Production was handled by Bangladesh, Jazze Pha, Organized Noize, I-20, Jook, KLC, Mike Johnson, P. King "The Specialist", Swizz Beatz, Timbaland, and Ludacris himself, who also served as executive producer together with Chaka Zulu.
It features guest appearances from Fate Wilson, I-20, 4-Ize, Chimere, Jagged Edge, Jazze Pha, Keon Bryce, Mystikal, Nate Dogg, Shawnna, Sleepy Brown, Three 6 Mafia and Twista.
[1] Tom Sinclair of Entertainment Weekly wrote: "with his fashionably foul worldview, Ludacris could indeed be Foxx's bastard son, and Word often seems like nothing so much as an extended Dolemite routine set to hip-hop beats".
[6] Soren Baker of the Chicago Tribune also praised the album's comedic nature, commenting that "whether he's delivering a punchy one-liner, exaggerating his rhyme flow to a silly extreme or cleverly deploying pop culture references, Ludacris keeps the mood light and festive.
[12] In his mixed review, AllMusic's Jason Birchmeier called the album a "superstar affair that aims for mass appeal with a broad array of different styles" and enjoyed "witty puns and sly innuendoes" displayed in songs such as "Area Codes".