[3] On April 8, the album was briefly removed from streaming services due to a production discrepancy, but returned days later.
[4] According to Pitchfork writer Briana Younger, album opener "Scraps" features "disquieting keys and decaying synths".
[6] Pitchfork's Younger also described "Biggie Smalls" as a body-positive song about beauty standards and eating disorders, and its production as a "jungle-like trance".
[5] She pointed to "Tarzan" as a drill track,[5] while she and The Fader, as well as Stereogum, referred to the album closer "Reality Pt.
According to Peter Helman of Stereogum, the video features CupcakKe as the leader of a "colorful stick-up crew armed with bright red guns".
[17] Pitchfork writer Briana Younger wrote of the album thus: "The amazingly explicit Chicago rapper has begun to embody the totality of her experience on record.