Goodbye & Good Riddance
Goodbye & Good Riddance is the debut studio album by American rapper and singer Juice WRLD. Released on May 23, 2018, through Grade A Productions and Interscope Records, it features 17 tracks and one guest appearance from Lil Uzi Vert on the song "Wasted".[1][2] The album propelled Juice WRLD to mainstream success, debuting at number 15 on the US _Billboard_ 200 and eventually peaking at number 4.[3] It has remained on the chart for over 390 weeks as of November 2025, becoming one of the longest-charting albums by a hip-hop artist.[4] As of May 2023, Goodbye & Good Riddance has been certified five-times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for sales and streaming equivalent units of five million in the United States.[1] Key singles from the album include "All Girls Are the Same", which peaked at number 41 on the Billboard Hot 100, and "Lucid Dreams", a breakout hit that reached number 2 on the Hot 100 and number 1 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.[3][5] The latter track, sampling Sting's "Shape of My Heart", garnered widespread acclaim for its emotional lyrics addressing heartbreak and substance use, contributing significantly to the album's cultural impact.[6] Posthumously following Juice WRLD's death on December 8, 2019, the album saw renewed popularity with anniversary editions, including a 2023 five-year deluxe version adding two bonus tracks, further extending its legacy in the emo rap genre.[7]Background
Recording and production
The recording of Goodbye & Good Riddance took place primarily between late 2017 and early 2018, following the viral success of Juice WRLD's single "Lucid Dreams," with many tracks captured through his signature freestyle method over provided beats.[2] Juice WRLD, born Jarad Higgins in Chicago, often improvised lyrics and melodies in single takes, enabling rapid creation; producer Benny Blanco recalled a session where he completed eight full songs in one day, highlighting the freestyle-driven workflow that required minimal revisions due to the raw, spontaneous nature of the performances.[8] This approach stemmed from his SoundCloud roots, where early versions of the project were uploaded under the working title Fuck You Bella before formal studio refinement.[9] Juice WRLD's breakthrough came after "Lucid Dreams" gained traction on SoundCloud in 2017, leading to his signing with Grade A Productions, founded by Chicago rapper Lil Bibby, in a $3 million deal that paved the way for the album's development under Interscope Records.[10] The entire album was assembled in under a year, with engineers like Don Rob handling mixing on early demos and final tracks to preserve the emotive, unpolished vocal delivery.[2] Production was led by Nick Mira of the Internet Money collective, who crafted eight tracks, including the pivotal "Lucid Dreams," where he flipped a sample from Sting's 1993 song "Shape of My Heart" by replaying it on guitar with added trap drums and melodic layers to suit Juice WRLD's vocal style.[11] Other key contributors included Benny Blanco, who handled "Black & White" and emphasized trap-infused beats with emotional depth; Cardo, who produced tracks like "Long Gone," incorporating hard-hitting 808s and atmospheric synths; and additional team members such as CBMix, Dre Moon, and Ghost Loft, who added melodic elements across the project to blend emo-rap sensibilities with contemporary trap production.[2][12] This collaborative effort, centered in Los Angeles studios tied to the Internet Money group, resulted in a cohesive sound built around Juice WRLD's freestyle prowess.[13]Concept and initial title
Goodbye & Good Riddance originated from Juice WRLD's breakup with his ex-girlfriend, known as "Bella," which deeply influenced the project's raw emotional core. Initially uploaded to SoundCloud in early 2018 under the title Fuck You Bella, the mixtape consisted of 10 tracks dedicated to processing the end of the relationship.[2] The album's concept is deeply autobiographical, emphasizing themes of heartbreak, addiction, and the challenges of young adulthood through an emo rap lens. Juice WRLD sought to express genuine vulnerability, transforming personal pain into relatable narratives that resonate with listeners grappling with similar issues; he described this approach as a "gift and a curse" in reflecting his life's darker moments.[14] After the viral success of his single "All Girls Are the Same," Juice WRLD signed a joint venture with Grade A Productions and Interscope Records in March 2018. The title was subsequently changed to Goodbye & Good Riddance to eliminate overt personal references, instead evoking a sense of closure and progression beyond the breakup. The initial tracklist was finalized shortly after the signing.[15]Reissues and editions
2018 expansions
