If you travelled in or out of Birmingham or Manchester this weekend, you may have been in for a fright as the creepy doll from Netflix’s Squid Game arrived in the cities.
The three-metre-tall doll from the hit Korean series was on display at Birmingham New Street Station and Manchester’s Trafford Centre on Saturday.
The doll, accompanied by the iconic masked guards in dark pink suits, attracted large groups of onlookers and fans of the show to both locations.
Fans waited in long queues to take pictures with the doll, which was complete with 360-degree rotating head, light-up eyes and an eerie singing voice.
Sign up to our new free Indy100 weekly newsletter
Fans were also given the chance to try to carve the dalgona cookies featured in the show, without the threat of a brutal death, of course.
People took to Twitter to express their excitement, shock and fear of the creepy doll.
Am I really tempted to go to Birmingham just so I can see the Squid Game doll...
— amy (@aimes_lou) November 4, 2021
You bet I am
Going through Birmingham new st and there’s a 10ft tall version of the creepy doll from #SquidGame pic.twitter.com/w1LqDwq90N
— Michael Grimwood (@MichaelGrimwoo5) November 6, 2021
#SquidGame in Birmingham oh my word 😭 pic.twitter.com/cg5GlVoUIc
— Koenji (@KoenjiUK) November 6, 2021
The doll was also seen in London’s Westfield shopping centre in Shepherd’s Bush on Halloween.
Squid Game is Netflix’s most popular show, amassing 111 million views in its first few weeks of release.
The thriller follows gambling addict Seong Gi-hun, played by Lee Jung-jae, as he and 455 other debt-ridden players compete in the lethal squid games in hopes of winning a 45.6 billion Won (£28.2 million) cash prize.