Offica
Offica is the stage name of Tomas Adedayo Adeyinka, a Nigerian-born Irish rapper raised in Drogheda, County Louth, renowned for pioneering the Irish drill music scene with a unique fusion of UK drill beats, Yoruba slang and mythology, Irish vernacular, and Japanese anime influences.[1][2][3] Born in September 2000 in Lagos, Nigeria, Adeyinka moved to Ireland as a child and grew up in a household influenced by Fuji and Afrobeats artists like Fela Kuti, before discovering hip-hop through Chicago influences and UK rap.[1][2] He began his music career in early 2018 at age 18, initially performing anonymously as a masked rapper and releasing his debut track "No Hook" later that year, which marked his entry into the burgeoning Irish drill landscape. In February 2024, he headlined a show at Belfast's Limelight 2.[3][1][2][4] Offica rose to prominence as a key member of the A92 collective, with his 2021 "A92 x Fumez the Engineer Plugged In" freestyle becoming the highest-streaming UK drill freestyle ever, amassing over 126 million Spotify streams and over 55 million YouTube views as of 2025.[3][2] His debut album, Hokage – Pt. 1, released on October 27, 2023, features 14 tracks including collaborations with A92 affiliates and explores themes of personal growth, anxiety, and cultural identity, followed shortly by Pt. 2 in November 2023.[2] By 2024, his catalog had surpassed 80 million total streams, with notable collaborations alongside artists like KSI, Kenny Allstar, and Charlie Sloth.[3] In July 2024, Offica signed with Greenback Records, a hip-hop label co-founded by UFC fighter Conor McGregor, marking a significant step in his international career; his first release under the label, the dancehall-rap crossover "Gyal Over There" with Jamaican artist Konshens, dropped in August 2025.[5][6] He followed this with the freestyle single "Plotting" in December 2024, which highlighted his lyrical prowess and set the stage for upcoming projects. In early 2025, Offica joined American rapper The Game as a special guest on a UK and Ireland tour, performing at five dates. In May 2025, he released the single "Go Mo".[7][8][9][10]Early life
Birth and heritage
Offica, whose real name is Tomas Adedayo Adeyinka, was born in September 2000 in Lagos, Nigeria.[11][12] Adeyinka hails from the Yoruba ethnic group, with both parents originating from Nigeria's southwestern region where Yoruba culture predominates.[12][13] The family maintained strong ties to their heritage by speaking Yoruba at home, instilling an early appreciation for Nigerian linguistic and cultural traditions.[14][15] Details on Adeyinka's pre-relocation experiences in Nigeria remain limited, reflecting the immigrant background of his family, who emphasized cultural preservation amid their Yoruba roots.[14] This early environment shaped his foundational identity, rooted in the vibrant, populous city of Lagos known for its diverse ethnic influences.[11]Youth in Ireland
Offica relocated to Drogheda, Ireland, from Lagos, Nigeria, as an infant, beginning his schooling there at age three and having no recollection of his birthplace.[1] The town's A92 postal code later inspired the name of his musical collective, A92.[16] Growing up in this working-class coastal town in County Louth, he immersed himself in local community life during his formative years. Offica attended local schools in Drogheda throughout his youth, focusing on a typical Irish education without notable academic distinctions. After completing secondary school, Adeyinka studied International Business at Maynooth University, from which he graduated.[13] His primary non-musical pursuit was soccer, which he described as his first love; he played competitively as a midfielder for Drogheda United F.C.'s youth teams until injuries in his late teens forced him to pivot away from the sport.[1] As a Nigerian-Irish child in predominantly white Drogheda, Offica navigated cultural adaptation by balancing his heritage with his surroundings. His parents spoke Yoruba at home, instilling an understanding of Nigerian language and customs, though he primarily adapted to Irish daily life with mostly white friends.[14] This duality shaped his identity, presenting challenges in a less diverse environment but fostering a strong sense of resilience and belonging in Ireland.[17]Career
Formation of A92 and initial releases
