The album features guest appearances from Roddy Ricch, Tory Lanez, Kodak Black, G Herbo, Lil Durk, Don Q, and H.E.R.
The deluxe edition was released three days later and included an additional guest appearance from the late PnB Rock for the only newly-added track, "Needed That".
Production was handled by a variety of record producers, such as A Boogie himself, S.Dot, P2J, Kofo, Wheezy, Don Cannon, Lee Major, Sean Momberger, Rogét Chahayed, Band on the Beat, Chuck Taylor, OG Parker, Smash David, and Dez Wright, among others.
This is due in part to the strong production (which includes work from Boogie himself) and also a plethora of exciting guest star appearances.
"[11] Kathleen Johnston of The Telegraph wrote, "Most of the songs here do somewhat merge into one, long, party soundtrack that is enjoyable to listen to and yet entirely forgettable.
This is not a record that moves the needle on artistry, but it is sure to wrack [sic] up considerable streaming numbers in the rap-obsessed States in particular, helped along the way by strategic decisions such as big-name features and extended track list.
"[15] Robin Murray of Clash wrote, "Nothing here stands out as bad, per se, it's more that A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie has long since perfected this approach.
Slick, inoffensive pieces of pop-rap like 'Ballin' and 'Regular' have a few winning charms going for them, but their inclusions, along with tracks like the patronizing 'Come Here,' suggest an artist who lacks the capacity to push himself out of his comfort zone or self-edit.
"[14] Me vs Myself debuted at number six on the US Billboard 200 chart, earning 53,000 album-equivalent units (including 3,000 copies in pure album sales) in its first week.