ITV have shared the latest trailer for winter Love Island and the excitement is seriously real.
It’s a little more than 24 hours until a whole new batch of singletons head to the villa in a bid to, you guessed it, find love.
Laura Whitmore will be hosting Love Island’s first-ever winter series, which has moved to South Africa for the next few weeks.
And now the first look at winter Love Island is here – and honestly, we couldn’t be more excited.
The footage sees the 12 singletons ditch their day jobs in favour of some more villa-appropriate clothing – all set to U2’s I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For.
“Winter’s gonna be hotter than ever,” Love Island’s voiceover man Iain Stirling says at the end of the trailer. “Because it’s always summer in paradise.”
And even though it hasn’t started yet, Love Island fans have already predicted the first ‘bombshell’ of the new series.
Yes, Love Island fans reckon twins Eve and Jess Gale are going to be winter Love Island’s first bombshells.
If you notice there are more girls than boys so I think the twins will come in at the end of episode one just like how tommy and Curtis did last season #LoveIsland
— Ifunanya (@IfunanyaRE) January 8, 2020
I just can’t wait for the drama on Sundays Love Island. Also, why do I feel like the twins are going to be added in later just so they can say something along the lines of “oh oh here comes double trouble” followed by a slow mo of them entering the villa.#LoveIsland
— Jessica (@PinkRainCloudd) January 7, 2020
imagine if the @LoveIsland producers sent the twins in as bombshells without revealing them. THE SCENES #loveisland
— kunt king (@georgesyournan) January 7, 2020
We’ll admit it, the theory does make sense. Last year’s first ‘bombshell’ arrivals, Tommy and Curtis, were included in the first cast announcement – and there is an uneven number of girls to guys…
It’s not the first time Love Island have sent twins into the villa.
Back in 2015, John and Tony Alberti joined the series – briefly – to try and stir things up for the singletons.