On July 10, 2018, Goodbye & Good Riddance was reissued with the addition of "Wasted" featuring Lil Uzi Vert, inserted as the fifth track.[2] The song, produced by CBMIX, was recorded in April 2018 during the album's original sessions but held back initially.[16] This update aimed to leverage the growing popularity of lead single "Lucid Dreams," which had propelled Juice WRLD's rising profile following the album's May release.[17] The track explores themes of substance use and emotional numbness in relationships, aligning with the album's core motifs of heartbreak and escapism. "Wasted" has since been certified 3× Platinum by the RIAA, reflecting its enduring commercial impact.[18] A further expansion occurred on December 10, 2018, when "Armed and Dangerous" was added exclusively to Spotify and Tidal editions of the album, later extended to other streaming platforms.[2] Like "Wasted," this track originated from sessions around the album's production period in 2018 and was withheld to sustain momentum amid Juice WRLD's breakthrough success.[19] Produced by Dre Moon, it delves into reflections on fame, excess, and personal guardedness, complementing the record's introspective style despite its more assertive tone.[20] These 2018 modifications increased the album's runtime from 40:13 in its standard edition to 47:30 on the updated Spotify and Tidal versions, incorporating the new tracks without altering the original sequence significantly.[21]Anniversary releases
Following Juice WRLD's death in December 2019, his estate—overseen by his mother Carmela Wallace and Grade A Productions co-founder Lil Bibby—has curated subsequent anniversary editions of Goodbye & Good Riddance to preserve and expand his musical legacy.[22][23] On May 28, 2021, marking the album's third anniversary, the estate released the Anniversary Edition, which incorporated two previously unreleased tracks: "734" and a remix of "Lucid Dreams" featuring Lil Uzi Vert.[24] "734," produced by DT and Nick Mira, derives its title from the area code of Juice WRLD's ex-girlfriend's hometown in Southeast Michigan, reflecting themes of heartbreak and reflection in the lyrics.[25] This edition built upon the 2018 expansions that had added "Wasted" and "Armed and Dangerous" but introduced fresh material from the artist's archives.[26] The fifth anniversary edition arrived on May 18, 2023, via Grade A Productions and Interscope Records, expanding the tracklist to 20 songs with the addition of two more unreleased cuts: "Glo'd Up" and "No Good." "Glo'd Up" explores personal growth and the transformative influence of a near-perfect romantic partner, emphasizing emotional maturity amid love's complexities.[27] In contrast, "No Good," produced by Rvssian and Lil Bibby, addresses the pitfalls of a toxic relationship driven by superficial attractions like wealth and status.[28] The deluxe edition runs for 58 minutes and 40 seconds, offering fans a fuller glimpse into Juice WRLD's evolving sound.[29] In January 2024, Interscope Records issued a limited physical reissue through its Vinyl Collective program, featuring the 5 Year Anniversary Edition artwork on lemon yellow double vinyl, pressed at Precision Record Pressing and limited to 2,500 numbered copies with red foil stamping.[30] This collector's edition included no new audio content but provided remastered vinyl formatting and updated packaging to appeal to audiophiles and longtime supporters.[31]Composition
Musical style
Goodbye & Good Riddance exemplifies the emo rap genre, fusing trap beats with melodic R&B sensibilities to create a sound that prioritizes emotional vulnerability through atmospheric production. Juice WRLD's signature singing-rap hybrid—marked by auto-tuned, warbly vocals—drives the album's cathartic energy, often layering weepy groans over mawkish synth atmospheres and fidgeting trap snares. This approach crystallizes the emo-rap aesthetic of the late 2010s, blending hip-hop's rhythmic drive with pop-punk-like introspection.[32] The album's instrumentation relies heavily on trap staples, including booming 808 bass lines, rapid hi-hat rolls, and spacey synth pads that evoke a dreamy, melancholic haze. Tracks like "Lean wit Me" highlight upbeat trap rhythms, contrasting the overall subdued tempo with energetic percussion that propels the melody forward. A standout sonic element is the interpolation of the acoustic guitar riff from Sting's 1993 rock ballad "Shape of My Heart" in "Lucid Dreams," which infuses 90s rock textures into the hip-hop framework and underscores the genre-blending innovation.[32][33] Drawing from contemporaries like Post Malone and Lil Peep, the album's style echoes their frustrated, melodic trap influences while carving out Juice WRLD's distinct emo-rap niche. The standard edition's 40-minute runtime ensures sonic cohesion, with reissues maintaining this foundation through added tracks that retain the auto-tuned melodies and trap-infused backdrops, albeit with denser layering from features.