What Is “The Genius”?

The Geniusis a South Korean season-long elimination-based serial game show like no other.

Each season starts with 13 contestants who have been invited—yes, hand-picked and invited by the producers—on the basis of certain special qualities that have allowed them to excel in their respective fields.

The first season brings a state politician with social cunning, a web comic artist with out-of-the-box creativity, a world-class professional gamer, and more.

Every episode ofThe Geniusis comprised of two games, with a unique game each episode.

The first game is the Main Match, in which everyone participates and vies for first place to win a Token of Life.

The loser of the Main Match is sent to the Death Match—the second game of the episode—and must choose an opponent to play against, but cannot choose someone if they hold the Token of Life.

Whoever loses the Death Match is eliminated from the season.

What kinds of games are played in Main Matches?

Well, Main Matches are designed to create tension between individual success and the need to work with others.

The games always have some element of hidden information, and players must navigate alliances and betrayals as they share information (or lies) with each other.

Mental acuity is needed to win, but lack of social finesse can result in everyone else ganging up on a player, and even the strongest player can fall when left stranded.

As for Death Matches, they also involve wit as players verse each other one-on-one, but they can also involve social elements.

For example, the remaining players whoaren’tin the Death Match may still be able to influence the outcome, and so it’s up to the at-risk players to build and maintain alliances to the very end.

Players must also manage Garnets, which is a special currency that’s earned by winning games and can be traded in for cash at the end of the season—but only if you’re the last one remaining.

The moment you’re eliminated, so too are your Garnets. Garnets are extremely valuable (worth $1,000 each) allowing for a huge grand prize if players play their hands well.

Why “The Genius” Is So Gripping

The Geniusis a microcosm of the human experience, distilled down to 90-minute episodes that are just plain fascinating to watch.

The games, the players, the teamwork, the betrayals—all of it keeps you on edge from start to finish.

And while the Main Matches and Death Matches are extremely fun to figure out and play along with, it’s the people ofThe Geniuswho are the most interesting to watch.

At the start of a season, you have no idea who anyone is (unless you’re in tune with South Korean culture, I suppose).

All you know is that this woman is a professional pool player, that guy is a record producer, this other woman is a television announcer, that other guy is a vocalist and entertainer, and so on.

But as you watch them interact on screen, you begin to form bonds with them, either as protagonists or antagonists—as you would when watching any reality show.

But the difference withThe Geniusis that these are truly smart people doing truly smart things as they fight for survival in an ever-evolving battle of deception and craftiness.

None of the drama inThe Geniusis falsely manufactured, and that’s the beauty of it.

The design of the Main Matches, the Death Matches, the threat of elimination, the need for teamwork and compromise without risking your own individual standing—it all comes together in a way thatnaturallycauses tension, and tension causes drama, and drama is fun to watch.

I’m talking about drama in the narrative sense, not sensationalized bickering. These are real people, and they always treat each other with respect like real people. The kind of drama you see onThe Geniusis nothing like the “drama” you see onThe Jersey Shore.

And what about the games? Yeah, they’re amazing.

If you’ve ever playedThe ResistanceorCouporSecret Hitleror any of the manybluffing and social deduction games out there, then you know what kind of fun they can be.

Now, imagine that but amped up to an even larger scale: 13 players who are all geniuses in their own unique ways, all trying to outsmart each other without giving themselves away.

And with stakes as high as the Garnets-based grand prize, every game will have you thinking and re-thinking what’s going on in everyone’s minds as you chew at your fingernails and sit with eyes glued to the screen.

It’s a wholly unique cutthroat-yet-strangely-wholesome reality game show experience. If you’re a fan of board games and social games, you have to watchThe Genius. You’re doing yourself a huge disservice if you don’t.

Related:Why Korean variety shows are so addictive

How to Start WatchingThe Genius

Four total seasons ofThe Geniusaired between 2013 and 2015:

Each season beyond the first introduces a slight twist to make things even more interesting. I personally think the third and fourth seasons were the best—at least in terms of cast, player interactions, and game designs—but they’re all extremely fun.

As of this writing, all seasons ofThe Geniuscan be watched via Mega usingthis Reddit threadwith each episode subbed in English.

Unfortunately,The Geniusisn’t available for purchase on any marketplace or streaming platform that I know of. If you know of a place whereThe Geniuscan be watched legally, please let me know in the comments.

Read next:The most addictive Korean variety shows

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“The Genius” Is a Smart, Gripping Reality Game Show for Board Gamers

A mysterious masked man oversees the games in The Genius

Alliances often shift over the course of a game

Some players know how to play, others are played

Tensions rise as players grow suspicious and trust erodes

In the end, the game results are all that matter

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