Boy Spyce Unpacks Problems — The Afrobeats Confession Everyone Relates To
The production is dark afrobeats with R&B soul. Moody guitar, heavy bass, and space for his voice to crack when it needs to. Rugged gave him a beat that feels like late night traffic and empty pockets. Boy Spyce’s delivery is raw but smooth. He is not begging for sympathy. He is documenting life.
Since release, Problems has become therapy for fans online and offline. People play it during tough weeks, after getting bad news, when they need to feel understood. On TikTok and Reels, you see clips of people grinding in silence, hustling through pain, building quietly with Problems as the soundtrack. The hook hits because everyone has a story.
DJs play Problems when the crowd is ready to feel instead of just dance. It plays in Lagos, Accra, London, Toronto. Anywhere people are tired of pretending everything is fine. From Destiny to Red Pill to now, Boy Spyce has made it clear he is the voice for Gen Z pain and progress. Problems is that voice stripped bare.
The lyrics are direct and vulnerable. Boy Spyce talks about bills, fake friends, anxiety and faith until every bar feels personal. That honesty is why fans connect. This is not music for flexing. This is music for healing.
Problems also shows Boy Spyce’s range. He can give you love songs, club records, then give you a confession like this. That balance is why his music grows with his listeners.
If you have not played Problems while dealing with your own battles, try it now. Boy Spyce is reminding us that problems are part of the process.



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