Which Drake song is your personal favorite? It’s a question that, depending on who you ask, has a different response. Drake’s career includes something for everyone, whether you favor Sad Drake, Boastful Drake, or both Sad and Boastful Drake. Five studio albums, four Grammy Awards, 206 singles on the Billboard Hot 100 list (the most of any solo artist), and billions of streams globally speak for themselves. Although his complex double album Scorpion got mixed reviews from critics, it reasserted Aubrey Graham’s standing as one of the most prevalent musicians of his time, with singles like “God’s Plan,” “Nice For What,” and the meme-spawning “In My Feelings.”

He started a multi-year residency in Las Vegas last year, but it would be folly to predict that Canada’s most renowned export will slow down anytime soon. In that vein, we’ve compiled a list of our top 5 Drake songs, which include duets with Future, Jorja Smith, Nicki Minaj, Rihanna, and others.

1.”Hotline Bling”

“Hotline Bling” came out of nowhere, like so many Drake tracks. The globe awoke one day, checked the internet, and life would never be the same again.

2.”Marvin’s Room”

Drake’s greatest asset is his willingness to embrace excellent music. There are lots of individuals capable of crafting something like “Marvin’s Room” — Kanye springs to mind — but he hid behind autotune and grim synthesizers on his all-encompassing divorce album, 808s & Heartbreak.

3.”Worst Behaviour”

“Worst Behavior” is still shrouded in mystery. It appears to exist beyond the confines of time and space. Nobody understands what it’s all about, why they’ve never liked us, what “worst conduct” means, and so on.

4.” In My Feelings”

It’s hard to believe it took Drake till 2018 to utilize this title for a song, but it proves that no one is better at making Instagram caption-worthy, feelings-on-sleeve songs than Drake. Bounce, a booty-shaking New Orleans dance music genre, impacted Scorpion extensively, and nowhere is it more represented than on the TrapMoneyBenny and BlaqNmilD-produced song. Just make sure you don’t undertake the associated dance challenge in a moving vehicle.

5. “Hold on, We’re going home”

Drake is occasionally at his finest when he’s singing rather than rapping, as seen by this song. It’ll float lighter than air in every CVS throughout the country for centuries to come, as the thoroughbred smash from 2013’s Nothing Was The Same. It’s understandable: it’s a lovely, emotive, and peaceful tune.