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Can Squid Game season 2 halt Netflix’s Korean viewer decline?

  • Scheduled for release in December, season two has a tough task ahead as Netflix’s recent K-dramas struggle

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Lee Jung-jae in a still from season two of the Netflix Korean drama Squid Game. Photo: Netflix

By Park Jin-hai

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Netflix is experiencing a decline in its user base as its Korean original content continues to underperform.

Attention is now focused on whether coming titles such as season 2 of Squid Game, slated for release in December, can reverse this trend.

Netflix original Korean series have achieved the top spot in weekly global viewership seven times since the beginning of this year. Parasyte: The Grey claimed the top spot twice, while The Bequeathed, A Killer Paradox, Physical: 100 season 2, The 8 Show and Hierarchy each secured the No 1 position for a week.
However, no new hit series has emerged to follow in the footsteps of Squid Game, which achieved phenomenal success with its first season in 2021, as well as All of Us Are Dead, which ranked No 1 for five consecutive weeks in 2022, and The Glory, which topped the charts five times from late 2022 to early 2023.
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Netflix’s recent struggles with original content are tied to its declining subscriber numbers. Since original content is exclusive to the platform, it is vital to increase and maintain its user base to make original content profitable.

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