Alma erupts once more in this edition of .survivors‘, as Raquel Bollo’s daughter confronts Bosco after their recent distance. He did not swiftly earn the rewards they were due at sea during the Conexión Honduras challenge, and Alma makes her stance clear: I don’t want them, let them stay, she asserts with a firm edge that leaves little room for doubt.
Here are the kinds of teammates that exist in the world of survival reality shows. Alma feels the sting of such companions and voices her frustration, the tirade cutting through the scene with blunt honesty. It’s a prize meant for everyone, she notes, yet some rivals swim with a quicker stroke while her partner struggles to reach the buoy before they pull it away. The moment weighs on her, and Bollo watches with a mix of awe and disappointment at what has unfolded on screen.
Bosco makes an effort to defend his actions, offering two prizes to soften the blow, but Alma’s reply arrives with cold clarity: it doesn’t matter whether the gifts come from him or not. The truth she points to is the selfishness that sometimes threads through alliances, the way one person seems to hoard advantage while another risks everything for the fragile balance of teamwork. When Alma declares, Bosco, you’re taking everything from me, she gestures toward a helper named Artur who appears in the background, a stark reminder of how quickly shifting loyalties can alter the course of the game.
Her critics flood in as Bosco vents his own frustration. He protests that he did not publish anything, pleading, Why are you lying, Alma? Please don’t behave this way. The sentiment is shared in the room, a dissonant note about fairness and the way tension spikes when competition collides with personal animosity. Alma remains unyielding, her voice rising as she points to the broader pattern of what the show often masks: the way a single misstep can sour the morale of the whole group. Bosco, meanwhile, lets out a blunt assertion aimed at the narrative: How am I going to have fun if you took my buoys away? He doubles down, telling her straight that she is not making this enjoyable and that she should own the consequences of her actions.
In the end, Alma’s perspective makes its case with a mix of raw honesty and practical critique. I just see balls, balls, and catch balls, Bosco explains, trying to justify his focus on the task rather than the drama surrounding it. I didn’t see you; I heard screams, and suddenly I caught balls and hit you, he adds, describing a moment of chaos that swirled around the buoy. Alma’s reflection returns, underscoring her belief that the audience should recognize the selfish patterns that often arise among teammates who share a difficult journey. We survive through friendship, she emphasizes, insisting that this adventure is about more than racing, travel, and survival alone. The core tension—trust, sacrifice, and the price of competing in a high-stakes environment—remains at the center of the episode, inviting viewers to consider what true teamwork looks like when pressure mounts and every decision feels consequential.