Quavo and Offset hint at a final Migos album honoring Takeoff, a new Unc & Phew project, and a posthumous Takeoff solo release
The internet has been on high alert since Monday, April 27, and for good reason. Quavo took to his Instagram Story to drop what reads like a roadmap for the next phase of the Migos legacy, posting a throwback photo of himself alongside his late nephew Takeoff with a caption that laid out multiple projects in plain sight. “Warriors Never fold. Jobs Not Finished. TAKEOFF ALBUM. UNC N PHEW 2. LAST ????? ALBUM. REAL MIGO BLOOD RUN IN MY VIENS!!! AINT NO NEW CHAPTER JUST THE NEXT ONE!!!” Hours later, Offset jumped in with a Culture III-era photo of the full trio and a two-word confirmation: “On dat!!!!”
That sequence of posts, unprompted and unannounced, sent Migos fans into a full decoding session. The breakdown as the culture reads it: a posthumous solo Takeoff album, a sequel to the 2022 Unc & Phew joint project Only Built for Infinity Links, and then the big one, a mystery final album that most are reading as one last group effort. The question marks in “LAST ????? ALBUM” are doing a lot of heavy lifting, with fans speculating loudly that it points toward a final installment in the Culture series, a project that has been sitting in the vault since the group’s 2022 dissolution.
The Road Back Was Long
None of this happened overnight. Migos officially disbanded in 2022, months before Takeoff was fatally shot on November 1 of that year at a Halloween party in downtown Houston. Quavo confirmed the group was finished in his 2023 tribute record “Greatness,” and the two surviving members were not exactly on good terms in the immediate aftermath. Their last joint appearance came at the 2023 BET Awards, a performance that felt less like a reunion and more like a closing statement.
But the temperature has been rising for a while now. In August 2025, Offset told Apple Music’s Ebro Darden that a Quavo collaboration honoring Takeoff was “possible” and “not impossible,” even if no formal conversations had started. More recently, on the 7PM in Brooklyn with Carmelo Anthony podcast, Offset went further, confirming the two speak regularly and that the public beef was always more internet noise than reality. “It be the internet trying to do some old shit, but with us, it ain’t about that,” he said. “That’s family at the end of the day, man.”
The Vault Is Deep
What makes Quavo’s post hit different is the specific inventory it implies. In a 2023 interview, Quavo made clear that the Takeoff archive is enormous, stating that between phones alone, there could be upward of 350 songs per device, with a total count potentially reaching 1,000 unreleased tracks. He used only a handful of those verses on his own Rocket Power project, keeping the majority of the material, in his words, “sacred” for a dedicated Takeoff release. Adding credibility to the timeline is the fact that Quavo already released a posthumous collaboration with Takeoff in 2025, the single “Dope Boy Phone,” which showed he was willing to revisit that catalog under the right circumstances. Offset, meanwhile, has been focused on his solo run, dropping his third album KIARI last year while also recovering from a shooting outside the Hard Rock Casino in Hollywood, Florida earlier this month. He returned to the stage just days after that incident. The timing of both men publicly affirming the same creative direction, without a press release or label announcement in sight, suggests this is less a stunt and more a genuine signal. The Migos story is not finished. It is just reaching its final act.
