The Devil's Plan
The Devil's Plan is a South Korean reality competition series on Netflix, in which 12 intellectually accomplished contestants collaborate and compete in strategic games of wit, wisdom, and deception over seven days to win a prize of up to 500 million South Korean won (approximately $350,000 USD).[1] Produced by Jeong Jong-yeon and hosted by an anonymous figure known as the "Devil" (a masked man with a pixelated face), the show emphasizes high-stakes mind games where participants form alliances, betray rivals, and risk elimination by losing all their "pieces"—a form of in-game currency earned or forfeited in daily main and prize matches.[1] Contestants, selected via a rigorous entrance exam and hailing from diverse fields such as entertainment, law, medicine, and academia, are confined to a soundstage mansion without phones, where bedrooms double as potential jail cells for the eliminated.[1] The series premiered its first season on September 26, 2023, consisting of 12 episodes that follow the contestants' intense battles, culminating in a final round to determine the ultimate winner.[2] Notable participants in Season 1 included K-pop idol Boo Seung-kwan of Seventeen, actor Ha Seok-jin, and lawyer and YouTuber Suh Dong-joo, showcasing a mix of celebrities and experts whose real-world skills influence gameplay dynamics.[1] The show's format draws inspiration from global strategy competitions but incorporates Korean cultural elements, such as collaborative puzzles and ethical dilemmas, earning praise for its intellectual depth and unpredictable twists.[3] Season 2, subtitled The Devil's Plan: Death Room, was released on May 6, 2025, introducing new contestants and intensified challenges centered around a "death room" theme, while maintaining the core mechanics of piece-based survival and strategic gameplay.[4] In September 2025, production began on a third season.[5] Both seasons have received strong critical acclaim, with Season 1 holding a 96% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on eight reviews, lauded for its engaging cerebral contests and character-driven narratives.[6] On IMDb, the series averages an 8.3 out of 10 from over 5,800 user ratings, highlighting its appeal as a standout in the reality TV genre for blending competition with psychological intrigue.[7]Overview
Premise
The Devil's Plan is a South Korean reality competition series on Netflix where 12 contestants in the first season—and 14 in the second—are confined to an isolated, secretive facility for seven days to engage in intellectually demanding games that prioritize strategy, logic, and social manipulation over physical prowess.[1] The show's tagline, "The devil only brought the game. How you play is up to you. No judgment," underscores its theme of moral ambiguity, inviting participants to navigate temptations of greed and betrayal in pursuit of a substantial cash prize.[8] The "Devil's Plan" serves as a central metaphor for the orchestrated challenges that test contestants' ethics, intellect, and interpersonal dynamics, with the unseen "devil" representing the game's designer who crafts scenarios to provoke strategic dilemmas and alliances.[2] Produced by Jeong Jong-yeon, the series emphasizes mental acuity in a high-stakes environment, drawing from survival game formats but focusing on brain-teasing puzzles and collaborative yet competitive tasks.[9] Contestants hail from diverse backgrounds, including celebrities, professionals, and everyday experts such as Go master Lee Sedol, musician Kyuhyun, and actors, blending fields like entertainment, science, law, and gaming to foster unpredictable interactions.[10] The prize pool, accumulated via "game pieces" earned in matches, reaches a maximum of 500 million South Korean won (approximately $360,000 USD) in both seasons, though the final amount in Season 2 totaled 380 million KRW after gameplay outcomes.[11][12]Core Format
The core format of The Devil's Plan centers on a seven-day strategic competition among 12 to 14 contestants confined to a controlled environment, where intellect, negotiation, and deception determine survival and victory. Participants accumulate "pieces" through gameplay, using them as a versatile currency for bargaining, acquiring items, and unlocking advantages, with the ultimate goal of securing the largest share of a prize pool up to 500 million South Korean won (approximately $350,000 USD).[1][13] The structure unfolds over six days of intensive matches, culminating in a finale that rewards the top performers based on their piece holdings. This blueprint remains consistent across seasons, emphasizing high-stakes decision-making without physical confrontations or theft.[1] Each contestant starts with one piece, establishing immediate vulnerability as matches can rapidly deplete holdings.[14] The daily rhythm features a main match—typically individual or team-based strategy games testing logic, memory, or social deduction—followed by a secondary match focused on piece acquisition or defense.[1] In the first season, the secondary match is a prize game where non-eliminated players collaborate or compete to expand the prize fund; in the second, it shifts to a prison match for at-risk contestants to vie for redemption. Winners of these encounters gain pieces (often 1 to 10 depending on performance), while losers forfeit them, heightening the tension as zero pieces trigger immediate elimination.