Welcome to O'Block

[4][5] "O'Block" in the album title is a reference and other name to design the Parkway Gardens complex in the Greater Grand Crossing community area on the South Side of Chicago, where King Von was raised.

He also declared that his storytelling rapping comes from his sojourn in prison where he read books and urban novels most of the time; still said that his favorite piece over the whole album was "Demon".

[13] "All These Niggas", the second single from the album, it features Lil Durk, and was released on August 5, 2020, with an accompanying music video directed by JV Visuals 312.

On the track the two rappers deliver vicious bars about the bleak reality of the streets, with a hook sung by Bennett himself, on an Eerie piano keys drill instrumental.

The video finds King Von posted up in a white Rolls Royce and rocking a massive diamond Only The Family chain as raps about life in the hood.

On the first half of the video focuses on the negotiations between prosecutors and public defenders which often result in plea deals, and it shows Bennett struggling to survive in prison.

[18] The official video is directed by Jerry Production, the accompanying visual shows Fivio with King Von in the Chicago trenches, flexing money, whips, jewelry, and more.

[26][27][28] The second video is represented by "Armed & Dangerous", that was, in the first place, scheduled to be released on November 6, 2020, under the idea of Bennett himself, but was later postponed, due to his passing, to the date of January 11, 2021.

"[35] Dean Van Nguyen by Pitchfork Defines the project with a more "Nuanced set" than his previous work Levon James, moving from a full album of gangsterism to a larger and more varied album; he also highlights track "All These Niggas" and the last three pieces of the work, defining them the best part of the project; finally ending with the sentence: " King Von wrote about a world that was bleak.

"[36] Tom Brehian from Stereogum defines "Wayne's Story" as his best work to date, appreciating the third-person narration that characterizes the piece, and he goes on to say that it has been a long time since a rapper so promising in storytelling has appeared.

[38] Iii Williams described the Chicago rapper project as characterized by "charismatic storytelling and versatile delivery", and that incorporates songs with various tones and flows, all while maintaining his patented aggression and confidence in rapping.