agnes-writes:

A Character Analysis on Seong Gi-Hun (Squid Game)

made at 2 AM running on 1 hour of sleep so I hope it makes sense

A lot of people were baffled by the ending of Squid Game, where Gi-hun actively chose to not get on the plane for his daughter and try to stop the salesman trying to recruit a player for the game.

I think it’s actually quite fitting for his character.

Now, I’m not saying that he’s not a bad dad for doing this, I’m just saying that all his actions make sense, especially if you analyse it.

Still, I’m going to use the bad father narrative and the common comments that come with it to form a clear picture for his main character trait:

Firstly, the fact that people say his daughter is his main motivation to play the games. Now, at first, you could definitely argue that this is true. He’s first approached by a salesman (Gong Yoo, which, holy shit, he’s so fucking hot, by the way) right after his daughter’s disastrous birthday celebration. He plays, and makes his way home. At home, he finds out from his mother that his daughter will be moving to the US and he can only get her back if he can provide for her. Seeing it as harmless and a way to make quick money, he calls the number.

However, when the first game ends, he votes not to continue, and is sent back home. Here, we find out that his mother is severely diabetic. This leads to an argument where he vows to get the money for her treatment one way or another. Subsequently, he tries to beg both his friends and even his ex-wife for a loan, and almost gets the money from her ex-wife’s current husband, who told him to stay away from his family. He’s seen walking home in the rain and sees the business card right after that.

I think this episode cements the fact that his main motivation, is not, in fact, his daughter—she’s only a small part of it; his main motivation is his desperate need for money for his mother’s treatment, and that little jab of the stepfather to him just adds insult to injury, and therefore, just a bonus perk of winning the game.

Next, the argument that he knew from the very start that he’s playing for blood money, so why doesn’t he just use it to provide for his kid?

I don’t think that argument’s very fair. I genuinely think that he did not, in fact, know what he signed up for, and that’s because the game mods had phrased their rules in a very particular way.

The game mods had told them that if they survive all six games, they get to win the money. That is very open to different interpretations but what I think Gi-hun thought is that there isn’t one winner—anyone who survives ‘til the end will get a portion of that money. So my theory on his thought process is that he only signed up to risk ONLY his personal health and safety, not thinking he’d have to kill anybody else. In fact, in that one scene in Episode 4, when a few players don’t get enough food and have a scuffle leading to the death of one player, he is the first one who demanded something be done about it, saying that they’re not there to kill each other like animals, before it’s revealed that foul play is, in fact, condoned and even rewarded by the game mods.

But now Gi-hun’s stuck there and he has to see it through. But he doesn’t have to be happy about it.

I think one of the scenes that further cements this is in the Tug of War game—in the moment, he doesn’t want to die, but they show alternating perspectives of his team and the opposing team, and there’s a myriad of expressions on his face; one of them, possibly fear and guilt as he sees the faces of the people on the other team. Then, in the elevator, we have a shot of him staring at the rope burns in his hands with a clearly conflicted and horrified look on his face—which I interpreted as the moment it had sunk in that he’d have to kill people to survive.

Next is the reasoning on why he left the prize money untouched, but gave 2/3 of it Sangwoo’s mother and Saebyeok’s brother, but not his daughter.

Now, we’ve established that he probably sees this money as blood money; Gi-hun probably feels incredibly guilty or blames himself for killing his friends and other people, or at least having some kind of hand in them. He’s already promised to take care of Saebyeok’s brother and Sangwoo’s mother, so I’m not particularly surprised. The thing is, I think he gives the money to Saebyeok’s brother and Sangwoo’s mother and doesn’t feel bad about where it came from is because he knows that’s the reason why they played the games in the first place. It was their blood that was spilled, so it would have only been fitting for them to get money.

But why not his daughter? Again, this goes back to the guilt argument. Gi-hun thinks this is blood money; and knowing how he’d gotten it, knowing what he had to do to get it (and not being able to fulfill the main motivation on why he joined, treating his mother, who died before he could come back), it would weigh on someone. It would also make sense that he wouldn’t want to give his daughter that money and try to explain it, not wanting to relive or come up with a lie for what he had to go through. In his eyes, that money is tainted, and he doesn’t want his daughter anywhere near what he experienced in that arena.

