The Amazing Race Season 38 Week 6 recap: Roadblock blunders and alliance doubts fuel Croatia drama

Kristine and Rubina gets eliminated in The Amazing Race Season 38 Week 6 | Image via Instagram/ @itskranysworld
Kristine and Rubina gets eliminated in The Amazing Race Season 38 Week 6 | Image via Instagram/ @itskranysworld

The competition grew more fierce in Croatia during Week 6 of The Amazing Race Season 38 as alliances broke down and a Roadblock incident rearranged the rankings. Pure speed started to give way to terminal strategy and internal trust as teams maneuvered through the breathtaking salt-works and maritime chores at Mali Ston Bay.

When longstanding partners Kristine and Rubina Bernabe were removed, the leg titled "The System Hacked Me" left everyone stunned, demonstrating how brittle partnerships can become when put under duress. Teams were scurrying due to the self-drive components and the math-heavy Roadblock, so it wasn't only the work list that got rough. Missed pieces proved costly, and several people said the questions were "brutal."

As the front-runners' winning streak has slowed, mid-pack teams have benefited, and the race board has been shaken. It became evident that reading the game, reading people, and understanding when to adjust are more important for success this season than simply driving quickly or flying correctly. The journey to the finish line is now a minefield of mistakes and alliances rather than a walk in the park.


What happened in The Amazing Race Season 38 Week 6?

The sixth leg of The Amazing Race Season 38 increased internal politics and task difficulty. Teams were forced to put in more mental effort than athleticism, from a roadblock full of mysterious map hints to an unexpectedly important self-drive. You have a leg in both strategic and physical heartbreak when you combine it with deteriorating alliances. It's obvious that every mistake now bears attention, and the possibility of elimination as the scoreboard gets closer and the field gets smaller.


Roadblock blunders & shifting placements

As part of this week's roadblock, one team member had to look at a raised-relief map of Ston, find three shields that included factual information regarding salt operations, and then, under time pressure, properly respond to three questions.

The Amazing Race teams made mistakes early on when they misread shields, went back, and squandered time that cost them places. Even though the tasks were difficult, teams that thought they could go through them quickly and easily underestimated the level of accuracy needed, which led to failures.

The entire rhythm of the race shifted as a result of their mistakes, which affected their places. Teams that had previously been safe now had to scramble behind. It became evident that this leg required depth under pressure, clarity, and decision-making in addition to speed. After three votes were cast against them in a vote that was motivated more by fear than by performance, Kristine and Rubina were declared the losers.


Alliance cracks & the fallout of elimination

Not only did Kristine and Rubina's departure mean the end of one of the season's most powerful alliances, but it also meant the departure of a team. Long-standing collaboration between Joseph and Adam, Jag and Jas, and others had concealed hidden conflicts this week on The Amazing Race. The trust accountants started to lose it since each team was no longer as safe, and each member was no longer as secure.

This leg demonstrated that even powerful alliances can fail. Candidates for removal were now chosen based on perceived threat and alignment rather than just finish-line placement. Teams that had previously ridden together now paused, reevaluated, and looked at possible ways out.

When Kristine and Rubina left, the balance of power changed, and vulnerability took the place of money. In the future, successful teams will need to race not just harder but also more intelligently and with greater social awareness.


Watch the entire week 6 episode of The Amazing Race on CBS.

Edited by Gouri Maheshwari