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Liar Game: Episode 12 (Final)

Good news! Liar Game won’t be going down as yet another good show ruined by a bad ending, because this finale delivers. And in traditional fashion, everything you think you know about the small set of characters who’ve become near and dear to our hearts these past six weeks will be thrown on its head. I think I’m still in denial that it’s even over, because I’ve latched on so tightly to the idea of a second season that convincing me otherwise will now be next to impossible—even if the actors sign a contract in blood stating that they’ll never touch this material again. If that means I’ve transcended from fan to superfan, it’s only because the drama transcended into a higher plane of existence first. Yes, it’s that good.

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FINAL EPISODE: “Final Round II”

We rewind to the bathroom conversation between Director Jang and Da-jung, and how she refused to believe in Woo-jin’s treachery based off a video testimony that could be made up.

“That’s not all,” Director Jang continues. “Hundreds of other people were scammed along with your father.” He makes a compelling case against Woo-jin when he claims that he plotted with Do-young to get him into the game (it’s true that Woo-jin voted him in, but not for those reasons), and that it’s no coincidence that Jaime and Dal-goo were eliminated.

Da-jung still doesn’t want to believe him, but Director Jang is relentless: “The way I see it, Ha Woo-jin will betray you. The network wants you to win.” His advice is for her not to trust Woo-jin, and to shoot him if she feels he’s betrayed her.

PD Lee takes control of the broadcast when she finds one of her crew members reporting secretly to Director Jang, and tells him that she’ll be the only one giving orders to her team.

Director Jang is incensed as he asks her if she’ll take responsibility in the event of a broadcasting accident, but PD Lee isn’t cowed. “If you try to influence the game in any way, you’ll be making a huge mistake,” she warns him, before throwing her phone into the briefcase where all crew members have been ordered to deposit theirs. Go PD Lee!

Before the round begins, Da-jung watches from afar as Do-young acts chummy with Woo-jin, which only corroborates Director Jang’s lie. While Jaime and the other eliminated contestants watch on nervously, Director Jang announces the modified rules for this extra final round: No dodging will be allowed, everyone gets fifteen hearts, and they have only thirty seconds to either load their gun or choose to shoot.

He gives each of them a chance to say a few words first, starting with Da-jung. “I… don’t think all the things Woo-jin has shown me have been lies,” she says. Woo-jin: “No matter what I do, trust me.” (*melts*)

Do-young laughs at all this gooey sentiment, and tells them that it’s time for them to throw away their masks—he wants to see what their true faces look like.

While Do-young chooses to load for the first round, Woo-jin chooses to shoot…

…And aims straight for Da-jung. Oh god. Is this why he asked her to trust him no matter what?

He fires, but it’s a no-go. Da-jung looks at him disbelievingly before she loads her gun, though Woo-jin uses his second chance to aim for her again. “Why are you doing this?” she asks shakily, before Woo-jin pulls the trigger.

Again, it’s a misfire. Their eliminated teammates reel in shock at what they perceive to be Woo-jin’s betrayal, but Jaime sets them straight—if Woo-jin really wanted to shoot Da-jung, he would’ve loaded more bullets first.

Now we get to hear what Do-young said to Woo-jin when he was acting friendly earlier, and it’s not good. He gave Woo-jin a choice: He could save Da-jung’s father by eliminating her… but if he eliminates her, he’ll lose.

And if he loses, then he’ll never hear the answers about his mother Do-young has been lording over him since the beginning. “Do I look like someone who would hold a joker in his hand and not even use it?” Do-young asked through a maniacal grin. Oh, you evil bastard. You evil, evil sonofabitch.

In the present, Woo-jin can only think to himself: “Please hurry, Dal-goo.” If Dal-goo can find her father, then Woo-jin won’t have to bend to Do-young’s threat.

When Woo-jin aims for Da-jung a third time, she asks desperately, “It’s not true, right? It doesn’t make sense that you conspired with Kang Do-young. You have a reason, right? Please, tell me!” He doesn’t, and pulls the trigger. Another misfire.

But I love that Da-jung shuts Do-young down when he offers to tell her about his relationship with Woo-jin with a, “No. I don’t trust anything that comes out of your mouth.” POINTS.