[13] For instance, main matches might involve logic puzzles that require collective problem-solving, but outcomes directly influence piece distribution.[1] The prison system adds a layer of peril and opportunity, varying by season: in Season 1, main match underperformers are confined to jail cells (bedrooms doubling as cells) until the next day, disqualified from the prize match; in Season 2, the two with the fewest pieces are isolated in a dedicated prison area, where they engage in redemption challenges to reclaim pieces or avoid expulsion. This creates a cycle of risk where failure solidifies elimination.[13] Hidden stages, accessible via pieces as keys, introduce unpredictable twists such as secret chambers offering advantages or traps that can bypass standard rules and eliminate players outright.[13] These elements ensure dynamic gameplay, with eliminations stemming from main match defeats (leading to zero pieces), prison match losses, or hidden traps, progressively narrowing the field until only survivors remain.[1] Alliance formation and betrayal are integral, as many games encourage temporary coalitions for mutual benefit, yet provide no immunity beyond outright wins, allowing strategic backstabbing through piece trades or misinformation.[1] On the seventh day, the two contestants holding the most pieces advance to a final match consisting of three head-to-head games; the first to win two claims the full prize, underscoring how piece accumulation directly shapes the endgame.[1] This format prioritizes cerebral endurance, with the piece system serving as both shield and sword in a web of calculated risks.[13]Season 1 (2023)
Gameplay Mechanics
The gameplay of Season 1 of The Devil's Plan centers on 12 contestants competing over seven days in daily main matches (competitive, affecting piece counts and eliminations) and prize matches (collaborative, building the prize pool up to 500 million KRW). Each contestant starts with 1 golden puzzle piece, used as currency for survival and the final prize share. Losing all pieces results in elimination. Low-piece holders are sent to a prison area, while high performers access better living quarters. A secret chamber offers opportunities to gain up to 10 pieces or risk elimination through solo challenges. The season features a mix of social deduction, logic puzzles, board games, and auctions, emphasizing alliances, betrayals, and intellectual strategy.[15] On Day 1, the main match "The Virus Game" assigns hidden roles: 7 civilians, 3 terrorists, 1 fanatic (terrorist ally), and 1 researcher (civilian with antidote). Terrorists and the fanatic aim to eliminate civilians via votes, while civilians identify and vote out terrorists. The researcher can cure a terrorist for pieces. The game unfolds in rounds of discussion and voting, with outcomes distributing pieces (e.g., successful terrorists gain 4 each). The prize match "Cooperative Puzzle" requires teams to solve rotating puzzles under time pressure; success adds to the prize pot, but the solver cannot win unless facing the final puzzle.[16][17] Day 2's main match "Rules Race" involves players crafting personal and group rules using colored blocks to form cause-effect statements on a board. Players roll dice (standard: 1,2,2,3,prison,escape; special: 1,2,2,3,3,3) to advance toward the end, with the "office" space allowing rule modifications. Rankings determine piece gains (1st: +3, 2nd: +2, 3rd: +1) or losses (10th: -1, 11th: -3, 12th: -5), with 0 pieces leading to elimination. The prize match "Fragments of Memory" challenges players to reconstruct fragmented images or sequences collaboratively.[16] Day 3 features "Secret Number" as the main match, where players draw unknown numbers (1-10) and use operation tickets (add, multiply, divide, zero) to deduce values through calculations and trades. Within 120 minutes, they submit guesses; accurate self-predictions earn 5 points, correct guesses on others add points, while errors deduct. Low scorers lose pieces (4 or fewer points: -1; negative: -2 or -3). The prize match "Word Tower" requires stacking blocks to form themed words (e.g., animals) in 10-minute rounds, succeeding if completed before time expires.[16] In Day 4's "Zoo," players select three animal cards (snake, lion, parrot, monkey, elephant) and a condition, then auction coins for board tiles to create patterns (lines or diagonals). Meeting the condition doubles points; 2+ points grants +1 piece, otherwise -1. The prize match "Scale Game" involves balancing a scale with colored cubes (1-20g each) using one clue per turn, deducing weights without repeating patterns in 5 minutes.[16] Day 5's main match "Laying Grass" uses Tetris-like pieces to cover a grid, aiming for complete squares (5x5 avoids elimination; larger yields pieces). The prize match "Montage" tests memory: players buzz if a face repeats after 3-second views; correct buzzes earn points, wrong lose them, failing at -10 or missed duplicates.[16] On Day 6, "Equation High-Low" adapts poker with math equations targeting 1 or 20 using numbers and operators, betting chips on hands. "Four Player Three in a Row" involves stacking blocks on a 4x4 grid against a mystery player to form three in a row. The final match is a best-of-three head-to-head: Nine Men's Morris (align three markers to capture), Hexagon (memorize numbers for magnitude guesses), and a interrogation game detecting lies. The first to two wins claims the prize based on their pieces. Secret chambers throughout offer solo puzzles like Blind Gomoku for piece gains or risks.[18][16]Contestants
