Made in Korea Episode 6 shows why Season 1 is not an ending but a prologue.
Season 1 Is Not an Ending, but a Prologue
Season 1 of Made in Korea concludes after six episodes, yet it never feels like a complete story. Rather than resolving conflicts, it pauses after clearly showing who controls the board. The finale functions less as a conclusion and more as a rearrangement of power, setting the stage for what follows.

Prosecutor vs Intelligence Agent: Two Very Different Kinds of Power
At the center of the series is the confrontation between prosecutor Jang Geon-young and Central Intelligence agent Baek Gi-tae. Jang believes in law, procedure, and moral clarity. Baek, on the other hand, understands how power actually works. This difference defines the entire season and becomes decisive in Episode 6.


Episode 6 Begins with Fabrication and Fear
In Episode 6, Baek Gi-tae has Jang Geon-young and his sister Jang Hye-eun taken into custody after learning that Jang approached his younger brother. Hye-eun’s workplace, a dye factory in Gimpo, is fabricated into a communist spy hub. A guitar teacher is framed as a North Korean agent, and Hye-eun is accused of managing espionage funds. Soon, Jang himself is trapped inside an anti-communist narrative with no clear escape.
This sequence defines Baek Gi-tae’s character. Truth is irrelevant to him. What matters is creating a structure of fear that leaves no room to fight back.

Political Lines Collide in Made in Korea Episode 6
The prosecution pushes back, furious that the intelligence agency dared to touch one of their own. They activate Chief Secretary Na Yong-cheol, who is in open rivalry with security chief Cheon Seok-jung. Pressured by Na—and angered that Baek acted without approval—Cheon orders Jang’s release.
At this point, Jang is no longer just a prosecutor. He becomes a political weapon, chosen to strike at Cheon Seok-jung.

The Tape That Was Supposed to Change Everything
Jang’s strategy hinges on a recorded tape. He believes Baek secretly recorded Cheon while delivering bribes. If the tape surfaces, Cheon would abandon Baek, and Baek would collapse to survive. Arrests follow, including drug traffickers Kang Dae-il and Baek So-young. The intelligence agency is raided. For a moment, it appears Jang has won.

The Truth on the Tape: Made in Korea Episode 6 Turns the Game
The victory is an illusion. The tape does not expose Cheon Seok-jung. Instead, it contains evidence of Na Yong-cheol’s corruption. At the same time, Jang learns that his own investigative partner was Baek Gi-tae’s planted informant. From the beginning, every move Jang made had already been anticipated.
Kang Dae-il dies. Evidence is planted. Jang is arrested on bribery charges.

The Ending of Made in Korea Episode 6: Evil Wins
Season 1 ends with Baek Gi-tae ascending to the position of Busan branch chief of the Central Intelligence Agency. Jang Geon-young is defeated, disgraced, and silenced. Justice does not fail because it lacked conviction—but because it never understood the game.

What Made in Korea Episode 6 Sets Up for Season 2
Season 2 is expected to jump forward in time, eventually reaching the events of October 26, 1979. The series has consistently rewritten history through the fictional figure of Baek Gi-tae, raising the possibility that he may ultimately replace real historical actors at the center of national tragedy.
Baek Gi-tae is not a subordinate who was used by power. He is someone who chose power in order to survive. That makes him disturbing—and unsettlingly convincing.
Final Verdict: Made in Korea Episode 6 and Season 1
Made in Korea excels in atmosphere, period detail, and its depiction of power struggles between institutions. However, the pacing often drags, and the tonal imbalance between characters—especially the growing weight of Baek Gi-tae versus the increasingly light portrayal of Jang—undermines immersion.
Still, for viewers drawn to political crime dramas and morally uncomfortable narratives, Season 1 remains worth watching. It may not end loudly, but it ends cold—and that feels intentional.
Official Streaming & Verified Resources
Made in Korea — Official Disney+ Page
https://www.disneyplus.com/
Hyun Bin
https://www.vastenm.com/theme/vaste/02/artists01_view.php?type=top&no=2
Woo Sung Jung
https://www.instagram.com/tojws/#
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Made in Korea Powerful Episodes 1–2 │ Ambition Ignites
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Made in Korea Episodes 3–4 Review: Brutal Power Games Exposed
https://gokwv.com/made-in-korea-episodes-3-4-review/
Made in Korea Episode 5 Review: A Powerful Turning Point
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