Kartel’s appearance on JACKBOYS 2 is more than a feature—it’s a statement. Despite being previously incarcerated for over a decade, the deejay continues to be a dominant voice in dancehall and an increasingly visible figure in hip-hop’s international orbit. His contribution to Scott’s high-profile compilation underscores a larger trend: dancehall’s rhythmic, street-rooted DNA remains essential to modern rap’s global evolution. With Scott bringing together artists like Kodak Black, GloRilla, 21 Savage, Tyla, and Waka Flocka Flame, it’s Kartel’s raw patois-laced delivery that anchors the album’s cross-cultural credibility.
Beyond the buzz of his guest features, the numbers behind JACKBOYS 2 speak volumes. Of its 232,000 units, a massive 160,000 came from pure album sales, making it the biggest sales week for a rap album since 2024. The album also pulled in 72,000 SEA units, equating to nearly 95 million streams, and stands as 2025’s second-largest rap debut, following Playboi Carti’s MUSIC. The success showcases Travis Scott’s marketing genius and the growing commercial impact of multi-format album strategies—vinyl variants, digital exclusives, and webstore bundles.
Still, for many fans, it’s Kartel’s inclusion that lingers. His enduring presence—heard through gravelly bars and charged lyrics—adds authenticity and grit to a project that is otherwise dripping in glossy production. “Hearing him on a Billboard No. 1 album? That’s historic.” – one fan commented.
In many ways, JACKBOYS 2 is a microcosm of music’s future: genre-blending, borderless, and boldly collaborative. And for Vybz Kartel, it’s further proof that not even prison walls could contain the reach of a true global icon.



