| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before 2027 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Drake and Metro Boomin will release a song together before 2027; it matters because announcements or releases by major artists can move markets and reflect broader trends in music collaboration. Traders use the market to express and aggregate information about the likelihood of such a collaboration happening within the specified timeframe.
Drake is a high-profile rapper and vocalist whose projects often feature multiple producers and guest artists; Metro Boomin is a prominent producer and credited artist known for shaping modern hip-hop production. Both operate within overlapping industry networks of labels, managers, and featured artists, so a collaboration depends on creative alignment, scheduling, and business arrangements rather than pure chance.
Market odds represent the collective expectations of participants based on available information and will change as new announcements, leaks, or industry developments appear. They are not guarantees but a real-time summary of beliefs and information flow about the event.
A qualifying outcome is a publicly released recording before 2027 that credits Drake as a performing artist and Metro Boomin as a producer or credited artist on the track; isolated live performances, unofficial leaks, remixes without credit, or fan edits typically do not count.
The event window ends on December 31, 2026; any qualifying, publicly available release issued on or before that date is considered within the timeframe.
Previous working relationships, mutual collaborators, and shared studio connections increase the plausibility of a future joint release because they reduce friction and create opportunities, but they do not guarantee a collaboration.
Unverified leaks, DJ mixes or mashups made without official credits, live-only performances not formally released, and reworks that do not credit Metro Boomin or Drake in official metadata would generally be excluded.
Record label release windows, sample clearance timelines, coordinated marketing around tours or album drops, and strategic decisions to hold tracks for later albums can all delay or accelerate a release relative to the market deadline.