i-dle has officially unveiled the complete tracklist for its upcoming mini album We made, sharpening anticipation just weeks after introducing the project’s first single. The rollout confirms a tightly curated five-track release, with Soyeon’s new producer alias icebluerabbit playing a central creative role across the record.
The reveal arrives as the group continues to position this era as one of its most self-driven and composition-heavy chapters to date.
Cube Entertainment confirmed the tracklist on June 22, 2026, outlining a project that blends collaboration and internal production control in equal measure. Leading the lineup is “Mono (feat. skaiwater),” returning in a new Mono ver. that will be available exclusively on CD.
The album opens with “Mono (feat. skaiwater),” followed by the title track “Gimme Dat Love,” which is marked as the centerpiece of We made. Third in sequence is “Morning,” while “Crow” occupies the fourth position after its June 15 release established the sonic direction of the era. Closing the digital version is “Love Is Pain.” CD buyers will also receive “Mono (feat. skaiwater) (Mono ver.),” adding an alternate interpretation of the collaboration.
Tracklist confirmation also spotlights Soyeon’s expanding production identity. Under her alias icebluerabbit, she is credited with handling lyrics, composition, and production across most of the project. The shift formalizes a role she has increasingly occupied since the group’s 2025 transition away from (G)I-dle and its renewed contract with Cube Entertainment. That rebrand era, anchored by We Are, marked the first time all members contributed to songwriting and composition across an entire release.
Momentum for We made began earlier this month when “Crow” arrived on June 15. Built on soaring guitar lines and arena-sized percussion, the single pushed i-dle deeper into rock-influenced territory while maintaining the assertive identity that has defined its most recent output.
Its accompanying music video leaned heavily into performance imagery, pairing high-intensity choreography with stark, cinematic visuals.
“Mono (feat. skaiwater)” had already set a different tone earlier this year when it dropped in January as a standalone collaboration. That track leaned into restraint and minimalism, contrasting sharply with the explosive production of “Crow.”
Photo: CUBE Entertainment






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