The album features guest appearances from Kehlani, Rod Wave, and Quavo, alongside production from Bobby Raps, DJ Suede the Remix God, JetsonMade, OG Parker, Southside, and Jason "Cheese" Goldberg who mixed and mastered the entirety of the record.
[3] It debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 chart, in which it earned 108,400 album-equivalent units, of which 4,600 were pure album sales.
Grim Reaper", "I Hate YoungBoy", "Don't Rate Me" featuring Quavo, and "Vette Motors".
On July 5, 2022, it was announced through the Never Broke Again label that the entirety of the album was recorded while Gaulden was on house arrest, by Jason "Cheese" Goldberg and Khris "XO" James.
Goldberg stated that he would record songs wherever Gaulden sought comfort and felt free to express himself.
On March 20, the Never Broke Again label officially shared the album's artwork, noting that it would be available for pre-order on April 1.
This was released alongside the official music video for "4KT Baby", the album's twentieth cut.
[18] Aiding the album's hype, on July 15, Gaulden was found not guilty in one of his two federal firearm charges, after which he noted that he's "feeling great".
[29] On February 22, as a response to Lil Durk's disstrack, "Ahhh Ha", Gaulden released the album's second single, "I Hate YoungBoy", produced by Jason Goldberg, K10Beatz, Horridrunitup, and Rellmadedat.
[31] On March 14, YoungBoy exclusively released the music video for the album's twenty-eight cut, "I Got the Bag".
[32] On March 17, YoungBoy released the music video for "Holy", the album's twenty-seventh cut.
A bracing, defiant gesture, it finds NBA YoungBoy embracing freedom with both hands.
"[1] Mosi Reeves from Rolling Stone described the album as "overstuffed and overlong, but it’s also undeniably compelling.
"[49] Paul Simpson from AllMusic stated that "Sitting through the entirety of The Last Slimeto is bound to be an exhausting experience to anyone but YoungBoy's many devout fans, but even if it seems to function more as a playlist than an album, it's definitely not monotonous, and the rapper's dedication to the game is unquestioned.