
All the Brutal Games Played in 'Squid Game' Season 3
The dust has finally settled on Squid Game season 3, but some of those games are still living in our heads rent-free. While previous seasons tortured players with bloody rounds of red light, green light, spinning top, and more, the final chapter upped the ante with some of the deadliest contests yet. From extreme versions of hide-and-seek to jump rope, here's what the battle royale consisted of in Squid Game's final season.
Season 3 began with a chilling reinvention of a childhood classic, hide-and-seek. The rules are simple: Contestants are divided into two teams by the random draw of blue and red balls. The Blue Team, armed with keys, must hide from the Red players and try to unlock the right door to exit the course within 30 minutes. Meanwhile the Red Team, equipped with knives, is tasked with hunting down and killing the Blues.
The stakes are clear: Failure to eliminate at least one Blue player results in immediate execution for the Red players. Blue players who are unable to escape will be eliminated as well. In a macabre twist before the game, players are allowed to negotiate their fate by swapping roles, which is essentially an invitation to betray—or be betrayed—before the first move is made.
As the stakes get higher in episode 2, so does the tension. The Blue Team's keys are revealed to be of three distinct shapes—circle, triangle, and square—and all three are needed to unlock the right door. This means players will have to cooperate and escape together, or steal one another's keys, to make it out alive.
Innocent playground games are once again taken to a lethal extreme in Squid Game season 3. In this version of jump rope, players must traverse a bridge while leaping over a swinging rope, all under the gaze of giant dolls Young-hee and Cheol-su. The challenge is as much about timing and nerve as it is about endurance: to pass, players must reach the other side within 20 minutes. The order in which they cross the bridge within the time limit, however, is entirely at their own discretion. To make the course even more dangerous, players must cross a gap in the middle of the bridge, or fall stories below to their death.
As the fourth episode commences, the jump rope ordeal persists, but with a devastating twist: Player 222, Kim Jun-hee, has died and her baby, who was born during the games, must now bear her mother's number. The new addition makes the stakes all the more stressful for the other players, who are now pitted against each other and an infant.
In true Squid Game fashion, the penultimate game is a test of both strategy and savagery. Players ascend a sequence of geometric pillars—shaped as a square, triangle, and circle—each serving as the stage for a brutal pushing contest. Survival demands that the players push off at least one contestant per round.
Each round is governed by a strict 15-minute limit, initiated only when the players press a button. Those who survive each round get to move onto the next pillar and so forth, until there is only player left standing.
The series finale unfolds atop the final pillar of Sky Squid Game, where the remaining contestants grapple with the ultimate question of humanity: How much are they willing to sacrifice to survive? In this bleak social experiment, the games are not only dangerously clever, but also reveal the deepest and darkest facets of the human condition.

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UPI
12 hours ago
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'Squid Game' lead Lee Jung-jae to star in rom-com
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Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
Top 6 concerts this week in Sarasota, Bradenton, Venice, Englewood, Punta Gorda
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Venice Ave., Venice; $25; 941-484-8765; Rick Derringer tribute Guitar hero, songwriter, and acclaimed producer Rick Derringer died earlier this year at age 77 in Ormond Beach. Now, on what would've been the week of his 78th birthday, Bradenton's 88 Live will host a musical tribute to Derringer that is open to Bradenton and Sarasota residents — which Derringer himself formerly was. A wide range of musicians will honor Derringer's legacy, which includes hits such as 'Rock and Roll, Hoochie Koo' and 'Hang On Sloopy,' the theme song for Hulk Hogan — another Florida resident who recently passed away — and producing numerous albums by the likes of Edgar Winter, Johnny Winter, and Weird Al Yankovic, including parody classics like 'Eat It.' The lineup includes Derringer's wife, Jenda Derringer, Tony Wilson, Stormbringer, Del Couch, Henry Lawrence, Steve Arvey, Rick Alvis, Susi Best Walker, Wayne 88 Live, Randy Stonehill, Mike MacArthur, Phil DeGracia, and Rebecca Bird. 5:30 p.m. Monday; 88 Live Piano Bar, 6640 Cortez Road W., Suite A, Bradenton; $40 donation at door; RSVPs required; 941-900-1133 'Rock and Roll, Hoochie Koo' rocker and former Sarasota resident Rick Derringer dies George Lynch Guitarist George Lynch, of Dokken and Lynch Mob fame, will return to Big Top Live in Sarasota. During Lynch's time with Dokken, the group released multiple platinum-selling albums on Elektra Records (which Lynch Mob were also signed to for their first two full-lengths) and were nominated for the inaugural Best Metal Performance Grammy for 1988's "Beast from the East." 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Dearborn St., Englewood; $7; 941-475-7501; Ben Prestage Florida-raised, self-described "Deep South Swamp Music" performer Ben Prestage will return to one of his semi-regular venues, Celtic Ray Public House in Punta Gorda. The musician grew up in rural Florida and later lived in Memphis, where as a street performer he started playing drums with his feet while simultaneously singing and playing other instruments, a setup he'd bring back to his home state. His repertoire of instruments he plays includes the diddley bow, which earned him a Blues Music Award nomination for Instrumentalist — Other in 2012. 7 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 7; Celtic Ray Public House, 145 E. Marion Ave., Punta Gorda; 941-916-9115; Matthew Curry Bloomington, Illinois blues-rock guitarist and singer-songwriter Matthew Curry will return to Bradenton restaurant and blues spot Cottonmouth for a solo show. Curry counts among his fans Peter Frampton, The Doobie Brothers and Steve Miller Band, all of whom he's opened for, and he also appeared onscreen in the 2015 David Spade comedy "Joe Dirt 2: Beautiful Loser," playing the late Lynyrd Skynyrd frontman and Jacksonville native Ronnie Van Zant. Can't make this show? Curry is also set to play Troll Music on Friday, Aug. 8. 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 7; Cottonmouth Southern Soul Kitchen, 1114 12th St. W., Bradenton; $5; 941-243-3735; If you would like to be considered for this story, please submit your event to at least 10 days before our Thursday publication date. Email entertainment reporter Jimmy Geurts at Support local journalism by subscribing. This article originally appeared on Sarasota Herald-Tribune: Top 6 concerts Sarasota Bradenton Venice Englewood Punta Gorda Solve the daily Crossword