The next Young and the Restless installment will ignite Genoa City with scandal, deception, and a shocking ultimatum that could destroy lives. At the center of the storm stands Phyllis Summers—bold, cunning, and more dangerous than ever. After uncovering a dark series of secrets buried deep in Cane Ashby’s past, Phyllis decides she’s had enough of being manipulated. Her discovery will set off a chain reaction that no one can stop, exposing what fans are calling “the sin trap” — a twisted web of lies that threatens to pull everyone in.
It all begins when Phyllis accidentally stumbles upon encrypted messages left on Cane’s old tablet—messages that reference offshore accounts, hidden assets, and the ominous phrase, “the pact must stay buried.” Curious and suspicious, she digs deeper, realizing that Cane’s shady dealings may tie back to a long-forgotten scandal involving multiple Genoa City elites. What she doesn’t know yet is that by prying open Cane’s secret life, she’s walking straight into a trap years in the making.
Determined to confront him, Phyllis meets Cane at Crimson Lights late one night. The tension is palpable from the moment she enters. Cane’s calm façade slips the instant he sees what she’s holding—his tablet. “Looking for this?” she taunts, eyes flashing. When he tries to downplay it, she leans in closer and whispers, “Don’t insult me. I know what you did. And I’m not the kind of woman who keeps quiet.”
Cane’s demeanor changes instantly. Panic flickers in his eyes. He warns her to stay out of things she doesn’t understand, but Phyllis only laughs—a sharp, cold sound that echoes through the café. “You always underestimate me, Cane,” she says. “But this time, I hold the power.” She reveals copies of the files she found, making it clear she’s not afraid to go public if he doesn’t tell her the whole truth
As their confrontation unfolds, Cane confesses part of his secret: years ago, he made a deal with a dangerous network that helped cover up a major crime. The cover-up not only saved his freedom but protected others in Genoa City—people Phyllis knows well. But there’s more. He admits that one of those people still controls him through blackmail, forcing him into silence. “It’s not just my sin,” he warns her quietly. “It’s everyone’s.”
The revelation shakes Phyllis to her core, but instead of backing down, she becomes more determined. “Then we burn them all down,” she declares. Her voice trembles—not from fear, but fury. She’s done being a pawn in other people’s games. But Cane pleads with her to reconsider, saying that if she exposes the truth, innocent lives will be destroyed. Phyllis doesn’t care. “Maybe it’s time they finally paid the price,” she snaps.
Word of their argument spreads quickly through the grapevine. Billy and Lily begin to suspect something’s brewing when they overhear parts of Phyllis’s heated call with Michael Baldwin. Meanwhile, Victor Newman takes notice when whispers of a “sin trap” begin to circulate among corporate circles. The tension across town grows unbearable.
In a stunning twist, Phyllis arranges a secret meeting at the Grand Phoenix, inviting Cane under the guise of truce. But when he arrives, she’s already one step ahead—she’s recorded his earlier confession and plans to release it to the press if he doesn’t cooperate. Cornered, Cane lashes out, accusing her of blackmail and manipulation. “You’re no better than them!” he shouts. But Phyllis fires back, “Maybe not. But at least I don’t hide behind masks and lies.”
The climax hits when Jill and Billy walk in mid-argument, overhearing everything. Jill’s face turns pale as Cane’s past is laid bare before her. Phyllis drops the final bombshell—revealing that Cane’s fortune, and much of Chancellor-Winters’ expansion, may have been funded through the very scandal he helped cover up. The fallout is immediate and explosive. Jill feels betrayed, Billy is furious, and Cane realizes there’s no way out.
As the truth unravels, Genoa City braces for the aftershock. Phyllis stands in the middle of it all, both hero and villain—exposing corruption but destroying lives in the process. The “sin trap” is no longer hidden; it’s wide open, pulling in every major player connected to Cane’s deception.
The episode closes with a chilling image: Phyllis alone in her suite, staring at her reflection in the mirror. Her expression is unreadable—part triumph, part regret. Then her phone vibrates with a message from an unknown number: “You think you’ve won, but the game’s just beginning.”
As the screen fades to black, fans are left reeling. Has Phyllis finally gone too far, or has she only uncovered the first layer of a conspiracy much larger than herself? Either way, Genoa City will never be the same again.
The Track-Focused Apollo Hypercar Is Coming, but Only for 10 Lucky Buyers

In another world, the Gumpert Apollo could have sat alongside the Koenigsegg CC and Pagani Zonda lines as the origin points for decades of beloved hypercars to come. Instead, the brand and its one-time record setter faded into irrelevance after a 2013 bankruptcy. A successor company, Apollo, carried on with the oddly named Intensa Emozione in the late 2010s. Now, that Apollo has its successor.
This is the Apollo Evo, a limited-run track hypercar meant to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Apollo predecessor Gumpert. It is billed as a follow-up to the Intensa Emozione, although its status as a track car puts it in competition with very different vehicles than the road-focused IE hypercar.
Apollo says that the car’s racing-style central monocoque weighs just 364 pounds, part of a 2866-pound package that goes from a standstill to 60 miles per hour in 2.7 seconds. A 6.3-liter V-12 producing 800 horsepower provides the propulsion, which can get the car to a claimed 208-mph top speed. Unlike other racers that might be riding on slicks, the Apollo Evo does all of this on Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 tires.
The modern hypercar market is very different from the one the Gumpert Apollo once debuted into, and even the market for cars produced just for track use has become substantial. Major brands like Aston Martin, Bugatti, and Ferrari all offer Le Mans–inspired machines for dedicated track use. All three of those cars have more impressive performance benchmarks and more serious connections to major racing programs, but they are missing something Apollo is offering: exclusivity. Just 10 Evos will be built, making the new car a rarity even in the world of ultra-specialized track cars.