Season 1 features 12 contestants from diverse fields including entertainment, law, gaming, and academia, selected through auditions and an entrance exam. Their real-world expertise influences alliances and strategies in the intellectual competitions.[1][19] Ha Seok-jin (actor, winner)Ha Seok-jin is a South Korean actor known for dramas like Something in the Rain and Life on Mars, with experience on variety shows such as Problematic Men. His calm demeanor and analytical approach from acting roles aid in social deduction and negotiation.[19][20] Boo Seung-kwan (singer)
Boo Seung-kwan, stage name Seungkwan, is a member of K-pop group Seventeen, debuting in 2015. He has appeared on shows like Knowing Bros and Racket Boys, bringing charisma and teamwork skills honed in group performances to collaborative challenges.[1][19] Lee Si-won (actor)
Lee Si-won is an actress recognized for roles in Adamas and Eve, holding over 10 patents as an inventor. Her creative problem-solving and adaptability from dual careers position her strongly in puzzle-based games.[19][20] Seo Dong-joo (lawyer)
Seo Dong-joo is a lawyer and YouTuber with degrees from Wellesley College, MIT, UPenn, and USF, known for legal analysis content. Her logical reasoning and persuasive skills from law and broadcasting excel in debate-heavy matches.[19][20] Park Kyung-rim (MC)
Park Kyung-rim is a veteran MC, comedian, and actress, hosting shows like Quiz Show Q and starring in Imitation. Her quick wit and entertainment experience facilitate alliance-building and high-pressure improvisation.[19][21] Lee Hye-sung (announcer)
Lee Hye-sung is a freelance announcer and vlogger, formerly with KBS, appearing on Radio Star. Her public speaking prowess and composure under scrutiny support communication in group strategies.[19][21] ORBIT (YouTuber, runner-up)
ORBIT (Lee Hae-rang) is a science YouTuber with over 800,000 subscribers and former Blue House policy advisor. His research background and analytical mindset shine in logic and pattern-recognition games.[19][21] Guillaume Patry (gamer)
Guillaume Patry is a Canadian former professional StarCraft player, 1999 world champion, and poker enthusiast, known from Abnormal Summit. His strategic gaming experience is ideal for competitive board and deduction games.[19][21] Kwak Jun-bin (YouTuber)
Kwak Jun-bin is a travel vlogger and comedian with 1.5 million subscribers, fluent in English and Russian, appearing on Uma Game. His interpersonal skills and adaptability from global content creation aid in alliances.[19][20] Seo Yu-min (comedian)
Seo Yu-min is a comedian known for sharp humor and public auditions, bringing multilingual fluency (Korean, English, Chinese) and quick thinking to social and puzzle challenges.[19][20] Lee Se-dol (Go player)
Lee Se-dol is a retired professional Go player with 18 international titles, famous for defeating AlphaGo in 2016. His expertise in long-term strategy and pattern recognition dominates complex board games.[1][19] Kim Dong-jae (poker player)
Kim Dong-jae is a Korea University biomedical sciences student and professional poker player, winner of the Asian Poker Competition. His risk assessment and bluffing skills from poker translate to high-stakes decisions.[19][20]
Episode Summaries
Episodes 1–3 (Days 1–2)The season opens with 12 contestants arriving at the mansion, including actor Ha Seok-jin, Seventeen's Boo Seung-kwan, Go master Lee Se-dol, and YouTuber ORBIT. Initial alliances form, with ORBIT emerging as a strategic leader. Day 1's "Virus Game" sees terrorists (including Kim Dong-jae as fanatic) outmaneuver civilians, securing pieces and luxury quarters for winners, who invite allies like Lee Se-dol. The "Cooperative Puzzle" fails, keeping the prize pot low. In prison, no eliminations occur, but tensions rise over suspicions. Day 2's "Rules Race" eliminates Guillaume Patry after he reaches 0 pieces, shocking the group. "Fragments of Memory" succeeds, adding to the pot. Hidden chamber discoveries heighten paranoia about secret advantages.[22][16] Episodes 4–6 (Days 3–4)
Day 3's "Secret Number" leads to eliminations of Kim Dong-jae and Lee Hye-sung, both dropping to 0 pieces, prompting emotional reactions and realignments. "Word Tower" succeeds, boosting the prize. ORBIT and Ha Seok-jin solidify a pact, while Seungkwan leverages charm for support. Day 4's "Zoo" sees aggressive bidding and betrayals, with no direct eliminations but piece losses straining low holders. The "Scale Game" fails, frustrating the group. Seo Dong-joo uncovers a secret chamber, gaining pieces but risking isolation. Alliances fracture as suspicions target ORBIT's maneuvers.[22][16] Episodes 7–9 (Day 5)
Day 5 intensifies with "Laying Grass," where precise placements eliminate Seo Yu-min. "Montage" succeeds, adding to the pot. Night 5's secret chamber challenge eliminates Lee Si-won after a failed Blind Gomoku puzzle. Remaining players—Ha Seok-jin, ORBIT, Boo Seung-kwan, Park Kyung-rim, Kwak Jun-bin, and Seo Dong-joo—navigate betrayals, with ORBIT's calculated plays drawing ire but securing leads. The shrinking field amplifies interpersonal drama.[22][16] Episodes 10–12 (Day 6 and Finale)