Woo-jin uses the next round to aim for her again. “Don’t do it,” she pleads. “I want to trust you, Woo-jin. So please…” But he fires—and this time, it’s a hit.

Da-jung looks numb with disbelief, unwilling to believe what’s staring her right in the face. Little does she know that Woo-jin is trying to protect her father, who’s currently duct-taped to a chair facing the live broadcast. He’s been soaked in gasoline, spared for now only because of the thin thread that runs from him to the burning lighter perched nearby.

“If I were my normal self, I would have trusted you until the end, Woo-jin,” Da-jung says at the beginning of the next round. With his gun pointed toward her, Da-jung aims right back at him: “But you told me: Reward loyalty. Punish betrayal. I can shoot you too. So please, stop now.”

Woo-jin: “Shoot me.” All three guns fire simultaneously, resulting in Woo-jin losing five lives, Da-jung six, and Do-young zero. He’s in the most advantageous position at present.

Detective Cha did the right thing in calling the production company about Woo-jin’s real bullet, but it’s not enough for PD Lee to put a stop to the game. Instead, she orders new guns for all the participants and pulls Woo-jin aside during the commercial break.

She claims she doesn’t want to get involved in whatever grudge he has against Do-young and Da-jung, but that keeping everyone safe on the show is her responsibility.

Woo-jin just seems confused when she frisks him, before she adds, “I trust that you’re not that kind of person, so I’m saying this just in case. Even if you fight with Do-young, don’t stoop to his level.”

Cut to: Do-young replacing one of the new blank bullets he was issued. Remember that lackey who attacked Detective Cha with a two-by-four? He stole one of the bullets from his gun for Do-young.

But in another twist, Do-young wasn’t exchanging one of his fakes for the real thing… he exchanged one of Woo-jin or Da-jung’s bullets. Ack!

Do-young calls Woo-jin out for stalling in his decision. Meanwhile, Detective Cha is prevented from entering sans warrant, even though he has probable cause to believe there’s a real bullet inside one of the guns.

Before the shooting begins, Director Jang asks Do-young to go into more detail about his past with Woo-jin. Do-young obliges without going into too much detail, and claims that there was once a kind woman who looked after orphaned children as if they were her own—but due to circumstances outside of her control, the orphanage had to shut down.

A flashback reveals that Woo-jin’s mother had done everything in her power to save the orphanage, even resorting to begging. At the orphanage, she was greeted by all the children as “Mom,” causing Woo-jin Lite to jealously proclaim, “She’s my mom!”

But Mom had only reinforced the idea that she was every child’s mother, and that she loved them all equally. Even though they weren’t related and had different personalities, Do-young says, the two boys recognized a certain sameness in each other.

Back in the past, we see Woo-jin goading Do-young to play a trust game over the well where they’d have to lean in at the same time over the edge. If one of them didn’t lean, the other would fall in.

They played that way, leaning in and pushing back off each other so that they could stay safely(?) on the edge. “Mom treated those two the same. She loved them,” Do-young says in the present. Woo-jin just yells for him to stop.

Do-young agrees to save the rest for later, but can’t resist adding, “We were special. Mother recognized that immediately. I wish I could see her.”

“Then why did you kill her?” Woo-jin growls. “Why did you kill her?!” he aims his gun at Do-young, who claims to be innocent—why would anyone want to hurt Mom? She was angelic and selfless, just like Da-jung.

“Mother aways said this: ‘It’s not so wrong for people to trust one another.’” Do-young adds, which only adds fuel to Woo-jin’s fire, since Mom had posed that statement to him in question form before she died.

As much as Woo-jin wants to shoot Do-young, he’s reminded of the choice he has to make, and shakes in rage as he redirects his aim at Da-jung and fires.

However, Da-jung doesn’t return betrayal with betrayal, and turns her gun on Do-young. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Bang. Do-young is down five hearts.

When she’s asked why she didn’t shoot at the person who shot at her, Da-jung professes her trust in Woo-jin—she knows he must have a reason for aiming at her. Awww.

Do-young isn’t fazed, and answers simply when Woo-jin asks why he dragged Da-jung into this. “Woo-jin, you know now that the three of us were there.”

