It especially sucks that she gave him some after his earlier crudeness. Why would he protect the doctor (111) before confirming that information?) After my first watch, I didn’t realize that the sex and betrayal happen in the same episode, but there’s literally less than 10 minutes of air time between them. Deok-su goes along in the moment, but he knows that he’ll have to dump her to make an all-male tug-of-war team before they smash. Mi-nyeo wants Deok-su to guarantee that he has her back and uses the afterglow of their bathroom stall sex and name exchange to cement an alliance. Compassionate Gi-hun wants to build genuine trust between the members, even getting Sae-byeok to open up a bit. For both Gi-hun and Mi-nyeo, exchanging names means building trust. We come to learn more of the characters’ names in two very different scenes, one in the open dorm and another in a bathroom stall. So after holding her own for a while in the chaos, she joins Gi-hun’s group. It’s because you have nothing else to lean on.” While Sae-byeok isn’t going down easily, her inability to trust anyone leaves her vulnerable when everyone else has teamed up. He even gives a neat line that sums up his thinking: “You don’t trust people because they’re trustworthy. He offers Sae-byeok a place on his team not because she will be a strategic ally (even though, duh, she will), but because Deok-su will go after her. Meanwhile, Gi-hun is still operating with compassion.
When he kills 271 and realizes that he stands to benefit from having one less player around, Deok-su and his team go into full predator mode, taking out as many players as they can. In that way, Deok-su is a perfect player for the game: He adopts childish tactics. He cut the line on the very first day, he gathered a group of goons, and his introduction was beating up Sae-byeok in front of everyone. After all, intimidation is always part of gangster Deok-su’s act. When that becomes known, a massacre begins once the lights go out.īefore player 271 dies, the line-cutting just seemed like an instance of playground bullying. But there are no breaks, and episode four reveals that no matter how a player dies - on the game floor or in the dorm, by a guard’s gun or a player’s hands - their death counts toward the cash total. So far, while the players have been in the massive dorm, they’ve gotten a break from the fear of being killed. It almost serves as a reality check, cutting through any sense of complacency that may grow in the off-hours. You May Also Like.In Squid Game, shit gets real when the bodies start dropping. The show then explores Henry's feelings of fear regarding the assault, and the discovery that those feelings can trigger her ability to teleport. She has a seizure and teleports, in the course of which she inadvertently crushes much of his truck when her ability to teleport first manifests, leaving him a paraplegic.
The first time she realizes this, she is in a truck with her high school's basketball captain and star, Clay Boone, who tries to rape her.
She discovers she has the ability to teleport but has no control over her destination. With a major chip on her shoulder and no friends, she remains withdrawn and isolated, but everything changes when a traumatic encounter with a classmate triggers something deep within Henry - unleashing a power she cannot control. Impulse Season 1 Episodes.ġ6-year-old Henry Coles is an outsider in her new town of Reston, New York. After finding herself in an unknown place, Henry seeks out Jenna and Townes in search of some answers.