Day 6's "Equation High-Low" and "Four Player Three in a Row" whittle the field to three: Ha Seok-jin, ORBIT, and Boo Seung-kwan, with Seungkwan eliminated in the latter. The finale pits Ha Seok-jin against ORBIT in Nine Men's Morris (Ha wins), Hexagon (ORBIT wins), and interrogation (Ha detects lies correctly). Ha Seok-jin wins 2-1, claiming 250 million KRW due to failed prize matches. The outcome highlights endurance and honest strategy over deception.[18]
Eliminations and Piece Distribution
Season 1's eliminations occur via 0 pieces after main matches or secret chambers, with 10 eliminations over six days, leaving two finalists. All start with 1 piece; gains come from match rankings (e.g., +3 for 1st in main), prize successes (+ to pot), and chambers (+ up to 10). Losses from poor placements (e.g., -5 for last) or failed challenges. The prize pot reached 250 million KRW from partial prize match successes.[15] Elimination timeline: Day 2 - Guillaume Patry ("Rules Race"); Day 3 - Kim Dong-jae and Lee Hye-sung ("Secret Number"); Day 5 - Seo Yu-min ("Laying Grass"); Night 5 - Lee Si-won (secret chamber); Day 6 - Boo Seung-kwan, Park Kyung-rim, Kwak Jun-bin, Seo Dong-joo ("Equation High-Low" and "Four Player Three in a Row"). Finalists: Ha Seok-jin (19 pieces) vs. ORBIT (18 pieces); Ha wins the full 250 million KRW.[22][18] The table below summarizes key piece changes for select contestants (representative; full tracking varies by daily outcomes):| Contestant | Starting Pieces | Notable Gains/Losses | Final Pieces (Pre-Finale) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ha Seok-jin | 1 | +3 (Day 2 main); +5 (Day 4 chamber); consistent top placements | 19 |
| ORBIT | 1 | +4 (Day 1 main as terrorist); +10 (Day 3 chamber); alliance rewards | 18 |
| Boo Seung-kwan | 1 | +2 (Day 1 prize invite); -3 (Day 5 main) | 0 (eliminated Day 6) |
| Guillaume Patry | 1 | -5 (Day 2 main last place) | 0 (eliminated Day 2) |
| Lee Si-won | 1 | Minor gains; -all (Night 5 chamber fail) | 0 (eliminated Night 5) |
Season 2: Death Room (2025)
Gameplay Mechanics
The gameplay mechanics of The Devil's Plan: Death Room (Season 2) revolve around daily main matches for all remaining contestants and prison matches for those sent to the prison wing, with golden puzzle pieces serving as the core currency for advancement and the final prize pool.[23] Main matches determine living areas and piece gains or losses, while prison matches focus on elimination and survival through high-stakes strategy. Hidden stages and secret chambers add layers of risk and reward throughout the competition. On Day 1, the main match "Crooked Cops" divides the 14 contestants into 12 police officers across three color-coded teams of four and two secret thieves, with two corrupt cops embedded among the police who secretly aid the thieves.[24] The game unfolds on a Seoul subway map, where thieves move to collect pieces while avoiding arrest, police teams coordinate searches and arrests via room-based discussions and votes to identify corrupt cops (voting "no" if none suspected), and corrupt cops can pass identities or mislead. Arrests by corrupt cops are invalid, and teams must move within time limits; successful thieves and allies secure pieces and the better living area. The prison match "Remove One" pits up to seven losers in an 18-round card game using numbers 1-9, where players select two cards and play one per round, with the lowest unique number winning a point and victory tokens every three rounds; the lowest scorer is eliminated.[24] Day 2's main match, "Hidden Rules Puzzle" (also called "Unknown"), challenges players to navigate a color-coded board to the central black goal square using cubic pieces rolled for movement, pushing adjacent pieces in the direction of travel.[25] Hidden rules reveal progressively: white-topped pieces or landings on white squares trigger banishment back to start; three banishments return pieces; pushed pieces avoid chain reactions except banishment; unmatched adjacent colors force top-color changes to matching ones; two or more adjacent same-color squares allow moving another piece of that color (or any for yellow); and three aligned same-color squares grant extra turns. The first to the goal wins, with rankings by square position. The prison match "Time Auction" allocates each of six players 600 seconds for 19 blind auctions, where participants hold buttons during a 5-second opt-in countdown, bidding time until release, with the last holder (to 0.1-second precision) winning a token if no tie; the most tokens secure a piece and safety, ties broken by remaining time, and the fewest leads to elimination.[25] Day 3 features "Halloween Monster" as the main match, an alliance-driven game where teams form to battle monster scenarios on a themed board, assigning roles for attacks, defenses, and betrayals to claim territory and pieces, emphasizing social deduction and temporary pacts. The prison match "Sniper Hold'em" adapts poker with targeting mechanics, where players bet pieces on hands while selecting opponents to "snipe" for direct confrontations, winning eliminates rivals' bets or forces folds based on hand strength and bluffing.