Da-jung’s eyes go wide as Do-young tells her that she was probably six at the time and too young to remember. Or her father lied to her. Where did he tell her she was going, anyway? Summer camp?

Dad screams behind his gag as he watches the broadcast unfold. Whoa. Did he once abandon his daughter?

Dal-goo makes it to the orphanage and finds Dad tied to a chair, but is delayed in his rescue when a lackey surprises him with a chair to the back. And then just starts bludgeoning him.

Do-young tells Da-jung that she was a cute kid back then, even though she followed the two of them around constantly, always pestering them to play with her. She especially wanted to try the Well Game, even though they told her it wouldn’t work with three people.

But as he continues with the story, he mentions how Mom was so trusting that she made a mistake in trusting someone she shouldn’t have.

Flash back to a shady man accompanying her to the orphanage with gifts for the children, and how he noted with too much interest how smart Woo-jin and Do-young were after watching them solve a Rubik’s Cube in record time. Then he’d promised to give another to whichever boy proved smartest.

The shady ajusshi had approached Mom about adopting both boys, claiming that the orphanage would be compensated well for it. Even though Mom sensed something strange, she only offered the boy who wasn’t her biological son.

So afterward, the ajusshi approached the eavesdropping Do-young: “Did you hear that, kid? Ajusshi just bought you.”

In the present, Do-young says that Woo-jin knew very well that the ajusshi was a bad man. “He was an adoption broker who sold kids for money. Mom sold me… to that man. Da-jung too.”

Dad is beside himself at Do-young’s reveal, and seems past the point of realizing that every move he makes brings the lighter one step closer. Now it’s not just his life at stake, but Dal-goo’s too.

Woo-jin tells Da-jung not to believe what Do-young says, but Woo-jin can’t answer her when she asks if she was there at the orphanage with them. Do-young explains that her father gave her up when her mother was sick, thinking that Da-jung would go to a better home—or that he would return for her if her mother got better.

Da-jung covers her ears with her hands to shut out the horror when Do-young asks if she wants to hear the sad story of the girl who got adopted instead of her. “Or… should I tell you what kind of hell I endured?”

Dal-goo manages to break free of the lackey’s control by biting his leg and fighting him off. Dad tips his chair, sending the lighter falling toward the ground, but Dal-goo dives in time to catch it right before it ignites the fuel. Phew.

Meanwhile, Do-young calls bullshit on Woo-jin’s claim that there was no way to know the ajusshi was bad news—Woo-jin knew from the very first moment. “Isn’t that why you tried to kill him?” Do-young asks.

Now the greater plan starts falling into place. When Do-young first returned to Korea, he approached the ajusshi to make him the president of a paper company named—you guessed it—L Company. Since he made the ajusshi his puppet, he instructed him to pull the scam on Mom…

“Crazy bastard,” Woo-jin growls, ready to throw down with him. He has to be restrained by the crew while Director Jang brings the focus back to the game.

The eliminated members of Team Woo-jin get a call from Dal-goo confirming that he rescued Da-jung’s father, but find themselves unable to get the message to Woo-jin when they’re still in the studio.

While Detective Cha stages a protest outside about the real bullet inside, PD Lee goes back through the footage of the gun-switching to catch anything she might’ve missed.

As the next round begins, Do-young tells Woo-jin ominously that they’ll finally be able to finish the game they left hanging in their childhood—the game that Da-jung still doesn’t remember—as he coerces them in closer for the last turn.

In the meantime, Jaime rushes in front of Director Jang to tell Woo-jin that Dal-goo rescued Da-jung’s father, but can only send him a thumbs up when she’s restrained by the crew.

Woo-jin gets the message, which means that he can now tell Da-jung that he’s been having to shoot at her because Do-young was holding her father hostage.

“Thank you for trusting me,” he tells her. “Now, let’s end it.” They both point their guns at Do-young, while he points his at Woo-jin. Meanwhile, PD Lee frantically searches the behind the scenes footage and spots Do-young switching out the bullets.

Do-young says it’s Woo-jin’s loss—he’ll never find out the truth now. Woo-jin just tells him to shut up before they all fire.

Because Mini Do-young blamed himself for being sold (since he didn’t ever say “Mom” like the other kids), he warned Da-jung not to make the same mistake. Perhaps he hoped that Mom might take pity on her if she called her that.

