On June 17, 2026, ONF released 'Open The Door' — the title track of their 2nd Album Part 2, 'ONF:MY SELF' — as the group's first release under new label KI Entertainment. The ONF 'Open The Door' comeback closes the self-portrait concept album that the group has been building across two release cycles, and opens, as the song's title suggests, something new: a chapter defined less by the institutional context of where ONF have been than by the creative clarity of where they are. Six tracks, one title song, one label change, one group that has spent the past year establishing exactly who they are on their own terms.
'ONF:MY SELF' PART 2 TRACKLIST: SIX SONGS SEQUENCED AS AN EMOTIONAL JOURNEY
'Open The Door' opens the album with a rock-inflected drive that positions the release immediately as something more visceral than the mid-tempo comfort zone most groups default to for lead singles returning from significant transitions. 'Bad Dream' follows with darker emotional territory; 'Escape' maintains that intensity and adds propulsive forward momentum. The back half of the tracklist pivots: 'Mirage' and 'Silver Lining' move toward melodic resolution, with 'Once In a Red Moon' closing the album in a balladic register whose restraint makes every song before it feel like the tension it was always building toward. As a sequenced six-track statement, Part 2 of 'ONF:MY SELF' reads as a complete emotional arc rather than a collection of singles.
The physical album arrives in ten versions — Lost, Face, Step, six individual Scar versions, and a Platform edition — a packaging range that signals a deliberate investment in the group's fandom relationship at exactly the moment when that relationship is most in need of reinforcement. Multiple Scar versions, each presumably specific to an individual member, is a fan-economy decision as much as an art direction one; it is also a structural acknowledgment that 'ONF:MY SELF' is a collective self-portrait in which each member's individual identity is legible within the group frame.
KI ENTERTAINMENT AND THE ONF 'OPEN THE DOOR' ERA: WHAT THE LABEL CHANGE SIGNALS
ONF's departure from WM Entertainment and signing with KI Entertainment is the most significant institutional development in the group's career since their 2017 debut. Label changes in K-pop carry implications that extend beyond the practical logistics of distribution and promotion: they announce a group's willingness to define the conditions of their own next chapter, to find a home that fits the creative identity they have already built rather than the one they were assigned. KI Entertainment's decision to debut its most prominently positioned signing with the conclusion of the 'ONF:MY SELF' concept album suggests a label that understood what it was acquiring: not simply ONF's commercial infrastructure, but the creative framework that Part 1 had established and that Part 2 was always going to complete.
For the Fuses — ONF's fandom, whose name references the group's stated role as the spark that ignites something — the KI Entertainment era represents a transition that requires trust in two directions simultaneously: in the label to provide the group with the conditions they need, and in the group to use those conditions to deliver music that justifies the faith invested across multiple years and institutional upheavals. 'Open The Door,' arriving June 17 as the first deliverable of that new relationship, is the group's first answer to both requests.
PRODUCER HWANG HYUN RETURNS, AND THE MEMBERS TAKE THE PEN: THE CREATIVE DNA OF 'ONF:MY SELF' PART 2
Producer Hwang Hyun, whose involvement has been central to ONF's musical identity across their career, returns for Part 2 of 'ONF:MY SELF'. His presence provides the sonic continuity that allows the album to read as the genuine conclusion of Part 1 rather than a reboot under a new label's creative direction. Alongside Hwang Hyun's production, members Min-gyun and Wyatt contributed to the songwriting — a continuation of the creative participation that has characterised ONF's most artistically significant work. A group that writes its own material into a producer-led framework is making a specific claim about the kind of act it intends to be; that claim, running through both parts of 'ONF:MY SELF', is the clearest artistic statement in ONF's catalogue.
The 'ONF:MY SELF' title — a compression of the group name and the word 'myself' — was always a declaration as much as an album concept: the group documenting its own identity, speaking to itself and its audience simultaneously. Part 1 introduced that framework; Part 2 resolves it. 'Open The Door' as the title track carries the full weight of that resolution: it is an invitation, a transition, and a first step into whatever comes next. What comes next, under KI Entertainment, with producer Hwang Hyun, with members who are writing their own songs, is the question the June 17 release answers by refusing to answer fully — by opening a door rather than closing one.
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