
Age: 42
male
Yeun Sang-Yeop (Korean: 연상엽; born December 21, 1983), known professionally as Steven Yeun (/jʌn/ YUHN), is an American actor. Yeun initially became famous for playing Glenn Rhee in The Walking Dead (2010–2016). He earned critical acclaim for the films Burning (2018) and Minari (2020). The latter earned him a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actor, making him the first Asian American actor to be nominated. Time magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2021. In 2023, he starred in the dark comedy series Beef (2023), for which he won two Primetime Emmy Awards and a Golden Globe Award. Yeun has also appeared in the films Okja (2017), Sorry to Bother You (2018), The Humans (2021) and Nope (2022). He has also voiced main characters in animated television series such as Voltron: Legendary Defender (2016–2018), Tales of Arcadia (2016–2021), Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters (2017–2018), Final Space (2018–2021), Tuca & Bertie (2019–2022), and Invincible (2021–present). Description above from the Wikipedia article Steven Yeun, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

After a mysterious cosmic event strikes the island, familiar landscapes begin to fracture—oceans bend upward, forests shift overnight, and time itself seems to stutter. What starts as a strange curiosity quickly escalates into a full-scale crisis as contestants from across Dream Island are forced to confront a reality that no longer follows the rules they know. As chaos spreads, unlikely alliances form. Old rivalries are put on hold, friendships are tested, and every contestant must decide what Dream Island truly means to them. With no host to guide them and no clear enemy to face, the group realizes that survival will depend not on competition, but cooperation. The journey takes them across warped versions of Dream Island—beautiful, haunting, and dangerous—where the island’s past, present, and possible futures collide. Along the way, one of their own becomes deeply connected to the island’s instability, holding the key to either restoring balance or losing everything they’ve ever known. In a final stand against the unraveling of their world, the contestants must face the truth: Dream Island is more than a place—it’s a fragile dream shaped by those who inhabit it.