Da-jung had initially refused, sure that her father would come back for her, but Do-young made her cry by telling her how unlikely that’d be. But when Woo-jin joined them, Do-young took the initiative to suggest the Well Game, but with a decidedly Liar Game-esque twist.

Just like the painting and the brief memory flash in Woo-jin’s mind, the three children stood around the well with their hands interlocked and their backs turned. The idea was that they’d each pull one hand away from the kid they’d rather be gone—so one of them would fall into the well if both hands holding them let go, or none of them would fall if no one let go.

It was then that Do-young told Woo-jin that his mother sold him and Da-jung off for money, sowing distrust between them right before the pivotal countdown… but in the end, Do-young was called away by Mom (who didn’t feel the need to make all the children get away from that yawning hole of death), and the game was left unfinished. “This isn’t over,” he told them. “Let’s play later.”

But Da-jung’s father did return for her, leaving Woo-jin and Mom to face the closing of the orphanage alone. But Woo-jin’s trust in his mother would be forever shaken.

Bang. Bang. Bang. Shot after shot is fired, just as PD Lee realizes that Do-young switched out the fake bullet… at Da-jung’s podium.

She jumps to her feet just as Da-jung prepares to shoot Do-young, who knows what’s coming and turns toward her to meet his end. Woo-jin has to only take one look at PD Lee to figure out what’s going on, but it’s too late—Da-jung pulls the trigger…

And Woo-jin, with only milliseconds to react, throws himself at Do-young to save him. The bullet lands in Woo-jin’s arm as the two tumble to the floor.

Do-young is left in complete shock as PD Lee orders the cameras to hone in anyway. Da-jung is declared the winner of Liar Game. Wait, what?

Some time later, Woo-jin wakes up in the hospital with Da-jung at his side. She shows him the news article Reporter Gu broke on Do-young’s true identity, and that he’s being investigated by the police for various crimes.

He’s not the only contestant recovering there—Sung-joon managed to barely survive his elevator plunge. (While I’ve clearly learned nothing from years of drama watching. It’s never a death until you see a body. Derp.)

When Woo-jin visits Do-young in prison, he’s asked what expression he saw on Do-young’s face before Da-jung shot. He looked like he was… waiting.

“Is it over now?” Woo-jin asks. “This isn’t the end. It’s just the beginning. This was only a test. Just because you two won doesn’t mean they’ll stop,” Do-young replies. Woo-jin asks who “they” are.

They’re the ones who made him this way, according to Do-young—and they’ll start another game soon. As for what Do-young, his aim this whole time has been to take the system down from within, without anyone suspecting.

Woo-jin asks why Do-young is telling him this, only for Do-young to recall what Woo-jin told him about how a human would never be able to fully control their microexpressions.

“In the end, I’m a failed experiment,” Do-young says. Then he suddenly grips the table as he adds gravely that if no one stops “them,” the chaos they’ll cause will set the world on fire.

Just like that, he gets up to leave. But before he goes, he turns back to Woo-jin and says, “Let’s meet again.”

Da-jung finds Woo-jin contemplating the meaning of life at the abandoned orphanage, and jokes about her possible future as a philanthropist now that she’s won all that money.

They both smile as Woo-jin extends his hand to help her up in the same way he did when they first met. (For the second time, anyway.)

A series of vignettes accompany Da-jung explaining what happened after the show ended, and that the grand prize wasn’t paid—instead, each contestant received five hundred million won/five hundred thousand dollars.

But it was enough for everyone to start over. Da-jung was able to live with her father again and go back to school, Bulldog and Actor Gu were able to return to their old professions, and Jaime and Dal-goo started their own love line.

Da-jung quotes an American philosopher named Mortimer Adler (I tried to find the quote she might’ve misquoted with no success), about our lives being dictated not by our past traumas, but by our future goals. And that she can trust whoever she damn well pleases even if she gets betrayed.

After burning everything in Do-young’s dossier but the picture of the two of them with Mom, Woo-jin walks the streets and thinks, “If someone says not to trust anyone, should we believe them? Or… in order to trust that one person, do we have to doubt everything?”

