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Japan’s Answer to Squid Game: A Brutal New Series Unveiled


It’s easy to see why Squid Game became a worldwide phenomenon. Netflix’s survival thriller transformed the death game genre into mainstream entertainment, inspiring countless projects across television, film, and anime. But while Korea’s global hit dominated headlines, Japan already had one of the genre’s strongest modern stories waiting in the wings.

Now, seven years after its anime adaptation premiered in 2020, Darwin’s Game is finally making the leap to live action. With a theatrical release locked in for March 12, 2027, an experienced director behind the camera, and cutting-edge visual effects, the film could introduce one of manga’s most brutal survival stories to an even wider audience.

Darwin’s Game Finally Returns After Years Away

Darwin’s Game began serialization in Akita Shoten’s Bessatsu Shōnen Champion in December 2012 before concluding in October 2023 after 125 chapters and an epilogue. Across its run, the series was collected into 30 volumes and surpassed 10 million copies in circulation by early 2024, cementing its place among modern survival manga success stories.

The franchise’s anime adaptation aired for just 11 episodes between January and March 2020. Despite attracting attention on Crunchyroll, the series never received another season, leaving many viewers wondering whether the story had reached a dead end. Instead, the property quietly disappeared while the manga continued building its fanbase.

That silence is finally ending. Toei has officially announced a live-action film adaptation arriving in Japanese theaters on March 12, 2027. The first teaser shows off the franchise’s deadly supernatural battles while confirming that the story’s signature “Sigil” abilities will play a huge role on the big screen.

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Japan’s Answer to Squid Game Has Its Own Identity

Comparisons to Squid Game are inevitable because both stories trap ordinary people in deadly competitions where survival comes at a terrible cost. But Darwin’s Game distinguishes itself by blending life-or-death games with supernatural powers rather than relying only on psychological manipulation. Every participant possesses a unique “Sigil,” creating battles that feel closer to superhero combat than traditional survival horror.

The story follows Kaname Sudo, an ordinary student who accepts an invitation to a mysterious mobile app. Instead of finding a harmless game, he is thrown into a real-world contest where players kill each other using extraordinary abilities. Kaname’s own Sigil allows him to recreate and weaponize objects he touches, forcing him to grow from an average teenager into someone capable of surviving increasingly impossible encounters.

Rather than focusing only on violence, the series also explores trust, loyalty, and the emotional strain of living in constant danger. Characters form alliances out of necessity, but every partnership carries risk because betrayal can arrive at any moment. That balance between explosive action and human drama helped the manga maintain momentum throughout its decade-long run.

An Experienced Creative Team Leads Darwin’s Game’s Adaptation

Leading the adaptation is director Fumihiko Sori, whose resume includes Ping Pong, the live-action Fullmetal Alchemist films, and Hakkenden. Sori has emphasized that the movie tells the origin of a new hero while using large-scale visual effects to bring the supernatural Sigils to life. Given his extensive experience with effects-heavy productions, Darwin’s Game appears well suited to his filmmaking style.

The cast is equally ambitious. Taishi Nakagawa stars as Kaname alongside Kōki as the undefeated fighter Shuka, Mei Hata as the analytical Rain, Fuju Kamio as Ryuji, and Koji Yamamoto as Hiiragi. Promotional materials highlight each character unleashing their signature abilities, suggesting the adaptation intends to embrace the manga’s larger-than-life combat instead of toning it down.

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What is possibly the most encouraging sign comes from creators FLIPFLOPs themselves. Rather than demanding a scene-for-scene recreation, the manga duo encouraged the filmmakers to prioritize making the strongest possible movie. That creative freedom, combined with modern visual effects and a property already proven through more than 10 million manga copies, gives Darwin’s Game an opportunity to become Japan’s next standout survival thriller, arriving at a time when audiences are hungry for high-stakes death game stories.


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Release Date

2020 – 2019

Network

AT-X, Tokyo MX, Gunma TV, BS11, ABEMA

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Ai Kayano

    Xuelan Liu (voice)

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Taku Yashiro

    Riuuji (voice)

  • Cast Placeholder Image

    Yusuke Kobayashi

    Kaname (voice)


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Sarah Parker
Sarah Parker is a research analyst and content contributor with a strong interest in business strategy, organizational behavior, and social development. With a background in sociology and public policy, she focuses on exploring the intersection between research and real-world application. Sarah regularly contributes articles that bridge academic insights and practical relevance, aiming to foster critical thinking and innovation across sectors.