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Call of Duty’s $28 Squid Game skins are the perfect crossover for our capitalist dystopia, and Activision knows exactly what it’s doing

It wasn’t long after the first series of Squid Game aired that we started to see its unsubtle anti-capitalist message twisted by the very types of people it attempted to skewer, and just as quickly came the takes mocking the executives, marketers and corporations for their lack of self-awareness. But as ever, the joke is really on us.

Of course it’s extremely tempting to imagine Netflix suits, Activision‘s marketing army or MrBeast as clueless idiots who didn’t understand what Squid Game was trying to say (very loudly), thus spawning multiple real-life knock-offs and collab skins for Call of Duty; just as it’s tempting to ascribe the success of the show to its potent takedown of modern capitalism, rather than its stylishness and gratuitous violence. But neither of those characterisations are true.

(Image credit: Activision)

What is true is that the message is completely irrelevant. Squid Game has been hugely successful and made a lot of people a lot of money. That’s all that matters in the eyes of Netflix and Activision. The people coming up with these campaigns aren’t blind to what Squid Game says about society, but they also know that fan culture turns people into whales, and that its popularity alone is enough to overwhelm any criticisms about these companies missing the point.

In a fairy tale utopia, fans of Squid Game would have no truck with these collaborations or crossovers, because they are disgusting, but time and time again we have shown a willingness to lap this gruel up with wild abandon, merrily spending our own money to promote and enrich random brands and media. There is nothing they can’t sell us.

I’m not talking about the ‘hey, you can play Fortnite as Spider-Man now’ stuff, even if that is ultimately advertising for Sony and Marvel that you’re paying for, but rather the more nakedly capitalistic collabs, like Aston Martin’s deal with PUBG, or FF14 players spending $20 on bubble tea to earn a subtle reskin of a flying pig. The kind of things that are overt marketing campaigns where we spend money to raise an unrelated brand’s profile.

(Image credit: Sqaure Enix)

Sure, when it’s all laid out in a vacuum it does seem ridiculous. People are spending $28 to advertise a Netflix show where the premise emphasises the complete disregard capitalism—and the people it elevates—has for humanity. The participants in the games are stripped of their dignity and transformed into playthings for the ultra wealthy.

People are spending $28 to advertise a Netflix show where the premise emphasises the complete disregard capitalism—and the people it elevates—has for humanity.


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