Woo-jin misses the newsflash that Do-young went missing during a prison transfer, but can’t ignore the caller when his phone rings: It’s Liar Game. Da-jung and multiple others receive the same call.

The voice on the other end is Do-young’s, who speaks only after the black bag is removed from his head by mysterious masked men.

“Whoever received this call is invited to the real Liar Game. The show is over, but the real game begins now. Never… trust… anyone.” Do-young laughs maniacally through his busted lip.

Flash forward to the third round of this new game, with the contestants fretting over how to proceed. Then a voice cuts through the noise with a familiar line: “I have a way to win.”

Who else would it be? It’s the one and only Ha Woo-jin.

 
COMMENTS

Bravo, Liar Game. Bravo. Pulling off a finale that delivers on everything that’s been hinted at/promised up to this point is no small task, and we’ve seen shows do so much worse when their only job was to coast to the finish line. Here, the mysteries brought up in the eleven solid episodes preceding this seemed too many to count, and certainly too many to properly address in a one hour finale. Yet here we are.

Granted, I’m still confused about a lot of things, which has been absolutely agonizing. My job is to break down these hour long episodes into bite-sized discussion points, or at least to paint a coherent picture of the events as they unfold, but I’ve never found that a harder task than I have with this show. It’s not a bad thing, don’t get me wrong, but it puts me at a distinct disadvantage when it comes to summing a monstrosity like this up in a neat little section when just studying individual focal points could take up more space than the entire recap. Which all goes to say that I’m not a wizard, but I’ll don the cape and try my best just the same. The rest I happily leave to you all, because this is the first show since White Christmas that begs to be studied from anywhere but the inside of a vacuum.

Poor Do-young. That’s something I didn’t think I’d find myself saying, but what a way to create a complex character out of what could’ve so easily been a stock villain with a megawatt smile. It’s been amazing to watch everyone’s progression through the show, but Do-young’s arc was a work of art, what with him being simultaneously as tragic as he was malicious and just a teensy bit misunderstood. I do love that his character came full circle both figuratively and literally, and that the reveal that he wasn’t just in the game for pure revenge didn’t mean he was an automatic good guy. He did some really, really unforgivable things.

There’s no way of knowing just how much Mom was culpable for based on the information we’ve been given, since Do-young’s account of her being a child-selling devil and Woo-jin’s memory of her as naive and selfless are so vastly different. It’s possible that Woo-jin had a bad feeling about what Mom was up to based off the scene where he let go of her hand after telling her he didn’t want to come back to the orphanage, but Do-young can’t exactly hold him accountable for not taking action when he was just a kid. After all, Do-young’s elaborate setup with the L Company CEO was made for the chief purpose of getting Mom to pay for what he thinks she did to him. And she was certainly no innocent, but I’d be willing to give her the benefit of the doubt that she might not have known that she was selling children into some sick, psychological experiment that left someone like Do-young calling himself a “failed experiment” just because he couldn’t shed every last vestige of his humanity.

The fact that Do-young was man enough to admit as much to Woo-jin said so much about him, but I loved how it all came back to trust in the end. Do-young wasn’t out to torment Woo-jin, he just had a very warped determination to return to the last part of his past not colored by unspeakable pain. I’d almost go so far as to say that Do-young set up the final roulette game out of fondness for times past more than anything, only this time he actually wanted to throw himself down the well and end it all. That’s why Woo-jin saving him was so perfect and unexpected for that moment, since the three of them were playing a more high-stakes version of the trust game they’d put on hold so long ago.

Only this time, Woo-jin proved to Do-young that he wouldn’t have let him fall down to the depths—not then, not ever. At least not on his account. It also says a lot for Do-young that he wasn’t the kind of crazy who wanted to take everyone down with him, since in the end he was fully ready and willing to put himself out of his misery. Which is just sad, regardless of the horrors Do-young inflicted on others. Having such a sorry past doesn’t excuse him, but it helps to understand him. And for Woo-jin to go from the “Never trust anyone” professor to a beacon of trust and hope for others, so much so that he showed Do-young what trust was by taking that bullet for him? That’s the stuff true heroes are made of.

