And for the first time, you realize: this isn’t a game. It’s a funeral for childhood dreams—and only the ruthless, the loved, or the lucky survive.
After the shock of the first elimination (rest in peace, Nicholas’s group), the remaining 23 trainees realize this isn’t a survival show. It’s a battlefield dressed in pastel uniforms. The mission: perform BTS’s “DNA” and SEVENTEEN’s “Pretty U” in front of the producers. Simple, right? Wrong. i-land ep 2
Heeseung, the ace, cracks under pressure—not from lack of skill, but from expectation . You see it in his eyes: the fear of falling when everyone expects you to fly. Meanwhile, K becomes the reluctant general, drilling his team until voices break and feet bleed. But the real story? Jay. His fierce “I’d rather die than be weak” attitude finally breaks into vulnerability. For the first time, he admits he’s scared. And that’s when you start rooting for him. And for the first time, you realize: this isn’t a game
doesn’t just raise the stakes—it sets the glass floor on fire. It’s a battlefield dressed in pastel uniforms
The lights dim. The second test begins.
The producers score. Then the participants vote for who should be eliminated. Not based on talent—but on who they’d least want to debut with. The silence in that room is louder than any stage. Jungwon’s diplomatic kindness vs. the cold arithmetic of survival. When the results flash on screen, no one cheers. They just stare. Because the person who leaves isn’t the worst performer—they’re the one without allies.