[32][34]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of Goodbye & Good Riddance revolve around central themes of heartbreak, drug addiction, mental health struggles, and the ephemeral nature of fame, presented in a raw, confessional style that captures the vulnerabilities of youth. Heartbreak dominates tracks like "All Girls Are the Same," where Juice WRLD laments romantic betrayal with lines such as "They're rotting my brain, love / These hoes are the same," portraying women as repetitive sources of emotional devastation and jealousy.[35] This confessional approach extends to mental health, often intertwined with self-medication, as in the admission "I take prescriptions to make me feel a-okay / I know it's all in my head," reflecting anxiety and emotional turmoil without narrative subtlety.[32] Drug addiction emerges as a perilous escape in songs like "Lean Wit Me," which details the seductive pull of substances amid internal conflict: "Drugs got me sweatin', but the room gettin' colder / Lookin' at the devil and the angel on my shoulder / Will I die tonight? I don't know, is it over?"[36] Fleeting fame adds another layer, evoking the highs of success against personal lows, as explored in "Black & White," where imagery of cocaine-fueled nights in a "black Benz" contrasts with sobering regrets, symbolizing the duality of euphoria and despair in a party atmosphere.[37] The standout "Lucid Dreams" employs dream metaphors for unrequited love, with Juice attempting to lucidly control visions of an ex to numb the pain: "I still see your shadows in my room / Can't take back the love that I gave you."[38] Poetic devices amplify this emotional rawness, including repetition in choruses for emphasis—such as the insistent "All girls are the same" refrain—to convey obsessive heartbreak, alongside slang-heavy vernacular rooted in Chicago youth culture, like casual references to "lean" and "hoes," which lend authenticity to the vulnerability drawn from real-life experiences.[32] The album arcs from introspective beginnings in the spoken-word "Intro," building through anthemic, hook-driven confessions of pain, to a reflective close in "Lucid Dreams," tracing an emotional progression from turmoil to wistful acceptance.[32]Promotion and singles
Lead singles
The lead singles from Goodbye & Good Riddance were strategically released in the months prior to the album's launch to generate anticipation and capitalize on Juice WRLD's burgeoning SoundCloud presence, under the guidance of Interscope Records and Grade A Productions. These tracks highlighted the artist's signature blend of melodic emo-rap and introspective lyricism, focusing on themes of heartbreak and emotional turmoil, while their accompanying music videos—directed by Cole Bennett of Lyrical Lemonade—featured stark, visually arresting imagery that amplified their raw sentiment. "All Girls Are the Same," released as the lead single on April 13, 2018, marked Juice WRLD's official entry into mainstream promotion following his independent SoundCloud uploads. Produced by Nick Mira, the track explores disillusionment with romantic relationships, portraying a cycle of betrayal and self-medication through substances, as in lines reflecting generalized pain from past loves: "All girls are the same, they're rotting my brain, love." It debuted at No. 92 on the Billboard Hot 100 and ultimately peaked at No. 41, driven by streaming momentum and radio play. Certified 8× Platinum by the RIAA in May 2023 for over 8 million units in the U.S.[39], the song's music video, released earlier on February 25, 2018, depicted Juice WRLD in isolated, dimly lit settings to underscore its themes of isolation and regret.[35] The second single, "Lucid Dreams," followed on May 4, 2018, building on the momentum of its pre-release virality after Juice WRLD uploaded an early version to SoundCloud on June 15, 2017, where it amassed millions of plays and caught Interscope's attention. Also produced by Nick Mira and sampling Sting's "Shape of My Heart," the song delves into post-breakup heartache and escapism, with vivid imagery of emotional numbness: "I still see your shadows in my room / Can't take back the love that I gave you." It soared to No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming Juice WRLD's highest-charting single at the time, and maintained a remarkable chart run of over 120 weeks, underscoring its enduring appeal. Certified Diamond by the RIAA in February 2022 (later reaching 11× Platinum by May 2023 for 11 million units), it was pivotal in propelling the album to breakout success upon release. The music video, premiered on May 11, 2018, employed surreal, dreamlike visuals—including distorted close-ups of Juice WRLD's face embedded in a fractured floor—to evoke the track's themes of lucid yet tormented reverie and vulnerability.[40][41]Promotional singles and features
