‘Made in Korea‘ is coming back for a second season, and this time the battle at its center looks even more brutal.

On April 28, The Walt Disney Company Korea confirmed that ‘Made in Korea Season 2’ will premiere in the second half of 2026. While the first season unfolded in the 1970s, the follow-up will move the story forward by nine years, opening a new chapter shaped by deeper ambition, harsher conflict, and characters who appear more dangerous than before.
That time jump already suggests a bigger shift in tone. Season 2 is not being presented as a simple continuation, but as an escalation.
According to the announcement, the next season will again center on Baek Ki-tae, played by Hyun Bin, now standing at the height of power.
Alongside him, Jang Geon-young (Jung Woo-sung) and Baek Ki-hyun (Woo Do-hwan) are set to drive the drama forward as desire and power push the story into more extreme territory. If Season 1 introduced the world and its tensions, Season 2 appears ready to turn those tensions into direct confrontation.
That idea is also reflected in the newly released first-look stills.

The preview images released with the announcement focus on the darker aura surrounding the main characters.
What stands out most is the tense face-off between Baek Ki-tae and Baek Ki-hyun, a confrontation that immediately raises questions about loyalty, rivalry, and how far the conflict within the family line may go. Rather than teasing emotional reconciliation or political maneuvering from a distance, the stills suggest a much more openly combustible fight.
The mood is heavier. The characters look harder. And the visual language around the season is already pointing toward a more dangerous game.

The production team also framed Season 2 as a more direct and more perilous showdown than what came before.
That positioning matters. Sequels often promise scale, but this one is specifically being introduced through the language of intensification — more exposed desires, riskier power moves, and a deeper collapse of restraint. In other words, the series is not merely returning to continue its story. It is coming back to sharpen it.
That may be one of the biggest reasons anticipation is rising so quickly.

Although an exact release date has not yet been announced, the confirmation of a second-half 2026 launch already places ‘Made in Korea’ among the more closely watched Korean drama titles on Disney+’s upcoming slate.
With a high-profile cast led by Hyun Bin, Jung Woo-sung, and Woo Do-hwan, a time jump that promises narrative change, and a darker conflict already visible in the first stills, Season 2 is shaping up as a more aggressive and more emotionally volatile continuation of the original story.
For now, one thing is clear:
‘Made in Korea’ is not returning in a calmer mood. It is coming back for a bigger collision.