With her second full-length studio project 777, Atlanta rapper Latto continues her full court press of dominance and bravado, maintaining her status as Queen of Da Souf that she first claimed on her 2020 debut of the same name. Latto's rhymes cover the standard range of topics. There's bedroom bragging on the raw sex talk of the 21 Savage-featuring "Wheelie," getting money and demolishing enemies on "Trust No Bitch," and some combination of all of the above on tracks like "Soufside." While minimal, wide-open trap instrumentals serve as the backdrop for most of the songs, Latto explores different styles here and there. The Lil Wayne- and Childish Gambino-assisted "Sunshine" blends trap drums and slithering flows with gospel vocals, "Like a Thug" flirts with R&B, and songs like "Real One" and "Big Energy" aim for big-screen pop catchiness while Latto continues blasting through the hooks with endless confidence.