I think she did grape him when he was intoxicated and “in the process of dying” because they had a red line,…
No, that red line he had while unconscious—he only had one—was from that girl yesterday. But then this psycho realized he was dying and fucking sexually assaulted him, literally humped him to try and force a bond. I wanted that bitch behind bars so bad, but she took the easy way out and killed herself. That shit was sick. Straight up depraved. If he hadn’t died, she would’ve full-on raped him.
Why would you make up a theory like that about him ROFL He is a DOG if you haven't realized, he put it anywhere
Some folks get so rattled when their favorite actor(It's evident from how they use"Lee sooHyuk's character" instead of the character's name here ) dares to play a character that doesn't fit their fantasy, they start inventing the most absurd backstories just to make it make sense in their heads.
I saw a lot of people saying he got fixated on the glasses, but isn’t that just part of the investigation process?…
He fixates on the glasses first and then goes to check the evidence box. Honestly, it would’ve made more sense if he had been casually going through the evidence and then noticed the glasses were missing—that could’ve triggered the fixation more naturally than how it actually played out.
For real… I still don’t get how he made that connection. And what was even the point of that bartender specifically…
If the show wanted the glasses to be a real clue, maybe don’t bury it behind “he was counting and acting weird… oh and also glasses I guess.” That’s not subtle storytelling, that’s hoping the audience does the heavy lifting.
He somehow looked at the teacher's pamphlet, got suspicious about the glasses, proceeded to search for them in…
I get that he was already suspicious, and I’m not arguing that. But something about the glasses part feels weirdly handled. It’s not about missing the detail—it’s about the writing not making that connection feel natural or earned. People start wearing glasses for tons of reasons, and unless the show gives stronger context, that shouldn’t automatically be treated like a red flag.
And honestly? The fact that questioning this got me responses implying I’m too young, ignorant, or didn’t “pay attention” is kind of wild. It’s okay to admit when a plot point is weak instead of over-explaining it or acting like pointing that out makes someone clueless.
uncle not able to see a problem with her niece but able to understand that there's a link with a murderer and…
For real… I still don’t get how he made that connection. And what was even the point of that bartender specifically pointing out that he wears glasses? Like okay, maybe he didn’t wear them before and now he does—so what? That’s not some huge clue. People start wearing glasses all the time—for vision, for style, whatever. It doesn’t mean anything.
The fact that Netflix executives thought Season 2 of Squid Game was Emmy-worthy is hilarious. Like… how high on your high horse do you have to be to mistake mediocrity for prestige TV? Other shows clearly did what Season 2 thought it was doing—and actually deserved their nominations.
If he hadn’t died, she would’ve full-on raped him.
People start wearing glasses for tons of reasons, and unless the show gives stronger context, that shouldn’t automatically be treated like a red flag.
And honestly? The fact that questioning this got me responses implying I’m too young, ignorant, or didn’t “pay attention” is kind of wild. It’s okay to admit when a plot point is weak instead of over-explaining it or acting like pointing that out makes someone clueless.
Like Gi hun had to watch so many people he cared die ...