Lastly, why he didn’t get on the plane. See, this ties in to what I think is his main character trait; he sees a salesman trying to find players for the game, indicating that it is, in fact, still on-going, despite Oh Il-Nam’s death, and interrupts them.

The reasoning behind this is that he knows his daughter is already well-provided for: even in the first few episodes, we see that she has a nice house and clothes, attentive parents and is clearly doing okay with her stepfather getting a steady job in the US. In his mind, she’ll be just fine.

But he was in these people’s shoes before—desperately trying to make ends meet, finding away to survive, only to be taken advantage of and made to sign their own death warrant for entertainment purposes. These people have no idea what’s to come for them.

In Gi-hun’s head, it’s his daughter’s life, who is already set and comfortable with her new family, versus the lives of possibly hundreds of people who had no idea what they’re getting into, many of whom may not be as lucky as he is.

That would eat at his conscience, or so I think it would. Knowing that the games are still continuing and doing nothing to stop it with the little knowledge he has of them… That screws with your head, especially with his morals intact. So he doesn’t get on the plane, and chooses to try and stop the games.

And that is the running vein of his entire character:

We have his mother, who only has him to help her, as his main motivation, and we see him help those who need help as the team builds—particularly Oh Il-Nam, or player 001, whom he perceived as someone who needs to be helped at his old age (but he isn’t, honestly, fuck that plot twist), there’s Saebyeok’s brother and Sangwoo’s mother who also lost their only providers in those games, and finally, to cement the on-going theme, there’re the hundreds of people, just trying to make ends meet, being swindled into playing these death games for the entertainment of rich assholes.


Seong Gi-hun doesn’t take care of everyone except his daughter.


He takes care of everyone who he thinks needs it.


And I think that’s a wonderful core trait for a person to have.

dobutsu-crossing101:

SQUID GAME SPOILERS!!

Yo why is everyone upset that he didn’t get on the plane I didn’t take that as him not being a good father which is most peoples take on it like of course he wants to see her but getting on that plane honestly is like ignoring the problem which is that the game is still going on and people are still dying from it my guess is that at the end of the show is when he’ll finally go see his daughter not now because that will mean closure of everything he went through which he doesn’t have yet and Idk how but it’s really obvious he’s going to to stop the game (and I think police officer guy is going to help cause I really don’t think he died 👀) I also see a lot of people saying why did he leave the boy in the orphanage for so long or why he took a year in general and like y’all never mourned before like who wants to go see the little brother of the girl you just saw get her throat slashed and by your friend no less like that’s rough and his mom died and he saw his friend kill himself who he was also trying to kill as well like that’s a lot to take in and on top of that the old man he mourned for turns out he’s alive and he created the games like that’s also enough to fuck with you idk man I’m just like y’all not seeing the bigger picture here

rhinobeetl:

finally finished squid game! thought this would be a perfect opportunity to pay tribute to my fave akira art… 

freshly posted to my INPRNT – take a look at my pinned post for the link or search “rhinobeetl” :)

no reposting or re-uploading pls! :) 

leekyopenmanhole:

i’m not saying i’m ignoring their beautiful friendship dynamic slash brotherhood slash last round rivalry but Gi-hun and Sang-woo is perfect for that childhood friends-to-enemies-to-lovers trope and frankly i’m actually not going to be sorry for thinking that,.

liyazaki:

Squid Game brutally, brilliantly and devastatingly illustrates the atrocious cruelty at the heart of capitalism.

It says, “this is the fairest system! Rise to the occasion! If you follow the rules and never stop working, you’ll make it!”, while blatantly disregarding every person with the ‘misfortune’ of being born in a body or to circumstances not 'optimized’ for the unforgiving game of (capitalistic) life. And any success you might have? Someone else will inevitably have to pay the price.

No one is safe. No one is exempt. And if you 'fail’- you’re out.

k.