The Drake Iceman, Maid of Honour and Habibti tracklist marks his biggest three‑album run in years. Drake is back with Iceman, Maid of Honour and Habibti. Together, they cover cold revenge raps, toxic love stories and late‑night confessions. They also touch on recent feuds, industry politics and what it means to stay on top this deep into his career.
Across the trilogy he calls out fake loyalty, revisits public beefs and looks at the cost of living online. Each album has its own lane. Iceman is the competitive, bar‑heavy project. Maid of Honour leans into relationships and “bestie” drama. Habibti blends global sounds with hooks and a slightly softer tone.

Iceman: Revenge raps and industry fallouts
Iceman is the most aggressive of the three. Drake leans into a “cold” persona here. The raps focus on scores, pressure and people he feels switched sides. Features include Future, Molly Santana and 21 Savage, with production from names like Ovrkast, Riot, Boi‑1da and DJ Frisco954.
On this album he addresses industry fallouts and the way people moved during his recent beefs. Songs like “Make Them Pay” and “Burning Bridges” sound like he’s cutting ties and counting all the times he felt betrayed. “What Did I Miss?” circles around fans and insiders who suddenly acted like they were never on his side. Later tracks such as “Little Birdie” and “Don’t Worry” hint at how draining constant conflict can be, even for someone used to headlines.
Iceman tracklist
- Make Them Cry
- Dust
- Whisper My Name
- Janice STFU
- Ran To Atlanta (feat. Future, Molly Santana)
- Shabang
- Make Them Pay
- Burning Bridges
- National Treasures
- B’s On The Table (feat. 21 Savage)
- What Did I Miss?
- Plot Twist
- 2 Hard 4 The Radio
- Make Them Remember
- Little Birdie
- Don’t Worry
- Firm Friends
- Make Them Know
Maid of Honour: Toxic romance and best‑friend fallouts
If Iceman is aimed at rivals, Maid of Honour is aimed at exes, situationships and so‑called “besties.” This project lives in the space between friendship and romance that Drake has written about for years. Now he approaches it from a more grown, slightly jaded place. Features include Sexyy Red, Central Cee, Popcaan and Iconic Savvy.
The production leans melodic and smooth, built for late‑night drives and Instagram captions. “Outside Tweaking” follows a friend group blurring lines on a messy night out. “Cheetah Print” with Sexyy Red is a loud club record with plenty of quotables. “Which One” with Central Cee turns jealousy and options into a playful back‑and‑forth. Tracks like “True Bestie,” “New Bestie” and “Q&A” push deeper into those blurred‑boundary relationships, where no one wants to define what the connection actually is.
Maid of Honour tracklist
- Hoe Phase
- Road Trips
- Outside Tweaking (feat. Stunna Sandy)
- Cheetah Print (feat. Sexyy Red)
- Which One (feat. Central Cee)
- Amazing Shape (feat. Popcaan)
- BBW
- True Bestie (feat. Iconic Savvy)
- Where’s Your Stuff (Interlude)
- New Bestie
- Q&A
- Stuck
- Princess
- Maid of Honour
Habibti: Global flex, hooks and a softer tone
Habibti closes the trilogy with a blend of global sounds, swagger and reflection. It leans into bouncier rhythms and big hooks. At the same time, Drake uses the space to talk about burnout, priorities and keeping his circle tight. Features include Sexyy Red, Loe Shimmy and PARTYNEXTDOOR.
“WNBA” flips women’s basketball into a metaphor for overlooked greatness. “Slap The City” and “High Fives” feel like victory‑lap records you’d hear in arenas and on tour. “Hurrr Nor Thurrr” with Sexyy Red adds playful chaos to the middle of the tracklist. “Fortworth” with PARTYNEXTDOOR slides into moody R&B, giving old‑school OVO fans something familiar. On “Prioritizing,” he focuses more on health, family and time, hinting that nonstop output carries a real cost.
Habibti tracklist
- Rusty Intro
- WNBA
- Slap The City (feat. Qenderesa)
- High Fives
- Hurrr Nor Thurrr (feat. Sexyy Red)
- I’m Spent
- Gen 5
- White Bone
- Fortworth (feat. PARTYNEXTDOOR)
- Prioritizing
- Habibti
What Drake is saying with three albums at once
Dropping Iceman, Maid of Honour and Habibti on the same day feels intentional. One album speaks to rap politics, one lives in messy relationships, and one stretches toward global pop‑rap and introspection. Taken together, they read like a status update from an artist deep into his run, still trying to control the narrative.
You can hear him push back against doubts, call out shifting loyalty and admit that the pace he’s kept for more than a decade came with a price. Whether fans place these projects next to his classics or not, this triple drop proves he still plans to live at the center of the conversation, album by album—and now, trilogy by trilogy.











