Producers are swapping the Australian bush for the UK, and Conwy Gwrych Castle is the most sensible on the list.
The castle has a more hectic history within its 200-year walls than any star that has appeared in the tabloids.
So what can be reserved for celebrities at their 250-acre camp?
In 1946, it was sold through the Circle of Relatives Dundonald, ending nearly a thousand years of ownership of the circle of relatives.
It was the backdrop of boxer Randolph Turpin in 1951, when he was organizing his education camp before beating Sugar Ray Robinson and becoming world middleweight champion. Turpin also met his wife, the daughter of a local farmer, while he was educating for the fight.
The castle opened to visitors and known as “the centerpiece of Wales”. There was also once a personal zoo, with a baboon and a bear, the castle also exhibits old cars and organizes motorcycle demonstrations.
After being sold in 1989, the Grade I indexed castle began to decline.
Gwrych rescued him through a 12-year-old schoolboy, Mark Baker, who introduced a crusade in 1997 to save abandoned madness, writing to then-Prime Minister Tony Blair and Prince Charles.
He formed the Gwrych Castle Preservation Trust to publicize its history and accept it as true despite everything the castle bought in 2018.
“Every day I walked past on my way to school and marveled at this castle; it was just a magical position and looked so impressive with its 18 towers,” he said.
Richard Prideaux, an instructor at Ruthin Wilderness Skills, training survival, food and bushcraft, told BBC Wales that the location of the castle would pose a very different set of demanding situations for prominent contestants from the twentieth season of I’m A Celebrity.
“The temperature will probably be one of the important maxims. It’s the other aspect of the world, another hemisphere, it’s going to get here in winter, so the north coast of Wales, wet, windy, bloodless, depends on how long they’re going to stand,” he says.
“Hanging out or showering in a waterfall in a bikini, I don’t know how far it’s going to happen in November in north Wales.”
And with kangaroos and scorpions in rarity, which place can celebrities locate in their camp or on their plates?
“When it comes to local wildlife, I don’t think there’s much threat. You may have an angry badger wandering around the camp, causing problems, but in terms of insects, snakes and things like that, there’s nothing in the Abergele Hills that I think will cause them a lot of trouble.”
Actress Vicki Michelle, who gave the impression on the series in 2014, warned that manufacturers could resort to more medieval strategies than jungle jokes this year.
“Actions, you know, when other people put them in action and throw objects at them, and then put them on the stand,” he told BBC Radio Wales.
“And, obviously, they’re going to have crypts and things like that, so take the coffin, which was horrible.