The Netflix series Squid Game is generating a lot of buzz due to its popularity. It has surpassed the most successful series on the OTT platform, including Stranger Things, Money Heist and others. While the tournament is getting a real-life counterpart that will be performed in the UAE, and fans around the world replicate their own variations of the Squid Game, guaranteeing stardom as their clips go viral, schools and educators are having a hard time dealing with the series.


Families in the u.k. have been told not to allow their children watch the Netflix comedy Squid Game, thus according sources. Following complaints that children as young as six and seven years old were replicating its violent challenges, the vote went into force. Central Bedfordshire council's education safety team encouraged parents and families to "be watchful" because "children and teenagers are replicating games and brutality from Netflix show Squid Game."


What's most disturbing is that youngsters aren't simply playing games; they're also employing actual aggression to "penalize" those who fail the game as an option to murdering. The red light, green light, or grandma's footsteps is the most big trend, in which players seek to cross the finish line when the gamesmaster's back is against the wall to them. Children in a Belgian school said last month that instead of killing those who moved, they were bashing them up.


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