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Shokii – Ratafari Ft Wassy Bwoy And Cash Level (Music Video)

Shokii- Ratafari

Shokii – Ratafari Ft Wassy Bwoy & Cash Level (Music Video Review)

Shokii came through on “Ratafari” like he’s preaching street freedom and he didn’t come alone, with Wassy Bwoy and Cash Level by his side, this video feels like a ceremony: raw, bold, and drenched in ambition. The title “Ratafari” suggests royalty, respect, and power and that’s exactly the energy these three bring.

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From the first frames, you can tell this isn’t a “pop for the charts” video it’s a message. The visuals are gritty but artistic: concrete walls, dim lighting, close-ups that catch sweat and hope in the same shot. No filter masks, no fake flexing; these guys look like they earned their grind, and they’re not afraid to show their scars.

Shokii leads with presence. He raps like a man who’s seen the struggle but believes he’s destined for better. His voice is calm but intense, projecting confidence without feeling arrogant. When he speaks about “ratafari,” he’s demanding respect not as a rapper, but as a king of his own story.

Then comes Wassy Bwoy, shining with a combination of grit and soul. His verses feel like the voice of someone who knows the cost of ambition. He isn’t just talking money he’s talking legacy, loyalty, and what it means to rise without forgetting where you came from.

Cash Level closes the trio with smooth but firm energy. He brings the melodic element that ties the verses together, giving the song a sense of unity. His contribution feels like an offer: “Stand with us, or remember us when we’re already gone.”

The storyline? Less about a typical “party and flex” narrative, more about asserting identity, claiming space, and demanding that people remember who built from nothing. It’s not just a rap flex it’s a statement.

Visually, the video blends luxury and struggle: expensive watches and modest settings, big chains and rough roads. That contrast is powerful. It reminds you that success doesn’t erase where you came from it highlights how fragile the climb is.

Of course, there are moments where the video could’ve pushed further a few shots stick too long, and the pacing sometimes feels like it’s holding back from fully exploding. But maybe that restraint is intentional. Maybe they want us to feel the slow burn.

Take 

Ratafari is more than a music video  it’s a proclamation. Shokii, Wassy Bwoy, and Cash Level prove they’re not just making noise; they’re building something real. This isn’t flash for clout. It’s ambition with purpose.

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