"Lean wit Me" served as the third single from Goodbye & Good Riddance, released on May 23, 2018, coinciding with the album's launch.[36] The track peaked at number 68 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.[42] It has been certified 5× Platinum by the RIAA as of May 2023.[43] The accompanying music video, directed by Sherif Alabede and released on August 2, 2018, portrays Juice WRLD's struggle with drug addiction and its impact on his relationship, featuring scenes of indulgence and emotional turmoil that underscore the song's themes of dependency.[44] Following the album's initial release, "Wasted" featuring Lil Uzi Vert was issued as a promotional single on July 10, 2018, and incorporated into the Wasted reissue of Goodbye & Good Riddance.[45] The collaboration peaked at number 67 on the Billboard Hot 100. It earned 3× Platinum certification from the RIAA as of November 2021.[46] The track highlights the duo's synergistic vocal delivery and shared exploration of substance-fueled escapism, with the youthful pairing delivering a melodic trap sound that amplified their mutual appeal in the emo rap scene.[45] "Armed and Dangerous" was released as a non-album promotional single on October 15, 2018, and later integrated into expanded editions of the album.[47] It reached number 44 on the Billboard Hot 100.[48] The song adopts a more upbeat, trap-infused tone compared to the introspective style dominant on the core album, emphasizing themes of success and readiness amid street life.[47] Promotion for these singles included live performances, such as Juice WRLD's appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live! in August 2018, where he showcased tracks from the album, and festival appearances at events like Rolling Loud Bay Area and Made in America that year. Collaborations like "Wasted" enhanced cross-artist visibility, drawing fans from Lil Uzi Vert's established audience to broaden exposure for Juice WRLD's project.[45]Critical reception
Initial reviews
Upon its release in May 2018, Goodbye & Good Riddance received mixed-to-positive reviews from critics, who generally praised Juice WRLD's emotional vulnerability and raw delivery while critiquing the album's repetitive themes and formulaic production.[32][49] Pitchfork awarded the album a 6.4 out of 10, highlighting its cathartic portrayal of adolescent heartbreak through weepy groans and blunt lyrics, with "Lucid Dreams" standing out as a moody, hook-driven highlight that captured the essence of emo rap.[32] The review commended Juice WRLD's immediacy in processing emotions like jealousy and agony, as in the line "Who am I kiddin’?/All this jealousy and agony that I sit in" from "Lean wit Me," but faulted the persistent sulkiness and self-obsession that led to vapid, groaning melodrama across tracks.[32] HipHopDX noted the project's raw talent amid the rising emo rap trend, emphasizing how Juice WRLD's passionate singing over Nick Mira's grunge-to-pop beats provided glimpses of strong songwriting, such as the vivid imagery in "Used To": "Wear your best dress, girl, ’cause you gon’ die in it/Bet you regret the day that you lied in it."[49] However, the outlet criticized the overreliance on themes of drug abuse and depression, which lacked creative depth and risked glamorizing negative influences on young listeners, though the skits offered relatable insights into his relationships.[49] Music critic Anthony Fantano of The Needle Drop described the album as a "decent but unremarkable" entry in emo-infused trap, rating it 5 out of 10 for its enjoyable moments in small doses but overall formulaic melancholy and lack of standout innovation beyond emotional authenticity.[50]Retrospective assessments
Following Juice WRLD's death in December 2019, Goodbye & Good Riddance experienced a notable elevation in critical regard, with publications reevaluating its contributions to emo rap and hip-hop. In June 2022, Rolling Stone placed the album at No. 199 on its list of the 200 Greatest Hip-Hop Albums of All Time, describing it as featuring a "primal whine of been-done-wrong romantic angst" that marinated Juice WRLD's vocals in emotional effluvia, highlighting its raw vulnerability as a key influence on the genre.[51] Pitchfork revisited the album in a December 2019 tribute article, emphasizing its enduring impact on emo rap by detailing how tracks like "Lucid Dreams" propelled the subgenre into mainstream prominence, transforming Juice WRLD from a SoundCloud sensation into a chart-topping artist whose melodic style resonated with a generation grappling with heartbreak and mental health.[52] Into the 2020s, critics have increasingly hailed Goodbye & Good Riddance as a foundational blueprint for sad rap, crediting its blend of trap beats, rock samples, and confessional lyrics for shaping subsequent artists in the style. In August 2025, Billboard ranked it No. 10 on its Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums of the 21st Century chart, based on cumulative performance metrics, affirming its sustained commercial and cultural relevance over 389 weeks on the chart.[53] The album's 2021 and 2023 anniversary reissues, with the former adding unreleased tracks including "734" and the latter adding "No Good" and "Glo'd Up," drew praise for enhancing the original's emotional depth without overshadowing its core sound, while underscoring prophetic themes of addiction and loss that gained tragic resonance posthumously.[54][55]Commercial performance