[25] In Day 4's "Treasure Island," contestants navigate a grid-based island map using arrow cards to move and steal pieces from others' positions, with auctions for movement advantages and hidden traps that reverse gains; strategic positioning and theft maximize pieces. The prison match "Triple Dice" involves rolling three dice per turn for high-risk bets on sums or colors to claim multipliers, where busts (certain combinations) deduct pieces, rewarding calculated risks over 10 rounds.[25] Day 5's main match "Balance Mancala" requires counter-balancing seed placements on a multi-level board, where moves distribute seeds to tip scales without toppling, aiming to fill goal pits while sabotaging opponents through shared mechanics. The prison match "Wall Go" plays territorial Go on vertical walls, capturing enemy stones by surrounding them across surfaces, with modular wall rotations adding dynamic strategy for area control.[25] On Day 6, "Doubt and Bet" uses Liar's Dice mechanics for card predictions, where players wager pieces on face-up/down card claims, calling doubts to force reveals and penalize lies, building tension through bluffing chains. "Equation Pyramid" builds hierarchical math equations from base numbers upward, selecting operators to maximize or minimize values per level, with peer challenges to validate or disprove for piece awards.[25] The final match pits the top two in three head-to-head sub-games: "Big or Small" requires guessing the relative magnitudes of hidden numerical sets under time pressure; "Bagh Chal" deploys leopards and goats on a board to capture or block paths strategically; and "Questions and Truth" involves interrogation rounds where one player asks questions, the other answers with possible lies, scored on detection accuracy. The first to two wins claims the championship.[25] Hidden stages span multiple episodes, including secret chambers unlocked by puzzle pieces for solo challenges offering advantages like Jeong Hyun-gyu's right to claim 10 pieces via the Knight's Tour puzzle or traps such as Lee Seung-hyun's early elimination from a failed hidden prison challenge, where incorrect solutions lead to immediate penalties or eliminations.[23]Contestants
The second season of The Devil's Plan, subtitled Death Room, features 14 contestants selected for their diverse expertise in entertainment, strategy, academia, and online influence, with two returnees bringing prior experience to leverage alliances and gameplay foresight. This cast expands on Season 1 by incorporating international participants and a higher proportion of gamers and digital influencers, fostering cross-cultural dynamics and varied strategic approaches in the high-stakes competition.[26] Chuu (singer)Kim Ji-woo, known professionally as Chuu, is a South Korean singer and former member of the girl group LOONA, debuting in 2018 before launching a solo career in 2023 with hits like "Heart Attack" and "Howl." Her background in the competitive K-pop industry, combined with appearances on variety shows such as Knowing Brothers and Chuu Can Do It, positions her as a charismatic strategist capable of building rapport through performance and quick social adaptation in team-based challenges.[26][27] Choi Hyun-joon (strategist)
Choi Hyun-joon is a South Korean model and KAIST graduate who ranked in the top 0.2% of France's Baccalauréat exam, showcasing analytical prowess from his engineering education. Having modeled for high-profile brands like Vogue and Saint Laurent, and appeared on You Quiz on the Block, he brings a calculated, intellectually driven approach to strategy, emphasizing logical decision-making and adaptability in competitive environments.[26][27] 7high (gamer)
Jung Seung-mook, better known as 7high, is a professional poker player, music producer, and DJ who has competed in high-stakes tournaments like the APT Poker Championship, honing skills in risk assessment and bluffing central to gaming strategy. Active in South Korea's hip-hop scene, his dual expertise in probabilistic thinking and creative production equips him to excel in games requiring deception and long-term planning.[26][27] Justin H. Min (actor)
Justin H. Min is an American actor of Korean descent, best known for roles in Netflix series like The Umbrella Academy and Beef, following a background in photography and a degree from Cornell University. As a UNICEF Ambassador since 2022, his international perspective and experience navigating diverse cultural narratives provide a unique edge in fostering global alliances and interpreting multifaceted social cues during the competition.[26][27] Kang Ji-young (host)
Kang Ji-young is a prominent South Korean announcer and former JTBC news anchor, having graduated from Indiana University and passed the American Institute of CPAs exam, which underscores her disciplined analytical mindset. With contributions to programs like JTBC Newsroom, Knowing Brothers, and You Quiz on the Block, she offers broadcasting savvy for clear communication and persuasion in group dynamics.[26][27] Kim Ha-rin (influencer)
