Hwang In-ho (Korean: 황인호; pronounced [hwaŋ.in.ho]), also known as the Front Man, is the main antagonist of the Netflix series Squid Game. He is the head of the Squid Game hierarchy, initiating and managing the competition of people in severe debt for a prize of ₩45.6 billion. He is portrayed as a ruthless and emotionally detached figure throughout the series.
Previously a police officer, he won the games himself in 2015 as Player 132 after executing the offer from Oh Il-nam (the game’s creator, portrayed by O Yeong-su) to kill the other finalists. Some time after his victory, In-ho started to work for the organization, becoming the Front Man. He has a half-brother 16 years younger, Hwang Jun-ho, also a police officer, who infiltrated the 2020 games to search for In-ho as he had gone missing. Jun-ho trying to find out what happened to his older brother In-ho while investigating the deadly games is one of the main plotlines and mysteries of the first season. When Jun-ho was eventually caught by the Front Man and his pink guards, In-ho revealed himself to Jun-ho as the Front Man, and spared his brother's life. After this, he disappeared from his previous life completely, cutting ties to both Jun-ho and his stepmother. In the first season, the Front Man is shown to mainly be overseeing and organizing the games. However, he appears in the second season disguised as a participant, going by Player 001 and using the fake name "Oh Young-il" (오영일; [ˈo̞(ː).jʌ̹ŋ.iɭ]) to foil Seong Gi-hun's plans.
The Front Man was created by Hwang Dong-hyuk and was portrayed by Lee Byung-hun, who assisted in developing the character. He is voiced in English by Tom Choi.
Appearances[edit] Squid Game season 1[edit]In the first season, In-ho is the organizer of the games, going by the alias the Front Man and dressed all in black. During Red Light, Green Light, the Front Man calmly watches the game while listening to "Fly Me to the Moon". When the players return to the game, the Front Man orders a supervisor to keep an eye on those who he not returned. One night, an altercation occurs with guards and a player who is a doctor helping to harvest the organs of executed players in exchange for hints on surviving the games; in the end, the Front Man kills a guard and orders the doctor's execution. He also discovers that there is an infiltrator among the workers. Before the VIPs arrive, he discovers that the infiltrator is his brother, police Detective Hwang Jun-ho. In the fifth game, the Front Man serves as a host for the VIPs, and when Jun-ho assaults one of them, the Front Man begins a chase. On a remote island, the Front Man confronts Jun-ho near a cliff, revealing that he is his missing brother and asking him to join forces, but Jun-ho refuses. In-ho then shoots him, and he falls off the cliff. After Seong Gi-hun wins the games, he meets the Front Man, who tells him to think it was all a dream. A year later, Gi-hun finds an invitation card at an airport and calls the number on it, promising to get revenge on the organizers. The Front Man answers and tells him to get on his plane, but Gi-hun hangs up and lees the terminal.
Squid Game season 2[edit]In the second season, after Gi-hun lees the terminal, the Front Man tells him that he will regret what he has done and Gi-hun replies that he will find the organizers.
Two years later, during a Halloween party, the Front Man has Gi-hun picked up in a limousine, where Gi-hun asks him to end the games. When the Front Man reveals that he was aware of Gi-hun's plan to sabotage him, Gi-hun asks instead to return to the games, to which the Front Man agrees.
With Gi-hun in the dorm, the Front Man keeps a watchful eye on him. During "Red Light, Green Light", the Front Man notices that thanks to Gi-hun's instructions, fewer players were eliminated. He then decides to infiltrate the game as Player 001, to teach Gi-hun a lesson, and ends up being the deciding vote to continue the games. In-ho, as Player 001, votes O making all players stay in the games. He then approaches Gi-hun and forms a team with him. Gi-hun witnesses him fighting Thanos and Nam-gyu, sing Lee Myung-gi's life and earning In-ho's trust. When it is his turn to throw the spinning top in the Six-Legged Pentathlon, he purposely wastes the team's time but still manages to gain their trust. After the game, In-ho introduces himself to his team under the pseudonym "Oh Young-il". At night, In-ho tells Gi-hun his supposed reason for joining the games: his terminally ill wife fell pregnant, and in an attempt to find an organ donor to se both her and her unborn child, he accepted money from a criminal; the transaction was misunderstood as a bribe, and he was kicked off of the police force. In reality, this was actually part of why he became the Front Man. In the third game (Mingle), In-ho kills a player via snapping their neck in order to se himself and Park Jung-bae / Player 390, one of Gi-hun's friends. In-ho tries to convince people to vote to lee, but they vote to continue the games.
