Warning: There are spoilers ahead for Squid Game season 2.
Squid Game season 1's ending showed that despite Il-nam's death, the games would continue, and be overseen by the Front Man (Lee Byung-hun).
One element of the games that was not as explored in season 1 was the masked guards and why they cooperate. The insight that was provided came via Hwang Jun-ho (Wi Ha-joon), who was only pretending to be one of the guards in order to find his brother. One of Squid Game season 2's new characters, Kang No-eul (Park Gyu-young), offers much-needed insight into what the life of the masked guards actually looks like, along with why they willingly cooperate.
Squid Game Season 2, Episode 2's No-eul Twist Solves A Masked Men Mystery
The Guards Are Also Targeted For Their Desperation
One of Squid Game season 2's biggest twists, occurring as early as the second episode, is that No-eul is not a prospective player, but one of the games' masked guards. No-eul's backstory suggests that the games' leaders target desperate individuals to be guards, just as they target desperate individuals to be players. Squid Game's guards cooperate because, like the players, they are desperate and have nowhere else to turn, and the guards have the luxury of survival.

Squid Game Season 2 Ending & All Twists Explained
Squid Game season 2’s ending is an even bigger cliffhanger than season 1, and it leaves Gi-hun even worse off after his plan to stop the tournament.
While not all the guards may be as desperate as No-eul is, the Front Man's backstory is a further indication of how the games target desperate individuals. Before working for the games and becoming the Front Man, Hwang In-ho was a police officer who became disgraced after it was discovered that he accepted a bribe to cover his sick wife's medical costs. For desperate individuals like No-eul and In-ho, the money and power offered by working for the games is alluring.
Squid Game's Leaders Targeting Other Desperate People Makes So Much Sense
It Ties Perfectly Into The Show's Themes
The simple truth behind the guards' cooperation is a perfect extension of Squid Game's themes. It continues the ruthless cycle of capitalism where the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. of the lower socioeconomic classes turn against each other while the corrupt and ultra-wealthy revel in furthering such a divide. Despite the power they think they wield, the guards are also victims of the games, as is the Front Man, who continues the destructive cycle instead of trying to break it.
Squid Game season 3 will be released in 2025.
Of course, the guards' cooperation is also made easier through their illicit side business of selling players' organs on the black market. Their willingness to do this goes beyond profit and ties into the desperation that motivates them to be as ruthless as some of Squid Game's players feel they have to be. If Seong Gi-hun (Lee Jung-jae) successfully destroys the games in Squid Game season 3, it will be intriguing to see what this means for No-eul and the other guards.

Squid Game
- Release Date
- 2021 - 2025-00-00
- Network
- Netflix
- Showrunner
- Hwang Dong-hyuk
Cast
- Lee Jung-jaeSeong Gi-hun / 'No. 456'
- Jeon Young-sooGame Guide
Squid Game is a South Korean series released in 2021 about financially struggling individuals who are invited to participate in a series of children's games. The competition offers a lucrative prize but comes with perilous consequences, as the players soon discover the lethal stakes involved in each round.
- Directors
- Hwang Dong-hyuk
- Writers
- Hwang Dong-hyuk
- Seasons
- 3
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