Offica entered the music scene around 2018, initially discovering rapping through casual freestyles with a friend over beats, which he described as happening "almost by accident."[1] This led to his debut single, "No Hook," released in late 2018, where he concealed his identity with a paisley bandana to protect his concurrent youth soccer career.[1] His interest in music was partly inspired by his younger sister, who was actively involved in singing and performing, influencing him to explore it as a potential path despite initially viewing it as outside his lane.[13] In 2020, Offica co-founded the drill collective A92 in his hometown of Drogheda, Ireland, alongside manager Joel Safo of JS Management, who identified a gap in the market for drill music beyond Dublin.[18] Named after Drogheda's A92 postal code, the group included key members such as Dbo Fundz, Ksav, Trapboy, Ace, Kebz, BT, and Nikz, with Offica emerging as a central figure.[18][19] A92's debut collective track, "A9 Link Up," released in September 2020, showcased their raw, posse-cut style and helped establish their presence in the burgeoning Irish drill landscape.[18] A92 quickly gained traction through their viral "Plugged In Freestyle" with producer Fumez The Engineer, released in October 2020, which amassed over 53 million YouTube views as of November 2023 and highlighted the collective's energetic flows and Drogheda-rooted lyrics.[20][2] Offica's solo contributions during the freestyle underscored his rapid rise within the group. Prior to A92's formation, Offica had released "Naruto Drillings" in May 2019, a track blending UK drill beats with anime references and themes of street life in Ireland, which received a high-profile remix featuring KSI in July 2019.[21][22] This period marked Offica's pivotal role in the emergence of Irish drill, a subgenre that gained momentum from 2018 onward through immigrant-influenced artists adapting UK drill with local Irish and West African elements, as seen in A92's multicultural slang and regional pride.[20] Platforms like YouTube channels Dearfach TV and New Eire TV amplified early talents from areas like Drogheda, positioning A92 and Offica as breakouts from outside Dublin's dominant scene.[20]Breakthrough and viral success
Offica's breakthrough came in 2021 with the release of his single "Obito," which premiered on GRM Daily on May 14 and quickly amassed over 300,000 YouTube views in its first three days.[23] Produced by Kidspyal, the track featured a Naruto-inspired drill beat characterized by sliding 808s and rapid hi-hats, while Offica's lyrics delivered heavy, precise bars targeting rivals and emphasizing street resilience, marking a return to his masked persona and raw drill roots.[24] By early 2022, the music video had surpassed 2.3 million views, earning Offica an award from Olly's TV and solidifying his position as a rising figure in the Irish drill scene.[23] Building on this momentum, Offica released "O Di Dan Dan (Oliver Twist)" in October 2022, a drill reinterpretation of D'Banj's 2011 Afrobeats hit, produced with Jersey club influences and featuring energetic flows about dance and cultural pride.[25] The track, premiered exclusively on GRM Daily with visuals starring Love Island finalist Dami Hope, celebrated Nigerian Independence Day and blended Offica's Irish-Nigerian heritage with UK drill elements, garnering over 99,000 views shortly after launch and appealing to a younger audience unfamiliar with the original.[25] These singles propelled A92's online presence, with the collective's YouTube channel and social media growing significantly through viral freestyles and link-up videos that highlighted group dynamics and Drogheda street life.[26] Key viral moments included Offica's appearance on Charlie Sloth's Fire in the Booth in late 2020, which laid groundwork for 2021 buzz with its showcase of multilingual flows and A92 energy, amassing hundreds of thousands of views and leading to first UK and Ireland headline tours announced in April 2021.[27][28] Collaborations like "Oggie" with Sello in September 2021 further expanded his reach, released under a deal with Trust It/Atlantic Records and crossing into the UK drill scene via platforms like GRM Daily.[29] Media recognition followed, with features in Hot Press discussing his role in Irish drill's evolution and a starring role in the YouTube Originals documentary Terms & Conditions: Deeper Than Drill in May 2022, which explored the genre's cultural depth beyond surface stereotypes.[26][30] Despite the success, Offica faced challenges from criticisms of the drill genre in Ireland, including accusations that artists like him adopted UK accents and themes to mimic London authenticity rather than authentically representing local experiences.[26] In interviews, he addressed these by emphasizing drill's potential to highlight Drogheda's realities while navigating broader debates on the genre's association with violence and its adaptation in an Irish context.[31]Label deal and 2020s developments
In 2023, Offica released his album Hokage: Pt. 1 on October 27, an 11-track project that showcased his evolving sound blending drill influences with introspective lyrics, followed by Hokage Pt. 2: Hokage in Lagos, a 4-track EP, on November 17; these marked a significant step in his independent output before major label involvement.[32][33][34] In July 2024, Offica signed with Greenback Records, the Irish-based label co-founded by UFC fighter Conor McGregor in 2024, which aimed to support emerging artists with enhanced industry resources.[35][5] This deal facilitated broader distribution channels and international promotion, expanding Offica's reach beyond the UK and Irish markets.[36] His debut single under Greenback, "Gyal Over There" featuring Jamaican dancehall artist Konshens, arrived in August 2025, incorporating reggae elements into Offica's signature style and highlighting his growing collaborations with global talents.[5] Earlier that year, on April 25, 2025, Offica dropped the single "Go Mo," a high-energy track leaning into trap production that signaled his stylistic shift toward heavier basslines and mainstream appeal.[37][10][38] In late 2024, Offica released the freestyle "Plotting," a sharp, wordplay-driven track that previewed his ambitions for the coming year, further emphasizing his transition toward trap-infused beats while maintaining lyrical precision.[7][39] These developments positioned Offica for increased visibility, with the label backing poised to amplify his presence in international scenes.Artistry and public image