Not to mention the whole undercurrent of Do-young having been in this to fight whoever “they” are from the inside, which led to a subtle moment of understanding passing between the two men when Do-young warned Woo-jin to stop the people behind his currently frayed mental state before they did something even more horrifying to others. Which might explain why Woo-jin found himself back in the game at the end. I’m trying to keep speculation for a second season down to a minimum because my heart will just break otherwise, but how cool would it be if the two of them worked together to stop whatever devils are behind all this shadiness?

But Woo-jin didn’t just change overnight when it came to trust, nor did anyone else previously on the fence—Da-jung gave them reason to hope again. While I love the individual treatment each of the final contestants received, the most startling and heartwarming transformation is still Jaime’s. She could’ve just as easily reinforced the stereotype that all drama women who wear heavy makeup are bitches (who can be measured on a sliding scale based on how dark their lipstick is), but was instead given a full, meaningful arc with actual bearing on the story.

And while I bemoaned the lack of romance between our two leads, I’ve also got to admit how refreshing it was to have romance removed from the bigger equation entirely, since it gave the two prominent female characters who weren’t Da-jung purpose outside of fighting over who gets the man. And though Jaime and Da-jung, or Da-jung and PD Lee, wouldn’t make it to anyone’s Best Female Friendships list, the fact that they learned how to coexist and cooperate with each other feels like we’ve stepped out of the darkness and into the light. That’s how it felt to watch all of Liar Game, actually. And if that’s not a reason to give such a deserving and revolutionary show six seasons and a movie, I don’t know what is.

 
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Did anyone else think that DY look like he was drugged with some kind of psychosis-inducing agent (look at his eyes) or that he was being forced to act under physical and/or mental duress? If season 2 is actually happening, I'd really like to see WJ save(?) DY and for the two to team up to take down the people behind Walden Two/Liar Game.

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A WJ-DY team would be THE dream team. *goes off to make a sacrifice to the drama gods*

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Sorry, forgot to specify that I'm referring to that last scene.

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I have to say I would have preferred a more concise ending? maybe with some more ambiguity, there was a lot of heavy handed exposition with DY explaining everything rather than allowing things to breathe and be discovered a little more naturally. I appreciated the inclusion of this back story, but by the end the drama seemed to be ALL about back story and less about the games and the messages the characters learn from them. I did enjoy it though and kind of liked that they sort of gave up on the final game and went straight in with the backstory. I thought it was a bit ridiculous though that when HWJ got shot they were more concerned about making DJ the winner than getting him to the hospital. I was also surprised that DJ was so chill when visiting him in the hospital she didn't even apologise even though she shot him (accidentally or not it just seemed out of character for her). Speaking of DJ her character just never went far enough for me, I was really excited that she got to share in the guys backstory but it really didn't feel that she was all that involved at all in it. Her character def needs more because they've fleshed everyone else out except for her so she comes off looking really really flat.
Ultimately I prefer the jversion but this was a great drama in itself, I do think it can stand well on its own and that the writers did a good job looking at the story from a different angle and focusing on something different.

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ugh, I so agree about Da Jung needing to be a more interesting and developed character.

the two male leads are so dynamic they completely overshadow her.

I'd be much happier if the female lead was someone as boss as Jamie.

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So as a big fan of the manga (tried to watch the Jdrama, found it way too dramatic), I was both really excited and nervous for this adaptation. From the first it's been clear that the directors had their own vision for this adaptation, and now that it's over I felt like some changes worked and some didn't. Overall I liked season 1 and am anticipating season 2, but a little warily.

* The biggest change overall for me was changing the focus of the story more onto the characters, as opposed to the actual games themselves. I thoroughly enjoyed Shin Sung Rok's performance, but thought some of the games suffered from lack of proper setup/explanation. Half the fun, for me, was trying to figure out the winning strategies and loopholes myself, and that aspect was definitely weaker in this adaptation. Ep 12 kinda lost me as well for this reason, because the final round of Russian Roulette was ridiculously simple.

* I really liked the fleshing out of the side characters here. Special mention goes to Jamie and Lee El's fantastic performace.

* The acting was very good in general. LSY's Woo-jin is actually closer to how I pictured Akiyama would be like -- not as smirky as Shota (though I liked him), more serious.

