Arizona Tribune - Netflix seeks recruits for real-life 'Squid Game'

NYSE - LSE
SCS 0.12% 16.14 $
RBGPF 1.28% 81.26 $
JRI 0.3% 13.41 $
CMSD -0.78% 23.02 $
BCC -1.37% 73.23 $
CMSC -0.48% 23.01 $
RIO 1.07% 80.97 $
RYCEF 1.29% 15.56 $
BCE 0% 22.73 $
NGG 1.07% 77.24 $
RELX 0.36% 41.13 $
VOD 1.38% 13.06 $
GSK 0.53% 48.85 $
AZN 0.64% 92.14 $
BTI 0.47% 57.04 $
BP 1.27% 34.58 $
Netflix seeks recruits for real-life 'Squid Game'
Netflix seeks recruits for real-life 'Squid Game' / Photo: VALERIE MACON - AFP

Netflix seeks recruits for real-life 'Squid Game'

Want to play "Squid Game" for real? Netflix is looking for recruits to compete for millions of dollars -- and even promises not to have you violently murdered if you lose.

Text size:

"With the largest cast in reality TV history, 456 real players will enter the game in pursuit of a life-changing cash prize of $4.56 million," the streaming platform said on a site set up to look for candidates.

"Squid Game: The Challenge" is looking for English-speakers from around the globe, aged at least 21 and free to travel for up to a month in early 2023.

Unlike the original, ultra-violent fictional show from South Korea, that became one of the biggest-ever hits on Netflix last year, losing contestants will not be killed.

"The stakes are high, but in this game the worst fate is going home empty-handed," the platform promises.

Describing the new reality show as its "biggest-ever social experiment", Netflix says players will compete "in a series of heart-stopping games".

The original fictional series was seen as a biting satire on modern capitalism, with contestants drawn from the fringes of society to play children's games for the chance to win big sums of money -- with the threat of being killed if they lose.

The new announcement comes shortly after Netflix confirmed a second season of the "Squid Game" was on the way.

In April, its creator Hwang Dong-hyuk said the follow-up would not be ready until 2024.

T.Sanchez--AT