[1][6] @kurtoart, a Twitter user, drew art depicting Lil Yachty's fictional journey to Poland, accompanied by Wockhardt cough syrup (the "wock" referenced in the song's chorus).
[7] Produced by Lukrative, Lucian, and F1lthy of Working on Dying,[1] the song features a synthy beat with a "cyber-vibrato" effect on Yachty's voice.
[2][9] A dissonant trap song,[8] The Washington Post's Chris Richards wrote that "Yachty makes his voice — a melodized yawn that has chafed low-imagination rap purists from the start — do something new, elongating the most flexible syllables and allowing them to tremble with Auto-Tuned vibrato.
[2] Serge Selenou of Pitchfork opined that these factors are implemented in the rapper's best songs and wrote: "Over a churning F1lthy beat that wouldn't be out of place on Whole Lotta Red, Yachty croons "I took the Wock to Poland" in a garbled yodel that probably has Mason Ramsey jealous"; Selenou added that the song helped recapture the "light-heartedness that won Yachty fans.
"[18] Chris Richards of the Washington Post praised the Auto-Tune vibrato effect applied to Yachty's voice, writing that "in this funny, freaky, emotionally extravagant, tragicomic gush, he sounds like a machine that’s learned how to cry.
"[10] Richards also positively received the song's concise nature, opining that "Yachty's brevity is casually artful, highly playful and totally real.
"[10] On October 12, 2022, Quality Control Music CEO Pierre Thomas shared an alleged text conversation with Poland's Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki.