Loaded: In Paradise S01e04 Fullrip _hot_
But beneath them, the other four pairs are closing in. The Vipers (estranged twin sisters Cleo and Dina) have stolen a speedboat. The Hustlers (retired grifters Frank and Patty) are using fake accents to bluff hotel staff for intel. And the Rookies (naive college best friends Zoe and Sam) accidentally tipped off the Dark Horses (military vets Ari and Jen) by posting a geotagged selfie.
The chase culminates at a mountaintop monastery. Maya and Leo, realizing they’re cornered, try to hide the card inside a prayer book. But Leo hesitates — a confessional flashback reveals he made a secret deal with Ari last night: split the remaining €200k if Leo throws the challenge. Maya catches him whispering into a burner phone. Betrayal explodes in Greek-accented shouts. loaded in paradise s01e04 fullrip
The episode opens with a drone shot of a whitewashed cliffside village at dawn. Last week’s winners, Maya & Leo — a cynical poker player and an ex-con turned motivational speaker — have just loaded the card. They’re splurging on a private helicopter tour of the caldera, champagne in hand. But beneath them, the other four pairs are closing in
“Loaded in Paradise” is a high-stakes reality competition where five pairs of strangers race across a Greek island, chasing a golden credit card with a €500,000 limit. The twist: only one pair can “load” the card at a time, spending wildly while others hunt them down. And the Rookies (naive college best friends Zoe
A hooded figure in the monastery’s crypt pulls out a second golden card. It glows in the dark. Voiceover: “They don’t know there are two.”
The final ten minutes are chaos. The Vipers arrive first, but Dina shoves Cleo aside to grab the prayer book — only to find it empty. Cut to: Frank and Patty walking calmly down the back trail, the card in Patty’s Birkin bag. They’d bribed a monk an hour earlier. As they load the card at a seaside taverna (ordering €2k worth of lobster), the episode ends on a freeze-frame of Maya staring into the camera, crying: “I trusted a con. Never again.”