* That being said, Da-jung's character really got shafted towards the end. She was developing so nicely up until episode 10, but then it was like the writers decided to ditch her development to focus on Do-young and his backstory angst. Da-jung is supposed to grow to be just as formidable a player as Woo-jin and Do-young, and I really hope the writer remembers that if they do season 2. Kim So Eun is good at being cutely innocent, but I like her better fire-y.

* Thematically, the season didn't really hold up as well either. "It's okay to trust even after being betrayed." Which is fine, but they show the entire reason Do-young is set on his path to hell is because Woo-jin's mother blindly trusted that sketchy man. Choosing to trust after you've been personally betrayed is one thing, but what about when your misplaced trust hurts other people?

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I'm also a LG manga fan that didn't like the Jdama (I found it tonally uneven).

My love for the K-version is pretty much hinged on Shin Sung Rok's KDY, Lee El's Jamie, and Jo Jae Yoon's Dal Goo. I also really enjoyed the general production quality: the instrumental soundtrack was wonderful, the cinematography gorgeous, and the directing slick and confident.

I initially found the show thematically problematic on the whole "trust" front. In earlier episodes, I disliked the whole "is it so wrong for one person to trust another" line. This kind of mentality seems incredibly naive and masochistic. Trusting everyone, regardless of whether they deserve to be trusted, is an act of surrender, in which the idiot doing the trusting is putting their own personal freedom and wellbeing in the hands of others.

So when Da Jung was doing that weepy trusting thing in episode 5 (and getting destroyed by Jamie in the process), I almost stopped watching. I found her THAT stupid and annoying.

But in the end I think the show did provide a layered and balanced reading of trust.

Viewers do see the dark underside of "is it so wrong for one person to trust another". Woo Jin's mother was NOT portrayed as an angel. If anything, the last episode paints her in a really troubling light-- that her trusting nature veered on wish fulfillment; the woman believed in and trusted anything she WANTED to trust. Her orphanage needs money? Okay, she'll trust the creepy guy who comes to her with offers of money. She was so blind to reality that she was fooled *twice* by the same guy. And in this process she indirectly killed at least one child (the girl Do Young mentions in the finale-- though there's possibly more).

I'm happy the LG writers chose to script this version of Woo Jin's mother. Because naivete does NOT equal unequivocal virtue. Too often kdramas beatify the naive/trusting characters, making them one-dimensional forces of good. But in Woo Jin's mother, LG definitely showed a character that was both naive and capable of great misdeeds.

Da Jung too, in her limited way, learned to trust selectively (though this was presented in a less clear fashion). She started out as a "trust everyone" type. But by the end, she did have to make selective choices as to who to trust. I was kind of proud of her when PD Lee said "sorry" and Da Jung replied, "Don't say things you don't mean." Skepticism FTW! She also had to distrust director Jang and Kang Do Young in order to win that final game.

So yes, trust is not necessarily a good thing. But the show is careful not to seriously promote its nihilistic "trust no one" tagline. Because the flip-side of the coin is that trust is pretty much essential for survival, and humans are social creatures who've evolved to develop bigger brains and bigger societies thanks to trust/cooperation.

This is why Do Young, who's been deprived of trusting relationships, is mentally unhinged. While...

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... while Woojin-Dajung-et al, who've learned to trust each other, was able to win the first 'season' of liar game.

I think Shakespeare sums up to take away message pretty well: "'Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none."

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Season 2!
Season 2!
Loved This Show

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Thank you for the recap!! It really answered a lot of my questions. Fav drama since I Hear Your Voice :) Looking forward to Season 2 now!

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Whoah if there's a season 2 it's gonna be gritty as hell :D

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Really glad the show turned out to be just as great as the J-Drama. I really enjoyed this because we really got to delve into the characters; it's something that the Japanese drama keeps a mystery 'till the end because there is more focus on the game itself.

However, one thing I didn't like about this version is feeling like Da Jung often got pushed to the side. I loved that though she was naive she [Nao] was always the focus and things seemed to still revolve around her trying to maneuver the games with her partner [Akiyama]–I felt less like that during this show. Like others said she does start to show some signs of becoming a really strong player so I want to see more of her and that growth; realizing that she has to step it up while not throwing away her whole philosphy.

