After announcing she’d be releasing two songs off her forthcoming third studio album earlier this week, Halsey and BTS’s official second collaboration is finally here — and we are feeling all the feels.

At midnight on December 6, Halsey unveiled the emotional “SUGA’s Interlude” featuring BTS member Suga, whose real name is Min Yoongi. The soft tempo track mixes piano keys with airy synths and features Halsey’s soulful vocals with Suga’s sharp rap skills.

The song was penned by Yoongi, Halsey, and Lido, and the lyrics immediately captivated ARMYs. “I've been trying all my life / To separate the time / In between the having it all / And giving it up, yeah,” Halsey sings in English, before the pair reflect upon chasing their dreams and the struggles that come with that.

“These wanderings within my head that are only full of blue / The self-loathing and pride that live in my heart / Though I, full of dreams, grew to achieve all my dreams, I live out my days with the parallel belief that dreams are in fact better when just kept as dreams,” Suga starts off his Korean rap, according to a translation by Do You Bangtan.

“Sometimes I don't know if I'm really walking / If I ceaselessly run towards / the end of the tunnel,” he also raps. “Is it even right? It's honestly different to the future I had hoped for.”

The Daegu wordsmith touches upon themes like success, pressure, and juggling his personas in two full verses riddled with emotion. Shortly after the song’s release, fans took to Twitter to express not only their excitement about the track (hashtags like #SUGAsInterlude and #HalseyXSUGA dominated the worldwide trends) but also their reflections.

“The way Suga, all of BTS, just know how to capture the most human emotions, our deepest worries, anxieties, sorrows, but also what brings us joy & love, then provide a sense of solace & comfort thru beautifully strung lyrics in the realest way. I wish everyone could appreciate it,” USA Today’s Fatima-Tul Farha said about the song.

As expected, the song’s many complexities did not escape ARMYs, who immediately noticed a direct reference to BTS’s “Tomorrow” in Yoongi’s new verses. “Yoongi used the iconic lyrics ‘the dawn before sunrise is the darkest, but don't forget that the stars you've been wanting only come out in the dark’ from tomorrow for his verse in SUGA’s Interlude and it’s so fitting for the entire vibe of the song, this collab is brilliant,” an ARMY pointed out.