A wish costs
everything.
Girigo (기리고) is the fictional wish-granting app from Netflix’s Korean horror series If Wishes Could Kill (소원을 말하면). Try the fan-made demo — say a wish out loud, the Girigo app keeps it for you.
기리다
기리다 · girida · v. The Korean verb 기리다 means ‘to honor, to memorialize the dead.’ Twist the conjugation toward 기리고 and you land on a line of children’s verse — and a horror that names the cost of every wish.
Four steps inside the Girigo wish-granting app.
Enter the room
Tap the praying hands. The app remembers the time you opened it. Doors close at dawn.
Whisper a wish
Speak softly into the camera. Names spoken aloud are bound. Fingers crossed do not count.
Review the offering
Watch yourself ask. If you flinch, retake. Girigo only accepts a steady hand.
Transmit
The signal leaves you. Three rings expand. Somewhere, a name is being forgotten.
Six things the Girigo app does in If Wishes Could Kill.
Anonymous Sender
No login, no account, no trail. The app does not need to know who you are. Something else does.
The Praying Hands
A pixel-art animation of folded hands sits at the center of every screen. Fan theory: it is counting.
Late-Night Only
In-canon, Girigo only answers between midnight and 4 a.m. Our demo lifts the curfew — out of mercy.
One Wish a Night
More than one wish per dusk and the second one is granted twice — once on you, once on someone you love.
The Toll Is a Name
Not money, not blood. A name slips from a yearbook, a tombstone, a parent's mouth. The town adjusts.
Echoes Back
After transmission the app sometimes plays back your wish in another voice. Don't pick up.
“If you must ask for something, do not ask for someone.”
— rumored final line, episode 6What people are saying.
Fictional reviews for atmosphere. No real users were harmed — that we know of.
I finally get her. She knew the female lead liked him, they got together behind her back AND kept it secret. Triple betrayal. On top of that she wished her friend dead and is terrified someone will find out.
Why would an evil spirit follow rules? If you wish for immortality it'll just trap you in a dream and slowly harvest your soul. That's not a loophole. That's the whole contract.
Family trauma does something to a person. She didn't just lose the guy she liked — her best friends were secretly dating and hiding it specifically from HER, who they KNEW had feelings. No coming back from that.
Things people ask before they tap.
Is Girigo a real app?
No. Girigo (기리고) is a fictional wish-granting app from the Netflix Korean horror series If Wishes Could Kill (소원을 말하면, 2025). This site is an unofficial fan-made tribute that simulates the in-show interaction — no wishes are granted, no names are taken.
Does this site collect anything?
Camera and audio used by the Girigo demo stay in your browser. Recordings are blob URLs that exist only on your device and are revoked when you leave the page. We do not upload, store, or transmit them.
Are you affiliated with Netflix?
No. This is a fan project inspired by the Netflix K-drama If Wishes Could Kill. All series rights belong to their respective owners. For canonical details, please check the official Netflix listings.
Where can I watch If Wishes Could Kill?
If Wishes Could Kill (소원을 말하면) streams on Netflix in supported regions. It is a Korean horror drama about a wish-granting app called Girigo. This site is an unofficial fan tribute — not affiliated with Netflix or the production.
Wishes from around the world.
Write a wish in 50 words or fewer. It joins the wall for everyone to see — anonymous, no account needed. Thousands of wishes, from every corner of the world.
Open the Girigo App. If you dare.
Try the Girigo demo from Netflix’s If Wishes Could Kill — right in your browser. Camera, praying hands, signal, all of it.