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Billionaires Club Review: Olamide ft Wizkid & Darkoo

<p>Olamide Billionaires Club review ft Wizkid &#038; Darkoo: luxe groove, P.Priime touch, wisdom-first hook, video charts</p>

Billionaires Club is a 2025 Olamide album track, featuring Wizkid and Darkoo, produced by P.Priime and released on his 11th album Olamidé on June 18, 2025 under YBNL Nation and EMPIRE.

Olamidé album artwork
Olamidé album artwork

It plays like a private-jet taxiing at night. Low-slung percussion, a soft 70s-soul glow, flutes hovering above a warm bassline, Olamide’s voice pacing the runway.

Then Wizkid slides in, unhurried. Darkoo seals it with velvet. The flex is obvious, yet the message carries a quiet instruction: “Go apply wisdom,” “Live your life and enjoy.”

Those simple lines, in Yoruba and English, frame the record as mindset music rather than a spending spree.

What the song is about, in plain terms: wealth as discipline, grace and study.

Olamide steers the track with street common sense, talking less noise and more moves.

Wizkid’s verse toys with big-engine imagery and soft plural love, but keeps returning to counting and calm.

Darkoo answers with power-stance lines about payrolls and bringing value to the table.

These aren’t fortune-cookie slogans dressed up in Afrobeats; they’re the sort of rules elders repeat at gatherings, folded into a beat you can two-step to.

The backstory tracks with that thought focus. Olamide says he and Wiz agreed from the start to add a third voice, and Darkoo “came through with that verse.”

It fits the record’s balance: male swagger softening into luxurious composure, then Darkoo cutting through with clarity.

On the technical side, the credits are tidy and heavyweight.

Songwriting is by Olamide Adedeji, Ayodeji Ibrahim Balogun and Oluwafisayo Isa. P.Priime handles production.

Mixing comes from Luke Campolieta and Mike Seaberg, with mastering by KennyMixx.

Official Apple credits list’s credit sheet even lists violin and flute parts that explain the song’s balmy finish.

If you want the short answer to “what does Billionaires Club mean,” it’s this: build first, enjoy without panic, study always.

The Yoruba line about applying wisdom appears repeatedly in comment sections and creator captions, becoming the ear-worm users clip for reels and short videos.

The visual language matches the audio. The official video, released August 14, 2025, is directed by Jyde Ajala and stages a luxe world without frantic cuts: skeet shooting on a private estate, cigar smoke curling, a camera that prefers glide to sprint. It’s clear cut opulence spliced with finesse.

Fans have been loud about it, in that very online way where memes meet micro-reviews.

One viewer on X put it bluntly: “I don’t think any Afrobeats act can beat Olamide in video making… Billionaires Club proved me right again.”

Momentum is real in the numbers too. The official visualiser cleared millions of plays within a month, a soft launch before the full video drop.

On home soil, the song rose to a new peak of number 2 on the Official Nigeria Top 100, as reported by TurnTable’s chart account.

Apple Music’s live charts had it moving inside the Top 20 in Nigeria, and Stateside it climbed into the Top 10 of Billboard’s U.S. Afrobeats Songs, per chart watchers.

None of this is fluke, because the record isn’t chasing a trend. It’s unbothered, expensive, and a straight banger.

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