Chinese Nü Yr

[2] Malliagh explained that Chinese Nü Yr is based on a story about 'Xiāngjiāo', a gelatinous and amorphous worm who wears a witch hat and is voiced by heavily pitch-shifted and processed recordings of his father and little sister.

"[5] Chinese Nü Yr's first two tracks, "Xiangjiao" and "Mametchi / Usohachi", were compared by Resident Advisor journalist Andrew Ryce to the works of labels PC Music and Noumenal Loom; his reason of the comparison for the former song was due to its "mush-mouthed vocals" and trance music sounds, the hip hop and uptempo "speedy chop-up" of the latter for its vocals reminiscent of the song "Hard" by English producer Sophie.

[1] "Mametchi / Usohachi" ends with a rap verse from Japanese singer and producer Mr. Yote,[1] whom Iglooghost said had "amazing taste in melodies" and that her work "sounds wide-eyed and childlike but is also introspective, like a genius baby.

"[1] "Peach Rift", the heaviest-sounding and longest cut on the EP at over five minutes, was described by Ryce as a "Rubik's Cube of heavy basslines, chirpy synths, and chattering vocals that never quite line up, which can be numbing by the end.

Gary Suarez, reviewing for The Quietus, spotlighted the EP's "mirthfully manic synthesis of garage, hip hop, footwork, and as-yet undefined (sub)genres" that "makes him a beatmaker to watch.