Squid Game Season 3 Predictions: The Astrological Collision of Player 456 and the Front Man | BgRemovit
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Squid Game Season 3 Predictions: The Astrological Collision of Player 456 and the Front Man
Predicting the Squid Game Season 3 ending through Six Star Astrology. Discover how the destiny charts of Gi-hun and the Front Man reveal the final game's fate.
The world is holding its breath for the final blood-soaked geometric shapes to fall into place. When the conversation turns to Squid Game Season 3 predictions, the discourse usually devolves into Reddit theories about hidden siblings, secret VIPs, or elaborate revenge plots. But to truly understand the impending endgame between Seong Gi-hun (Player 456) and Hwang In-ho (the Front Man), we have to look deeper than the script. We have to look at the foundational destiny charts of these two men.
The survival arena is not just a physical location; it is a karmic crucible. By applying the principles of what Six Star Astrology actually is to their canonical in-universe birth years, a chillingly precise blueprint of the series finale emerges. This isn't a battle of wits or a standard action-thriller revenge arc. It is a locked-room collision between two destiny types that are fundamentally incompatible, operating inside a forced void where the normal rules of luck and logic no longer apply.
The Birth of a Survivor: Seong Gi-hun’s Jupiter (+) Chart
Let’s start with the survivor. In the show’s established lore, Seong Gi-hun was born on October 31, 1974. When we run 1974 through the full system Kazuko Hosoki built, Gi-hun emerges as a textbook Jupiter (+) type.
Jupiters are the stubborn humanists of the zodiac. They are driven by an unyielding moral compass, and they prioritize emotional bonds over cold logic. In the context of a hyper-capitalist death game, this should have been a fatal flaw. Yet, in Season 1, it was Gi-hun’s ultimate salvation. He survived not through tactical brilliance or physical dominance, but through a chaotic, desperate empathy. He formed alliances with the old, the weak, and the outcasts when the brutal math of the arena demanded otherwise.
Jupiter (+) individuals are deeply tied to the concept of the collective. They suffer immensely when isolated, which explains Gi-hun’s severe depressive spiral after winning the games and returning to an empty home. His iconic red hair at the end of the first season wasn't just a stylistic choice; astrologically, red is the activation color for a dormant Jupiter, signaling a shift from passive survival to aggressive, fiery rebellion. He is returning to the games not to win a prize, but to fulfill the highest calling of his star type: tearing down an unjust authority.
The Architect of Despair: Hwang In-ho’s Saturn (+) Destiny
Across the chasm stands his dark mirror, Hwang In-ho. Police files retrieved by his brother in the first season reveal the Front Man was born in 1976. This birth year makes him a Saturn (+) type, and the contrast with Gi-hun is nothing short of staggering.
Saturns are the solitary architects of the Six Star system. They possess immense capability, visionary focus, and an almost frightening ability to detach from conventional human morality. A Saturn thrives in isolation, building rigid, idealized systems to make sense of a chaotic world. For In-ho, the games aren't just a bloodsport for the wealthy; they are a perfectly balanced ecosystem of "fairness" that the outside world utterly lacks.
As a former police officer, In-ho sought absolute order. When the real world failed to provide it, his Saturnian drive pushed him to enforce it in the underground. Saturn (+) types are infamous for their willingness to sacrifice personal ties for the sake of their ideological frameworks—a trait brutally demonstrated when In-ho executed his own brother to protect the integrity of the games. He is not a villain of passion; he is a villain of structure.
The Arena as a Literal Daisakkai Crucible
But the true genius of the show’s narrative structure is how it weaponizes time and space. The survival arena operates completely outside the bounds of normal society, functioning as a literal, physical manifestation of the Daisakkai / Great Calamity Period.
In Six Star Astrology, the Daisakkai is a devastating three-year void where karma reverses and ordinary rules violently break down. During this period, the universe strips away wealth, status, and external advantages, forcing individuals into a pure, karmic survival state. The games do exactly this: billionaires become spectators, while desperate debtors are stripped of their names, dressed in identical tracksuits, and forced to navigate lethal childhood games.
When you examine the 12-year fortune cycle, surviving the Daisakkai requires surrendering your ego. Those who enter this void with rigid plans or arrogant assumptions are inevitably shattered. In-ho believes he controls the Daisakkai because he built its walls, but a Saturn's greatest vulnerability is the delusion that they can engineer fate. The arena is a void, and the void eventually consumes its architect.
The Saturn-Jupiter Collision: Compatibility and Ruin
So, who survives the final polarity reversal? Season 3 promises a head-to-head showdown between a Jupiter (+) and a Saturn (+). If we examine compatibility by star type, this specific pairing is historically volatile and inherently destructive.
Saturn builds the indestructible system; Jupiter is the chaotic, emotional force that refuses to conform to it. In a short-term conflict, Saturn almost always wins because their logic is airtight and their execution is ruthless. But in a war of attrition—which is exactly what Season 3 represents—Jupiter’s sheer, stubborn endurance begins to crack the foundation.
The Front Man’s fatal flaw in the endgame will be his Saturnian arrogance. He relies on the belief that human nature can be perfectly quantified, predicted, and controlled by geometric rules and psychological pressure. Gi-hun’s Jupiter nature guarantees he will not try to outsmart the system on its own terms. He won't play 4D chess with the Front Man. Instead, he will try to break the system's heart. Gi-hun will introduce an element of irrational, self-sacrificing humanity that In-ho’s algorithms cannot process, causing the Saturnian architecture to collapse under the weight of its own rigidity.
Season 3 Endgame: Who Breaks First?
The fate of Player 456 and the Front Man was written in their birth years long before they ever stepped onto the blood-stained dirt of the arena. Gi-hun’s messy, irrational humanity is the exact astrological counterweight to In-ho’s cold, isolated perfection.
As we prepare for the final game, the charts suggest a mutual destruction of the system itself, rather than a simple, triumphant victory for one man. Saturn (+) and Jupiter (+) cannot coexist in the same space; one must annihilate the other's worldview. In-ho will likely face a moment where his rigid rules demand an action he can no longer justify, breaking his spirit. Gi-hun will likely dismantle the games, but at the cost of carrying the karmic weight of the void forever.
Destiny isn’t just a game of chance; it’s a calculation. The forces that drive us to build systems or burn them down are embedded in our charts. If you want to know what forces are driving your own survival story—and whether you are fated to be an architect of order or an agent of empathy—you can find your own Six Star destiny chart and see what the cycle holds for you.
Sources
Hosoki, Kazuko. Rokusei Senjutsu: The Book of Destiny. (Foundational texts on Jupiter and Saturn polarity traits).
Astrological compatibility matrices regarding the Saturn-Jupiter conflict in Eastern destiny reading.
Squid Game Season 1 canon: Seong Gi-hun's birthdate (October 31, 1974) and Hwang In-ho's birth year (1976) as seen in police files.