Kim Ha-rin is a South Korean plastic surgeon and Yonsei University graduate, selected as a civilian contestant from over 1,000 applicants for her sharp intellect and winner's determination. Her medical background in high-pressure diagnostics translates to strategic precision, while her emerging influencer presence amplifies her ability to influence perceptions and alliances in social strategy games.[26][27] Kyuhyun (singer, returnee)
Cho Kyu-hyun, known as Kyuhyun, is a South Korean singer, actor, and television host who joined Super Junior in 2005, contributing to hits like "Sorry, Sorry" and starring in musicals alongside variety shows such as Running Man and Radio Star. As a returnee, his prior experience enhances his strategic role, leveraging vocal charisma and variety show-honed intuition for negotiation and performance-based tasks.[26][27] Lee Se-dol (Go player, returnee)
Lee Se-dol is a retired South Korean professional Go player who secured over 18 international titles before retiring in 2019, famously defeating AlphaGo in 2016 and now serving as a special professor at UNIST since 2025 while creating board games like Wizstone. His returnee status amplifies his unparalleled expertise in anticipatory strategy and pattern recognition, ideal for complex intellectual showdowns.[26][27] Lee Seung-hyun (YouTuber)
Lee Seung-hyun is a South Korean influencer and 2022 Miss Korea winner, holding a degree in economics from Korea University and known for her goal-oriented persona in reality formats. Her digital content creation, including YouTube engagements, equips her with skills in audience engagement and quick adaptability, making her a pivotal player in information-sharing and alliance-building scenarios.[26][27] Park Sang-yeon (actor)
Park Sang-yeon is a South Korean medical student at Yonsei University and a MENSA member who earned a gold medal at the 2021 International Physics Olympiad, representing intellectual rigor in scientific fields. Though pursuing acting interests, his analytical training positions him as a strategic asset in puzzles and ethical dilemmas requiring precise reasoning.[26][27] Son Eun-yoo (model)
Son Eun-yoo is a South Korean mergers and acquisitions lawyer, bringing non-celebrity expertise in high-stakes negotiations and contract analysis to the cast. Her professional background in deal-making fosters a sharp focus on risk evaluation and interpersonal leverage, enhanced by modeling aspirations that aid in poised social interactions.[26][27] Tinno (international player)
Tinno, a South Korean YouTuber running the channel @tinoreviews with over 6,800 subscribers, is an avid fan of strategic reality shows like The Devil's Plan. His international gaming and review content exposes him to global trends, providing a fresh outsider's perspective on tactics and an enthusiasm for dissecting competitive formats.[26][27] Yoon So-hee (actress)
Yoon So-hee is a South Korean actress and KAIST graduate with postgraduate studies at Catholic University, known for roles in dramas like Witch's Love and Heartbeat, as well as EXO's "Growl" music video and appearances on Running Man. Her academic foundation in engineering bolsters her strategic role, enabling analytical breakdowns in logic-heavy games.[26][27] Jeong Hyun-gyu (winner, professional)
Jeong Hyun-gyu (also spelled Jung Hyun-gyu) is a South Korean influencer and Seoul National University graduate, a MENSA member who gained nearly 800,000 Instagram followers following his appearance on Transit Love 2. His professional edge in reality TV navigation and high-IQ problem-solving highlights his potential as a calculated competitor in intellectual arenas.[26][27]
Episode Summaries
Episodes 1–2 (Day 1)The second season of The Devil's Plan, subtitled Death Room, opens with the introduction of 14 diverse contestants arriving at a lavish mansion, including K-pop idol Cho Kyu-hyun of Super Junior, actor Justin Min, former LOONA member CHUU, professional Go player Lee Se-dol, YouTuber Tinno, announcer Kang Ji-yeong, KAIST student Choi Hyun-joon, actress Yoon So-hee, poker player 7high, Miss Korea 2022 Lee Seung-hyun, Seoul National University student Jeong Hyun-gyu, lawyer Son Eun-yoo, physics Olympian Park Sang-yeon, and plastic surgeon Kim Ha-rin.[24][28] As players settle in, initial alliances form tentatively, with top performers like Kyu-hyun and Tinno emerging as strategic leaders. The first main game, Crooked Cops, unfolds as a high-stakes Mafia-style deception where players are secretly assigned roles as police, corrupt cops, or thieves; suspicions quickly mount as corrupt cops Kyu-hyun and Jeong Hyun-gyu coordinate with thieves Tinno and Yoon So-hee, aided by 7high's subtle interventions, to outmaneuver the group and secure 12 puzzle pieces divided among the winning team.[24][25] This victory divides the house into a luxurious living area for the winners—who select Lee Se-dol and Park Sang-yeon to join them, with Se-dol yielding his spot to Kang Ji-yeong—and a stark prison for the losers, heightening interpersonal tensions and whispers of betrayal.[24] In the prison match Remove One, the seven confined players engage in an 18-round card elimination game requiring precise number selection to avoid duplicates, where CHUU's early missteps lead to her swift exit as the first elimination, shocking the group and prompting immediate reevaluation of loyalties.[24][25] Hidden twists emerge as living area players discover a secret chamber unlocked by puzzle pieces, while the prison group uncovers a single-player chamber; Lee Seung-hyun volunteers for the latter, resulting in his hidden elimination and amplifying paranoia about unseen dangers in the Death Room setup.[24] The day's drama peaks with the corrupt cops and thieves solidifying their pact, but cracks appear as 7high's ambiguous role fuels suspicions among the police faction.[28] Episodes 3–4 (Day 2)
Day 2 intensifies with the revelation of hidden rules via puzzle-decoding clues, exposing mechanics like secret chambers that allow players to access advantages or risks without group knowledge, further eroding trust in the established alliances.[29][25] The main match, a strategic board game, sees Kang Ji-yeong triumph and claim luxury privileges, while Park Sang-yeon suffers defeat and is demoted to prison, where he feigns resentment to infiltrate the underdog group and plot revenge against the elite alliance.[24] Alliance fractures deepen as Justin Min maneuvers subtly to sow doubt among the corrupt cops and thieves, leveraging his outsider status to whisper about potential betrayals.[28] The prison match Time Auction unfolds as a bidding war for limited time advantages using accumulated tokens, with Kim Ha-rin securing victory at the cost of five pieces, but Park Sang-yeon's aggressive plays backfire, leading to his elimination and leaving the house reeling from the upset.[24][25] Jeong Hyun-gyu activates a hidden stage through the chamber, embarking on a solo challenge that promises buffs but risks unseen penalties, introducing a layer of solitary intrigue amid the group's fracturing dynamics.[29] The episodes close on heightened tension, as Sang-yeon's exit disrupts the prison faction's cohesion and forces realignments, with Justin Min's calculated interventions beginning to unravel the Day 1 pact.[28] Episodes 5–6 (Day 3)
As Day 3 begins, Jeong Hyun-gyu completes his hidden stage mission, The Knight's Tour, gaining a strategic edge that subtly influences subsequent plays without immediate detection.[29][30] The main match Halloween Monster demands players form pacts of up to three to "slay" virtual monsters on a battlefield for victory points and loot, fostering temporary alliances like Jeong Hyun-gyu, Choi Hyun-joon, and Kim Ha-rin's trio, alongside Kyu-hyun, Tinno, and Yoon So-hee's group, while Lee Se-dol and Justin Min operate independently, heightening the risk of isolation.[29][31] Drama escalates as pact members uncover rules allowing direct attacks on rivals, leading to Choi Hyun-joon's reluctant betrayal of Jeong to secure points, fracturing their partnership and amplifying mid-game paranoia.[29] The prison match Sniper Hold'em, a Texas Hold'em variant with "sniping" mechanics to steal cards, showcases masterful bluffs from Kang Ji-yeong, Son Eun-yoo, 7high, and Justin Min, who dominate the chip race to 75, resulting in Kim Ha-rin's elimination and Lee Se-dol's ousting from the main game, marking pivotal mid-season losses that reshape the field's power balance.[29][32][25] These episodes underscore the season's rapid pacing through international dynamics, with Justin Min's cross-cultural insights aiding his survival while exposing vulnerabilities in the original Korean-heavy alliance.[31] Episodes 7–8 (Day 4)
Day 4's main match Treasure Island transforms the mansion into a hunt for 10 hidden boxes using directional arrows, where players like Yoon So-hee uncover the elusive treasure box, granting her the ability to steal puzzle pieces—one each from Kang Ji-yeong and Son Eun-yoo, and two from 7high—igniting accusations of greed and further splintering groups.[29][25] Alliances teeter as Choi Hyun-joon weighs loyalty to Jeong Hyun-gyu against opportunistic thefts, while the international flavor adds tension with Tinno's bold moves clashing against more conservative strategies from players like 7high.[29] Justin Min's hunt yields only 20 points, leading to his elimination and prompting reflections on the perils of solo plays in a collaboration-heavy environment.[29][25] The prison match Triple Dice introduces high-risk gambles with colored dice predictions, including hidden red and blue variants that double or nullify outcomes; after four grueling rounds, Tinno's overconfidence results in his elimination, allowing survivors to return to the main house but leaving the group wary of escalating betrayals.[29][25] Yoon So-hee's thefts become a flashpoint, with stolen pieces fueling debates over fairness and strategy, as the remaining players—now narrowed and battle-hardened—navigate the Death Room's unforgiving twists.[29] Episodes 9–10 (Day 5)
With the field shrinking, Day 5's main match Balance Mancala requires precise piece placement in colored bowls to counter opponents' advances, where Choi Hyun-joon's decisive break from Jeong Hyun-gyu—citing a prison plot twist—secures his lead but deepens the rift, turning former allies into fierce adversaries.[29][25] The game highlights defensive prowess, as players like Yoon So-hee fortify positions against aggressive counters, emphasizing the season's theme of calculated risks over brute force.[29] Hidden stage impacts from earlier days resurface, subtly aiding Jeong's recovery and adding layers of intrigue to the narrowing contest.[29] The prison match Wall Go demands robust defenses on a vertical board, where survivors like Son Eun-yoo and 7high excel in blocking advances, leading to further eliminations that propel the group toward finalists: Yoon So-hee, Jeong Hyun-gyu, and Choi Hyun-joon.[25] These episodes capture the culmination of international alliances' strains, with Justin Min's prior exit underscoring how cross-cultural bluffs have evolved into overt confrontations, setting a tense stage for the endgame.[31] Episodes 11–12 (Day 6 and Finale)