Chart positions
Goodbye & Good Riddance debuted at number 15 on the US Billboard 200 chart dated July 7, 2018, with 39,000 album-equivalent units consumed in its first week. The album later ascended to a peak position of number 4 on the chart dated August 11, 2018, driven by sustained streaming from singles like "Lucid Dreams." It has remained on the Billboard 200 for over 390 weeks as of November 2025, marking it as the longest-charting rap album by a deceased artist.[4][56] Internationally, the album reached number 23 on the UK Albums Chart, number 5 on the Canadian Albums Chart, and number 17 on the Australian ARIA Albums Chart.[57][58][59] Following Juice WRLD's death on December 8, 2019, the album experienced a significant streaming surge, re-entering the Billboard 200 at number 6 in the week ending December 14, 2019.[60] On year-end charts, it ranked number 18 on the 2018 Billboard 200, number 17 in 2019, and number 18 in 2020, reflecting consistent performance amid growing popularity.[61][62][63] For the decade, it placed at number 57 on the Billboard 200 decade-end chart for the 2010s.[64] The album has amassed over 10 billion streams on Spotify as of 2025, with notable boosts post-2019 contributing to its enduring chart presence.[65]| Chart (2018–2025) | Peak Position | Weeks Charted (as of Nov. 2025) |
|---|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 4 | 390+ |
| US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums | 3 | 390 |
| Canadian Albums (Billboard) | 5 | 312+ |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 23 | 167 |
| Australian Albums (ARIA) | 17 | 133+ |
Sales and certifications
Goodbye & Good Riddance debuted on the Billboard 200 with 39,000 album-equivalent units in its first week. By May 23, 2023, the album had been certified 5× Platinum by the RIAA, representing 5 million units in the United States, including sales and streaming equivalents. Internationally, the album has received multiple certifications reflecting strong global performance. In the United Kingdom, it was certified Platinum by the BPI in October 2021 for 300,000 units. Music Canada awarded it 5× Platinum status for 400,000 units, while ARIA in Australia certified it Platinum for 70,000 units. Other markets include 2× Platinum in Belgium (60,000 units) and 3× Platinum in Denmark (60,000 units).| Region | Certification | Units Sold | Certifying Body | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | Platinum | 70,000 | ARIA | July 6, 2021 |
| Belgium | 2× Platinum | 60,000 | BRMA | June 24, 2022 |
| Canada | 5× Platinum | 400,000 | Music Canada | N/A |
| Denmark | 3× Platinum | 60,000 | IFPI Denmark | August 9, 2022 |
| United Kingdom | Platinum | 300,000 | BPI | October 8, 2021 |
| United States | 5× Platinum | 5,000,000 | RIAA | May 23, 2023 |
Track listing
| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Intro" | Higgins | Don Rob | 1:14 |
| 2 | "All Girls Are the Same" | Higgins | Nick Mira | 2:45 |
| 3 | "Lucid Dreams" | Higgins | Nick Mira | 3:59 |
| 4 | "Lean wit Me" | Higgins | Nick Mira | 2:55 |
| 5 | "I'm Still" | Higgins | Nick Mira | 3:12 |
| 6 | "Betrayal (Skit)" | Higgins | 1:04 | |
| 7 | "Candles" | Higgins | 3:03 | |
| 8 | "Percaholic" | Higgins | 3:30 | |
| 9 | "Scared of Love" | Higgins | Ghost Loft | 2:50 |
| 10 | "Used To" | Higgins | Nick Mira | 2:56 |
| 11 | "Karma (Skit)" | Higgins | 1:14 | |
| 12 | "Hurt Me" | Higgins | Sidepce | 2:02 |
| 13 | "Black & White" | Higgins | 3:06 | |
| 14 | "Long Gone" | Higgins | 3:07 | |
| 15 | "End of the Road" | Higgins | Nick Mira | 2:42 |
Personnel
- Juice WRLD – lead vocals[2]
- Lil Uzi Vert – featured vocals (track 5, "Wasted")[2]
Producers
- Nick Mira – production (various tracks)[66]
- Benny Blanco – production[66]
- Cardo – production[66]
- CBMix – production (track 5, "Wasted")[66]
- Don Rob – production (track 1, "Intro")[66]
- Dre Moon – production (track 16, "Armed and Dangerous")[66]
- JR Hitmaker – production[66]
- Mitch Mula – production[66]
- Ric & Thadeus – production[66]
- Sidepce – production (various tracks)[66]
- Taz Taylor – production[66]
- Cashmere Cat – production[66]
Mixing engineers
- Lil Bibby – mixing (various tracks)[66]
- Don Rob – mixing (track 1)[66]
- Justin Craig – mixing (track 4)[66]
- James Kang – mixing (track 13)[66]
Additional personnel
Legacy
Cultural impact
Goodbye & Good Riddance played a pivotal role in popularizing emo rap within the mainstream, blending melodic rap with emotional vulnerability that resonated with Generation Z audiences facing mental health challenges. The album's success helped transition emo rap from underground SoundCloud circles to broader commercial appeal, influencing a wave of artists who incorporated raw emotional expression into hip-hop. For instance, Juice WRLD's style paved the way for successors to Lil Peep, such as those exploring genre-blending vulnerability, while also impacting Machine Gun Kelly's pivot toward pop-punk-infused rap and Olivia Rodrigo's "sad-girl pop" aesthetics that emphasize heartbreak and introspection.[68][69] The track "Lucid Dreams" notably sparked a surge in guitar-rap covers and acoustic reinterpretations across social platforms, inspiring amateur musicians to recreate its melancholic melody and fostering a trend of blending rap with live instrumentation. Complementing this, the album's "999" motif—explained by Juice WRLD as inverting negativity (like 666) into positivity by turning personal struggles into sources of strength—ignited a dedicated fan movement that embraced the number as a symbol of resilience and emotional transformation.[70] Beyond music, the album contributed significantly to the 2018-2019 SoundCloud rap wave by exemplifying its core elements of melodic introspection and genre fusion, which broadened rap's emotional palette and attracted diverse collaborators. Its themes of heartbreak and addiction soundtracked widespread discussions on mental health, particularly on platforms like TikTok, where fans shared personal stories aligned with the album's candid lyrics. By 2025, Goodbye & Good Riddance had amassed over 10 billion streams on Spotify alone, underscoring its enduring reach, while elements from the project influenced newer artists like The Kid Laroi, who sampled Juice WRLD's vocal style in tribute tracks such as "Goodbye."[69][71][70]Posthumous significance
Following the death of Jarad Higgins, known professionally as Juice WRLD, on December 8, 2019, from an accidental overdose of codeine and oxycodone, Goodbye & Good Riddance experienced a significant surge in streams, increasing by 487% in the days immediately after his passing, which helped establish the album as a central memorial to his life and work.[72][73][74] The estate of Juice WRLD honored his legacy through reissues of the album, including the 2021 Anniversary Edition, which added tracks like "734" and a "Lucid Dreams" remix featuring Lil Uzi Vert as tributes to his early sound, and the 2023 5 Year Anniversary Edition, incorporating unreleased material to reflect his evolving style.[24][7] Additionally, proceeds from estate-managed releases and merchandise have supported the Live Free 999 foundation, founded by his mother Carmela Wallace to provide education, prevention, and treatment for youth facing addiction, anxiety, and depression, with notable annual donations including $100,000 to mental health organizations on World Mental Health Day in 2022 and 2024.[75][76][77] The album featured prominently in posthumous recognition, such as the 2021 HBO documentary Juice WRLD: Into the Abyss, which explored his career and included tracks from Goodbye & Good Riddance in its soundtrack to illustrate his breakthrough.[78] Annual tributes, including the first Juice WRLD Day event in Chicago in 2022 organized by Lyrical Lemonade founder Cole Bennett, have highlighted songs like "Lucid Dreams" to commemorate his influence.[79] This posthumous album also inspired follow-up projects, notably the 2020 release Legends Never Die, which echoed the emo rap introspection and melodic style of Goodbye & Good Riddance while serving as a direct extension of his thematic concerns with mental health and loss.[80] Fans have continued to pay homage through pilgrimages to Chicago sites, such as vigils at Millennium Park shortly after his death and ongoing visits to murals and his grave at Beverly Cemetery in Blue Island, Illinois, where tributes accumulate as symbols of enduring devotion.[81][82]Release history
| Region | Date | Label(s) | Format(s) | Catalog |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Various | May 23, 2018 | Grade A Productions, Interscope Records | Digital download | — |
| United States | November 30, 2018 | Grade A Productions, Interscope Records | CD, LP | B0028719-01 |
| Various | May 23, 2021 | Grade A Productions, Interscope Records | Digital download (anniversary edition) | — |
| Various | May 18, 2023 | Grade A Productions, Interscope Records | Digital download (5 year anniversary deluxe edition) | — |
| United States | August 15, 2023 | Grade A Productions, Interscope Records | 2×LP (5 year anniversary deluxe edition) | B0037205-01 |