His biggest hit since 2020…

[Video]
[5.43]
[6]
Ian Mathers: Performs the signifiers of horniness so thoroughly that my only response is “sure man, whatever.”
[5]
Julian Axelrod: An uncredited sample of a woman’s voice can be so powerful. If I was still on Spotify, this would go triple platinum in Private Mode.
[6]
Charli Jae Brister: As a bisexual trans woman who has not had bottom surgery, I can relate to every aspect of this song. Cool! Fun song, too.
[8]
Nortey Dowuona: Fuck this song. Who is the girl who really makes this song pop? This remix fixes the whole song by filling up the rest of the song with hard verses from GloRilla, Yung Miami and YKNiece – but know to cut the song off before he shows up. Unfortunately this is not the version we are writing about, so again, fuck this song. DaBaby is bad on it but who cares. Sean the Firzt & Kayo the Wizard’s beat work is phenomenal, tho.
[4]
Alfred Soto: The DaBaby comeback in this cycle is as inevitable as DOGE was last year, but instead of flexing a minimum of his wit and speed the rapper gurbles like Luke Campbell without the community service.
[2]
Jacob Sujin Kuppermann: The appeal of DaBaby’s brief-but-unmissable imperial phase was how he took up sonic space — even when he shifted into a more contemplative mood he still was an undeniable force of charisma, the center of the universe for three minutes at a time. Obviously, “DaBaby as a captivating scamp” was always an attraction with a limited shelf life; even if he had not chosen to be reduced, by the LGBTQ+ community, to an abstract concept in 2021, he had perhaps 3 months of stardom left. The return of DaBaby, then, can be attributed to his newfound ability to get out of the way. “Pop Dat Thang” is a potent enough party record that anyone could make it a hit; DaBaby succeeds by doing nothing of note over it.
[7]