Day 6 erupts in the main match Doubt and Bet, a psychological risk game where finalists wager coins on guesses about opponents' hidden cards, with Yoon So-hee and Jeong Hyun-gyu repeatedly betting two coins each in a nail-biting exchange of bluffs and second-guessing that tests their resolve.[33][25] Choi Hyun-joon's aggressive plays force a three-way deadlock, amplified by lingering hidden stage effects that grant Jeong an unforeseen advantage, leading to Choi's elimination and intensifying the drama as betrayals from prior days resurface in accusations.[12][25] The episode builds unbearable suspense through rapid pacing, contrasting Season 1's slower builds with immediate, high-stakes international mind games.[33] The finale resolves in a three-game showdown, culminating in the prison match Equation Pyramid, a mentally taxing puzzle where players construct escalating equations for points; Jeong Hyun-gyu's superior strategy prevails, securing his win over Yoon So-hee and claiming the 380 million KRW prize after a gripping resolution that rewards endurance and adaptability.[12][33][25] Hidden twists from throughout the season, including chamber activations, prove decisive, underscoring the Death Room's theme of unseen perils and triumphant cunning.[29]
Eliminations and Piece Distribution
In Season 2 of The Devil's Plan, titled Death Room, the elimination process was structured around six main matches, each followed by prison challenges that heightened the risk of removal, contributing to greater volatility compared to the first season's format. With 14 contestants starting from zero pieces, eliminations occurred through direct losses in main games or prison matches, while pieces—representing shares of the 500 million KRW prize pool—were gained via match rewards, hidden missions, and strategic actions like steals, often leading to dramatic swings in standings. This system emphasized survival in living quarters auctions and prison escapes, where low-piece holders faced immediate peril, resulting in 12 eliminations over the six days before the finale.[25] The elimination timeline unfolded as follows: On Day 1, following the "Crooked Cops" main match with no direct eliminations, Chuu was removed in the first prison match ("Remove One"). A hidden prison stage that day also eliminated Lee Seung-hyun. On Day 2, after the second main match ("Unknown") spared all, Park Sang-yeon was eliminated in the prison's "Time Auction." Day 3 saw Lee Se-dol exit via the "Halloween Monster" main match, with Kim Ha-rin following in the prison's "Sniper Hold’em." Day 4 featured Justin H. Min's elimination in the "Treasure Island" main match and Tinno's in the prison's "Triple Dice." On Day 5, Kyuhyun was ousted in the "Balance Mancala" main match, and Kang Ji-young in the prison's "Wall Go." Finally, Day 6's "Doubt and Bet" main match eliminated Son Eun-yoo and 7high, with Choi Hyun-joon removed in the prison's "Equation Pyramid." This left Jeong Hyun-gyu and Yoon So-hee as the two finalists, each holding 14 pieces.[34][25] Piece distribution began with all contestants at zero and evolved through daily main match rewards (typically 1-2 pieces for top performers), prison victories (1 piece for first place), and special events like hidden missions. Notable gains included Jeong Hyun-gyu's acquisition of 10 pieces from the Knight's Tour hidden stage (completed on Day 3 and claimed on Day 5), and Choi Hyun-joon's 9 pieces from a key-finding mission in the prison block on Day 3. Losses were severe, such as forfeiting all but one piece in failed hidden challenges or transfers upon elimination—e.g., Lee Se-dol's pieces went to Choi Hyun-joon after Day 3. Steals added unpredictability; in the Day 4 "Treasure Island" match, Yoon So-hee, as the treasure discoverer, stole four pieces total (one from Kang Ji-young, one from Son Eun-yoo, and two from 7high). By the finale, these mechanics had concentrated pieces among survivors, with Jeong Hyun-gyu amassing 14 through consistent wins and claims.[34][35] The following table summarizes key piece changes for select contestants, highlighting volatility through representative daily shifts (full tracking spanned all 14 players, but examples focus on high-impact events):| Contestant | Starting Pieces | Notable Gains/Losses | Final Pieces (Pre-Finale) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jeong Hyun-gyu | 0 | +10 from Knight's Tour hidden stage (completed Day 3, claimed Day 5); various main match rewards | 14 |
| Yoon So-hee | 0 | +4 (Day 4 treasure discovery); +1-2 per main wins (Days 1-6) | 14 |
| Choi Hyun-joon | 0 | +9 (Day 3 prison key mission); + pieces from Lee Se-dol transfer | 0 (eliminated Day 6) |
| Kang Ji-young | 0 | Main match rewards; -1 (stolen by Yoon So-hee, Day 4) | 0 (eliminated Day 5) |
| Son Eun-yoo | 0 | Minor rewards; -1 (stolen by Yoon So-hee, Day 4) | 0 (eliminated Day 6) |