Netflix Presents: Street Combat — Song Hye Kyo & Suga Unleashed..

Neon bleeds into rain-slicked asphalt as Seoul exhales after midnight. This is a city that never truly sleeps—it stalks, listens, waits. In the underbelly where back-alley fight clubs thrive and power brokers trade favors like bruises, two legends step out of the shadows. Street Combat — Song Hye Kyo & Suga Unleashed isn’t just a collision of star power; it’s a reckoning.
Song Hye Kyo reinvents herself as Han Seo-rin, a former prosecutor who vanished after exposing a corruption ring that reached the highest floors of the city. Thought broken, presumed gone, Seo-rin returns hardened and precise, trading courtrooms for concrete. She doesn’t fight for spectacle; she fights to dismantle systems that thrive on fear. Every movement is measured, every strike a sentence passed without appeal.
Opposite her is Min Yoon-gi, known on the streets as AGUST, a producer-turned-underground tactician whose mind is as lethal as his fists. Once a musical prodigy swallowed by debt and betrayal, AGUST now runs information like beats—clean, sharp, and devastating. He hears patterns in chaos, predicting attacks before they land. His style is raw and relentless, a mix of street brawling and disciplined martial flow that turns combat into choreography.
When a shadow syndicate called The Meridian resurfaces—controlling illegal fights, laundering money, and erasing lives—Seo-rin and AGUST are forced into an uneasy alliance. Their goals differ, but the enemy is shared. Each episode peels back layers of the city and the characters themselves, weaving flashbacks of ambition, loss, and the moments that broke them open. Trust is earned the hard way, in bruises and near misses, in silent nods before the next round begins.
The fights are visceral and intimate. No slow-motion glamour—just breath, sweat, and the thud of bodies meeting pavement. Abandoned warehouses glow under flickering lights. Rooftops become arenas where the city skyline bears witness. Sound design pulses like a heartbeat, blending industrial noise with AGUST’s original score—tracks that blur the line between battle music and confession.
But Street Combat isn’t only about fists. It’s about control: who holds it, who loses it, and who dares to take it back. Seo-rin’s calm masks a fury sharpened by injustice. AGUST’s swagger hides a relentless need to prove that survival can still sound like victory. Together, they challenge The Meridian’s leader in a final arc that pits strategy against savagery, truth against spectacle.
As alliances fracture and secrets surface, one truth becomes unavoidable: the streets don’t forgive, but they remember. And when Song Hye Kyo and Suga are unleashed, Seoul will never be the same.
No rules. No mercy. Only resolve.
Coming soon, only on Netflix.
Neon bleeds into rain-slicked asphalt as Seoul exhales after midnight. This is a city that never truly sleeps—it stalks, listens, waits. In the underbelly where back-alley fight clubs thrive and power brokers trade favors like bruises, two legends step out of the shadows. Street Combat — Song Hye Kyo & Suga Unleashed isn’t just a collision of star power; it’s a reckoning.
Song Hye Kyo reinvents herself as Han Seo-rin, a former prosecutor who vanished after exposing a corruption ring that reached the highest floors of the city. Thought broken, presumed gone, Seo-rin returns hardened and precise, trading courtrooms for concrete. She doesn’t fight for spectacle; she fights to dismantle systems that thrive on fear. Every movement is measured, every strike a sentence passed without appeal.
Opposite her is Min Yoon-gi, known on the streets as AGUST, a producer-turned-underground tactician whose mind is as lethal as his fists. Once a musical prodigy swallowed by debt and betrayal, AGUST now runs information like beats—clean, sharp, and devastating. He hears patterns in chaos, predicting attacks before they land. His style is raw and relentless, a mix of street brawling and disciplined martial flow that turns combat into choreography.
When a shadow syndicate called The Meridian resurfaces—controlling illegal fights, laundering money, and erasing lives—Seo-rin and AGUST are forced into an uneasy alliance. Their goals differ, but the enemy is shared. Each episode peels back layers of the city and the characters themselves, weaving flashbacks of ambition, loss, and the moments that broke them open. Trust is earned the hard way, in bruises and near misses, in silent nods before the next round begins.
The fights are visceral and intimate. No slow-motion glamour—just breath, sweat, and the thud of bodies meeting pavement. Abandoned warehouses glow under flickering lights. Rooftops become arenas where the city skyline bears witness. Sound design pulses like a heartbeat, blending industrial noise with AGUST’s original score—tracks that blur the line between battle music and confession.
But Street Combat isn’t only about fists. It’s about control: who holds it, who loses it, and who dares to take it back. Seo-rin’s calm masks a fury sharpened by injustice. AGUST’s swagger hides a relentless need to prove that survival can still sound like victory. Together, they challenge The Meridian’s leader in a final arc that pits strategy against savagery, truth against spectacle.
As alliances fracture and secrets surface, one truth becomes unavoidable: the streets don’t forgive, but they remember. And when Song Hye Kyo and Suga are unleashed, Seoul will never be the same.
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