Gi-hun realizes that there will be a fight that night and hatches a plan that lees In-ho perplexed. When the guards enter the dorm to stop the fight, Gi-hun and his team, including In-ho, kill the guards. Gi-hun and Jung-bae make their way through the compound to the control room. In-ho, along with two other players, go to help them. Eventually, In-ho sabotages and kills the two players who were with him, faking "Young-il"'s death as well. After this, he radios the guards to "wrap things up." Gi-hun and Jung-bae surrender, and In-ho, now dressed as the Front Man, asks him if it was worth it to "play the hero". He then kills Jung-bae in front of Gi-hun, leing him devastated as he walks away.
Squid Game season 3[edit]After the failed rebellion, Gi-hun is returned as the apparent sole survivor (unbeknownst to anyone else, Gyeong-seok / Player 246 was sed by No-eul/ Guard 011) and In-ho continues to monitor the games when they continue, eventually welcoming the VIPs. During the aftermath of the Jump Rope game which resulted in Jun-hee's death, shortly after she ge birth to her child, the baby is designated as Jun-hee's replacement for Player 222. Gi-hun, who swore to care for the baby after Jun-hee's death, is summoned to meet In-ho in his office where he finally reveals himself as the Front Man. After apologising for Jung-bae's death and explaining that the remaining players intend to kill him and the baby to win the prize money, In-ho offers Gi-hun a knife and proposes that Gi-hun kills the other finalists first to se himself and the baby. It is then revealed that during the 2015 games that In-Ho won, Oh Il-nam (who was the Host at the time) made the same proposition to In-ho in a similar situation; In-ho killed the other finalists and was traumatised by his actions. This is implied to be what began his descent into becoming the Front Man. Gi-hun ultimately doesn't kill the other finalists after a hallucination of Sae-byeok about him not being that kind of person (which is also the reason why Gi-hun did not kill Sang-woo in Season 1) and proceeds with them to the final game, Sky Squid Game. During the final game, with In-ho and the VIPs watching, Gi-hun manages to outlive the remaining finalists including Myung-gi (the father of Jun-hee's child). Due to an oversight made by them in not beginning the final round before Myung-gi's death, Gi-hun decides to sacrifice his life to allow the baby to win the final round. As he does, he declares to In-ho and the VIPs that the players are humans, not horses as In-ho previously described to Gi-hun after his victory against Sang-Woo. In-ho, moved by Gi-hun's sacrifice and display of humanity, rescues Jun-hee's baby and lees Jun-ho when confronted by him. Shortly after, the island's hidden explosives are detonated to destroy the facility.
Six months later, In-ho delivers Gi-hun's 456 tracksuit and remaining winnings from the 2021 games to the latter's daughter, Ga-yeong, in Los Angeles. While driving through the city, he spots an American Recruiter playing ddakji with a homeless person. He expresses apparent disappointment - hing likely been influenced by Gi-hun's experience in the games - before leing.
Concept and creation[edit] The character was created by director Hwang Dong-hyuk (left) and portrayed by actor Lee Byung-hun (right).The Front Man was created by series creator Hwang Dong-hyuk and portrayed by Lee Byung-hun. Lee described his appearance in season 1 as more akin to a "cameo appearance," as this character lacked a backstory[1] and did not appear in promotional efforts for the first season. This changed in the second season, in which his character received a more prominent role.[2] Because the character had not been "fully shaped" in season one, Lee and Hwang collaborating on his backstory to create a "fully developed" narrative.[1] Hwang stated that the final results pleased him, calling the Front Man's decision to become a player the most important aspect of the second season.[2][3]
In season 2, it is revealed that In-ho's reason for playing 28th Squid Games in 2015 was to se his unnamed wife, who had acute liver cirrhosis, and their unborn child. He was the winner of the 2015 games, but by the time he won, his wife had already passed away. In a mournful and heated conversation between In-ho's stepmother Mal-soon and his half-brother Jun-ho, it is suggested that if In-ho hadn't given his kidney to his brother, he could he sold it, paid for all his wife's treatments and might he been able to se her.