Here, we got a bunch of new characters (Do Young is one) and the contestants were a lot nicer and more human in this version (I liked this) with the writing and production being solid and awesome. I would be onboard for a second season for sure. But, I'd have to watch this season over again because I'm not a genius like Woo Jin or Do Young, man! Don't ask me how many times I had to re-wind on some of these rules even if I did know them before, lmao.

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First time in a while that I've really liked the female lead in a drama :D
Da jung was such a refreshing character from all of the other sweet faced kdrama leads. And Woo jin was much more than another brooding and dark male lead. My favorite out of all of the characters has to be Do young, he was absolutely amazing! The entire time I watched this show, I was in awe and Shin Sung-Rok's acting. Holy crap that man can act.

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when i saw WJ's awful hairstyle at the end, I was like, “what happened?! did cha yoo jin from Cantabile Tomorrow appear at the wrong show or what?” I totally burst out laughing despite the intense music that played in the background. It reminded me about how I felt at watching the last episode of Joseon Gunman because the same thing happened. The hero at the end just had to sport so much facial hair to indicate that a few years have passed. Heck, might as well make it a century that has passed. No one can grow that much hair (& at an ugly rate) in such a short amount of time. For WJ, I was like, “he went from genius swindler to genius conductor” at the end. xD…So in season 2, they better get rid of that hair. Otherwise, DJ may not even recognize him. Then, where will their love line go? lol…i know, i know, very dramatic of me…but still, that hair…ugh…it was very ugly on him..it gotta go…lol…

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I just finished it. This ending is my favorite of all the dramas I've watched. It was absolutely brilliant. Shin Sung Rok is becoming one of my favorite actors to watch. Here's hoping for season 2.

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Wow. I just... wow. I don't know what to say. That ending was just AMAZING! Words cannot even describe how happy and bittersweet it is to finish this. I hope there is a second season, because that ending? Yeah, I need to know what happens!!!!!!

Thanks for the recaps!

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Such an intense recap! I am happy how they pulled off this show!!!

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I do have to say that though the ending of this drama left you with questions; it left it pleasantly unwrapped, so that even so, you were still satisfied with the ending. I definitely have to say this is one of not many dramas that succeeds in having an open-ending (hoping for season 2!)
My only problem with this final episode is that they didn't address why the other contestants disappeared if they didn't pay back their loans from the game?

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Just curious, is there a way to create a Dramabeans account?

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Can someone please explain to me what the Director’s role was in this drama? He seemed like he was trying to take down DY yet at the same time he’s manipulating the other leads. No doubt he’s evil, but why?

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Just finished marathoning the drama.

Please give Ha Woo-jin his original style in season 2 ! Not that hair and outfit color ! I want manbangs, a bit of guyliner and dark, fitted clothes ! Please !

Really.

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I'm going voting crazy!

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Love that ending!

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The korean version did pretty well and really developed the backstories of the main characters as compared to the japanese drama. Also NDJ was a lot less annoying than Kanzaki Nao, possibly because she didnt have the holier than thou attitude like her japanese counterpart. Jamie was a nice change to Fukunaga, and the actress played her character very well.

Despite all these, somehow, somehow the japanese drama is still my favourite version. I think it's mostly because HWJ, despite his measured brilliance, simply cannot compare to Akiyama Shinichi. The actor playing HWJ did a decent job, but i just wasnt as into it as I was with his japanese counterpart.

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I can't believe it's been 2 and a half years since this show ended. :'( Obviously too long for there ever to be a sequel unless it's in a reboot type of situation. I guess at least that means we end with a perpetually great ending and not with a mediocre or bad sequel.

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yeah I completely agree, I think if they pushed for a sequel only to have it be rushed and terrible, I would not have preferred that over this masterful re-telling of the Liar Game story.

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I just rewatched Liar Game for the SECOND time tonight and I've got to agree with everything you said here HeadsNo2. This was MASTERFULLY written and the characters were so well done!

Can I just add? Do-Young at the end looked like he was crying instead of laughing, and Shin Sung-rok has SO much acting skill with the micro-expressions of pain in the midst of his maniacal laughter. I LOVE IT! One can only hope for a second season!

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My overall: 6/10

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