is the magnum opus. Period. If Drake is remembered for one thing in fifty years, it will be the mood of this album. It is sepia-toned, rain-streaked, and luxuriously sad. This is where Drake cracked the code: rapping about the guilt of abandoning friends mixed with the joy of buying them Range Rovers. The features are immaculate (The Weeknd’s influence here is Massive), the production is watery and immersive, and the songwriting is peak "bittersweet victory." It is the "Blue" to his "Jigga."

(with 21 Savage) was a return to form, but with a safety net. Rapping alongside 21 Savage brought out a viscous, bar-heavy Drake. It’s fun, it’s violent, and it lacks the emotional introspection of a solo album—which is exactly why it works. It’s a buddy cop movie for the streaming era.

The journey through ’s discography is a decade-spanning odyssey of shifting moods, evolving sounds, and a relentless climb to the top of the music world. The Rise: From Mixtapes to Icons

When So Far Gone dropped in 2009, few could have predicted that the former Degrassi star would become the most commercially dominant and emotionally polarizing rapper-singer of his generation. Over 15+ years, Drake has turned vulnerability into victory, memes into milestones, and beef into billboard records. Here’s a deep dive into every official studio album from the 6 God.