The long-anticipated Squid Game: The Challenge TV show on Netflix has finally hit the airwaves, albeit with some controversy along the way in regard to the set conditions while filming.
The competition reality show is based on the original South Korean drama of the same name, wherein contestants are pitted against each other through grueling (and oftentimes fatal) challenges as they compete for the grand prize.
While no one on the reality show has actually died, the 456 contestants on the show have served some realness, including a fierce real-life "Red Light, Green Light" game popularized in the original show.
Out of the almost 500 people participating in the show, a handful of queer contenders have made a splash, a few of whom are actually doing quite well in the competition so far.
Although we're only five episodes into the season, here's a look at all the LGBTQ+ contestants we know about.
Roy Keane has been a prominent figure in the ITV studio throughout Euro 2024 and he was at it again with a hilarious quip in the build-up to England's last 16 clash
Lady Kitty Spencer has finally revealed the unique name she's chosen for her baby daughter in a sweet new post on Instagram, as royal fans gush over the 'beautiful' moniker
Former Loose Woman Carol McGiffin has opened up with her true thoughts about Ruth Langsford and Eamonn Holmes' split - two people she is friends with and admits she 'loves' equally
When someone tried – and failed – to burn down a bus garage in Prague earlier this month, the unsuccessful arson attack didn’t draw much attention. Until, that is, Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala revealed it was “very likely” that Moscow was behind it.
East Preston feels an unlikely stronghold of benefits dependency. The genteel village on the West Sussex coast might be the closest thing that Britain has to a moneyed pensioner utopia.
Glastonbury viewers were left disappointed by Shania Twain's performance at the music festival as they took to social media to declare the icon had been 'thrown under the bus'
The decision to give the Duke of Sussex a sports award named after an American war hero killed in Afghanistan has been criticised by the soldier’s mother.