[1] The cover of Sucka Free shows Minaj and Lil Wayne at a podium in front of a red curtain being interviewed by XXL and MTV.
[4] In a 2014 article, NME described the mixtape as Minaj's bang "on the door of hip-hop’s boys club" and was described as "explosive".
[5] Although Minaj jumped on a "load of popular hip hop instrumentals", she successfully made every track feel like her own.
's "Dead Wrong" was seen as a standout track from the mixtape which called in "comparisons to NYC rap legends like Notorious" and eventually continued by Minaj in her third studio album, The Pinkprint, on songs such as "Four Door Aventador".
[6] The song was also called a "triumph and an omen" in a Paper Magazine article, but that it was hardly comparable to Minaj's fourth studio album, Queen.