However, in Season 1, Hwang In-ho´s player file makes no mention of him hing a wife or being married, and it was implied that his brother Jun-ho needing a kidney transplant was the reason why In-ho played the 2015 games.
Season 3 features a small flashback to 28th Squid Game in which In-ho participated as Player 132. The night before the final game, the creator of the games, Oh Il-nam, gifted In-ho a gold and black knife, giving him an opportunity to "kill the trash". Despite his initial hesitation, In-ho used the knife to kill at least five other finalists while they were sleeping. It remains unanswered why was In-ho the one who got the knife from the Host. And it is unclear was anyone spared by In-ho or if the final game of 2015 was played after this.
Lee stated that the character had three different parts to him: Hwang In-ho, the Front Man, and Oh Young-il, all of which demanded different nuances of his performance. Lee, who found the performance "the most fun" for him as an actor,[2] considered this to be a challenging thing to balance.[1] He specifically cited the scene in which he killed a man to ensure his and Jung-bae's survival during the sixth episode as one where all three sides of the character come out, calling it a "rush of mixed emotions."[2] He worked with Hwang to create a balance between the character's "charismatic and chilling" sides.[4] Lee describes the Front Man as wanting to convince Gi-hun to adopt his pessimistic mindset and share his distaste for the world. He stated that, while the Front Man joined the games to change Gi-hun's mind, Gi-hun's hope for humanity changed his mind somewhat by reminding the Front Man of himself. He felt that while the character must he felt conflicted over killing Jung-bae, the Front Man persona took priority, as killing Jung-bae was the most "extreme" way to show that Gi-hun was wrong.[2]
He is voiced in the English dub by South Korean-American actor Tom Choi as the masked voice.[5]
Reception[edit]Gizmodo writers Germain Lussier and Cheryl Eddy praised the "carefully calibrated duplicity" giving Lee a "juicy part to dive into."[6] Therese Lacson for Collider says that Lee "steps into the role of the Games' turncoat" and that his interpretation of the character shows that "the lines for the Front Man are blurred. Sometimes, it feels like we're looking at Hwang In-ho...But then, sometimes, it feels like we're with the Front Man."[7]
References[edit] ^ a b c Kim, Ji-ye (January 9, 2025). "Becoming the Front Man: Lee Byung-hun reveals evolution of 'Squid Game' character". Korea JoongAng Daily. Archived from the original on January 12, 2025. Retrieved January 18, 2025. ^ a b c d e Romero, Ariana (January 7, 2025). "Squid Game Star Lee Byung-hun Goes Behind the Front Man's Mask". Netflix. Archived from the original on January 14, 2025. Retrieved January 18, 2025. ^ Brzeski, Patrick (3 July 2025). "The Front Man Speaks: 'Squid Game' Star Lee Byung-hun Unpacks His Character's Mysterious Inner Thoughts". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 4 July 2025. ^ O'Keefe, Meghan (December 27, 2024). "'Squid Game' Star Lee Byung-hun Spills on the Front Man's Juicy Season 2 Twist — Joining the Games as Player 001: "The Mask Comes Off"". Decider. Archived from the original on January 14, 2025. Retrieved January 18, 2025. ^ Craig, Did (December 24, 2024). "Is Squid Game dubbed in English? How to watch series with subtitles | Radio Times". Radio Times. Retrieved January 18, 2025. ^ Lussier, Germain; Eddy, Cheryl (December 26, 2024). "10 Things We Liked, and 3 We Didn't, About Squid Game 2". Gizmodo. Retrieved January 11, 2025. ^ Lacson, Therese (December 26, 2024). "'Squid Game' Season 2 Review: New Games, New Players, Still as Subtle as a Sledgehammer". Collider. Retrieved January 11, 2025. vteSquid GameSeasons Season 1 Season 2 Season 3 Characters Seong Gi-hun Front Man Cho Sang-woo Kang Sae-byeok Ali Abdul Han Mi-nyeo Ji-yeong The Recruiter Cho Hyun-ju Thanos VIPs Related Hwang Dong-hyuk Soundtrack Awards and nominations Cryptocurrency scam Crab Game "$456,000 Squid Game in Real Life!" "50 YouTubers Fight for $1,000,000" Beast Games Squid Game: The Challenge Mai Whelan