BNXN and producer Sarz have released their highly anticipated joint EP, The Game Needs Us, a five-track project that arrived on May 11, 2026. The EP has already landed at number two on the Apple Music Nigeria Top Albums Chart on its release day, marking a strong debut for the duo.
Chart Success and Early Reactions
The five-track project builds on the duo's previous collaborations, including Gwagwalada and Pidgin & English. Early reactions praise the EP's clean production and chemistry, even as it stays within the artists' familiar sound. The project had been building anticipation since the lead single Back Outside dropped in late April, giving fans a taste of what the collaboration would sound like and setting expectations for the full body of work.
High Expectations and Background
Those expectations were not small. Chatter among fans in the weeks leading up to the release suggested BNXN had hinted at the project being Grammy nomination material, a bar that, if true, signals how seriously he views the partnership. BNXN, formerly known as Buju, broke through after a freestyle caught Zlatan Ibile's attention and has since built a consistent profile that led to UK chart entries with Finesse and Propeller, a Headies Next Rated win in 2022, and two studio albums in Sincerely, Benson and Captain. The Game Needs Us is the latest in his endeavours.
The two have a history that predates the EP. Sarz produced Gwagwalada and Pidgin & English for BNXN, establishing a working chemistry that made the joint project feel like a natural next step rather than out of place. For Sarz, the collaboration adds another chapter to one of the most impressive production careers in Afrobeats. He produced old hits, including Wizkid's Come Closer and Lojay's Monalisa, and has worked extensively with artists including Burna Boy and Wande Coal over a career spanning more than a decade.
EP Details and Listener Reception
The Game Needs Us runs fifteen minutes and thirty-two seconds across its five tracks, compact by design, in the tradition of joint EPs that prioritise cohesion over length. Early listener reactions show the EP does not reinvent either artist or push them into unfamiliar territory. What it does is deliver exactly what fans of both BNXN and Sarz would expect: clean production, confidence, and music that does not demand much from the listener but rewards those already bought into their individual sounds. For a fifteen-minute project, that may be precisely the point, and at number two on Apple Music Nigeria the next day, the early indication is that the audience for it has responded positively.



