Which artists could feature on Drake’s ICEMAN?

Drake is set to dominate 2026 when ICEMAN is released. A decade on from that Summer of 16, remembered so nostalgically by almost all of us, a year that Drake released one of his strongest projects in Views, Drizzy has been teasing his new album for the last few months.

The Canadian is the king of side quests. From popping up courtside at basketball games to sports bets on Stake, Drake stays busy. Research from Casinos.com, home of online Gigadat casinos, shows that Drake is influencing the crypto casino market, while also appearing at the WWE and showing up on live streams with Kai Cenat. But when he jumps back in the booth, Drake will be back at his best.

Earlier this month, a snippet from a track believed to be on ICEMAN hit the internet. In his bars, Drizzy potentially blamed the album’s delay on “haters” and “double agents” while also pointing at record label woes. The hype is real, but the big question is around who else will feature.

Drake has recently released songs with the likes of 21 Savage and Central Cee, so they’re to be expected, and his Valentine’s album with PARTYNEXTDOOR still has several hits. But are there any outside picks, surprise entrants, or underground artists worth considering? In this article, we take a look at ICEMAN and its potential track list.

Bad Bunny

Drake and Bad Bunny already have chemistry. “MIA” still goes off at parties where people actually care about the music, and with Bunny’s global profile peaking again due to Super Bowl season, the timing is perfect. Drake loves a moment.

It could be a rare time we get some heat on a winter-themed album, a bit like the One Dance and Controlla sections in Views. The kind of track that plays in Miami, Mexico City, and Montreal without needing subtitles.

Drake’s always understood that reggaeton crossovers print money, and Bunny is the biggest artist in the world when he wants to be. This one writes itself.

SZA

Their 2023 collab “Slime You Out” was messy, meme-able, and magnetic. It gave the internet ammunition for weeks, and fans have been hungry for a cleaner, more expansive follow-up ever since.

SZA’s in her imperial phase. She’s untouchable right now, and Drake loves tapping artists at their apex. It’s a formula he’s perfected over the years. SZA’s voice over a Drake beat would give ICEMAN its emotional core, the kind of song that ends up on every playlist titled “late night drives” or “feelings.”

Dave

“Wanna Know” was the track that first pushed Dave into the global conversation, and nearly a decade later he’s a heavyweight with a critically acclaimed album and a sold-out tour behind him. Easily the biggest rapper in the UK.

A reunion would be a prestige move, subtle and lyrically elite. The kind of collaboration that reminds people Drake still cares about bars, not just vibes. Dave’s pen game is sharp enough to keep up, and the UK connection gives ICEMAN the transatlantic credibility Drake’s been building since working with Skepta and Giggs back on More Life.

Fred Again

Drake’s flirted with house and UK club beats before. Think Crazy Cousinz. Honestly, Nevermind proved he’s not afraid of the left turn, even when the internet roasts him for it. Fred Again is the most influential producer in that space right now, and his live shows have a cult following that has made clubbing cool again.

Even a sample flip or co-production credit would send fans into meltdown. Drake knows how to stay ahead of the curve, and Fred’s emotional, loop-heavy production would give ICEMAN a texture no one expects.

Jim Legxacy

Brit nominated Jim Legxacy had a 2025 to remember. BBM is one of the most distinct underground projects of the last year. Glitchy, melodic, and emotionally off-kilter in a way that echoes early-era Drake.

The comparisons are obvious, and that’s probably why Drake would be interested. Drizzy loves cosigning the UK’s next wave, especially when they sound like a younger version of himself. This would be a tasteful, insider pick.

The kind of feature that makes people who actually listen to music go, “Wait, how does Drake know about him?”

It positions Drake as a tastemaker rather than just a hitmaker, and that’s always been part of the appeal.

After featuring on No Weapons with Dave, hearing Jim on ICEMAN would be the perfect next step for the cult hero.

EsdeeKid

EsdeeKid’s breakout last year, boosted by that Timothy Chalamet moment, has made him one of the most intriguing new voices in the UK.

Drake has history with Liverpool artists, remember the Tremz era, and he’s always had a soft spot for regional scenes. A gritty, melodic Scouse feature would be a curveball that actually makes sense.

Drake’s built his career on finding pockets of culture the mainstream hasn’t caught up with yet, and EsdeeKid fits that profile perfectly.

The accent, the energy, the raw honesty in the writing. It’s the kind of collaboration that feels random until it drops, and then suddenly everyone’s claiming they saw it coming.

Brent Faiyaz

“Wasting Time” was a standout moment for both artists, and Brent’s new album Icon is dominating charts and playlists.

Drake loves returning to collaborators who evolve between link-ups. He did it with The Weeknd, he did it with Future, and he’ll probably do it with Brent.

A moody, late-night R&B cut with Brent would give ICEMAN its essential slow-burn moment. The kind of song that doesn’t hit immediately but becomes the album’s most replayed track six months later.

ICEMAN already feels like the start of a new Drake era. The leaks, the side quests, the casino headlines, the livestream chaos, the quiet studio hints. It all points toward an artist sharpening his focus again.

Whether he leans into global superstars, UK innovators or underground voices with something to prove, the features on this album will shape how 2026 sounds. Drake has always known how to pick collaborators who elevate the moment, and ICEMAN looks set to continue that tradition.

All that’s left now is for him to drop the track list and let the world catch up.

Trending

Arts in one place.

All our content is free to read; if you want to subscribe to our newsletter to keep up to date, click the button below.

People Are Reading