Musical style and influences
Offica's music is rooted in Irish drill, a subgenre characterized by ominous, trap-influenced beats and rapid-fire delivery that adapts UK and Chicago drill aesthetics to local contexts. His sound often features fast-paced flows layered with auto-tune, creating a gritty yet melodic texture that emphasizes rhythmic intensity over complex rhyme schemes. In tracks like "Gyal Over There," he fuses drill with dancehall and afrobeats elements, incorporating bouncy rhythms and patois-inflected hooks to blend his Nigerian heritage with Irish urban narratives, resulting in a crossover appeal that extends beyond traditional drill audiences.[8][6] Lyrically, Offica explores themes of street life in Drogheda, drawing from the socioeconomic challenges and camaraderie of his hometown to portray resilience and community bonds among young Black Irish youth. His Nigerian-Irish identity is central, evident in the integration of Yoruba slang and references to African cultural motifs, which add layers of personal authenticity to his storytelling. Anime influences, particularly from Naruto, permeate his work, as seen in projects like Hokage, where fantastical elements symbolize ambition and transformation amid real-world struggles, offering an escapist yet introspective dimension uncommon in drill.[20][1][2] Offica's influences span global hip-hop lineages, with Irish drill serving as a foundation shaped by UK drill's aggressive energy and Chicago's raw origins, while his heritage infuses indirect nods to Nigerian afrobeats through upbeat fusions and familial exposure to artists like Fela Kuti. Early inspirations from UK rap evolved into a multicultural palette, incorporating anime narratives for thematic depth and personal expression. Production-wise, his career traces a path from raw, freestyle-driven sessions in 2018—often over unpolished beats—to more refined tracks in the 2020s, collaborating with engineers like Fumez The Engineer for layered, high-energy freestyles that enhance his dynamic delivery.[1][2][40]Signature mask and persona
Offica adopted his signature mask early in his career, debuting the orange Obito-inspired design in May 2019 with the release of his breakout single "Naruto Drillings."[41][21] The mask, drawn from the Naruto anime series, served as a tool for concealing his identity while building a sense of mystique in the Irish drill scene.[42] This choice aligned with broader trends in drill culture, where rappers often use masks or balaclavas to maintain anonymity, protect against surveillance, and separate their personal lives from public scrutiny amid legal and safety concerns.[43][44] The mask quickly became central to Offica's enigmatic public image, creating a stark contrast with his rapid rise to viral fame through tracks like "Naruto Drillings" and its remix featuring KSI.[45] By initially hiding his face, Offica cultivated an aura of mystery that amplified his presence in music videos and online content, allowing his persona—often referred to as "Obito" or "Tobi"—to dominate without revealing personal details.[26] This approach enhanced his branding, as the mask appeared prominently in visuals, reinforcing themes of protection and guarded vulnerability echoed in his lyrics about street life and self-preservation.[46][47] In 2020, Offica briefly stepped away from the mask with the release of "Face Reveal," signaling a momentary shift toward greater visibility as his career gained momentum.[42] However, he returned to it in 2021 with the single "OBITO," introducing an upgraded white version that symbolized a recommitment to his anonymous roots while marking artistic evolution.[24] This consistency persisted through subsequent releases and live appearances, including tours in 2024 and 2025, where the mask continued to represent a deliberate boundary between his private life and stage persona.[48][49] By 2025, discussions around "mask on or off" in fan and promotional content underscored its enduring role in defining Offica's identity amid ongoing fame.[50]Personal life
Family background
Offica, born Tomas Adeyinka in Lagos, Nigeria, in 2000, hails from a family of Nigerian immigrants who relocated to Drogheda, Ireland, when he was an infant.[1] His parents maintain their cultural roots by speaking Yoruba at home, a language Offica understands but is not fluent in.[1] As the eldest of three siblings, Offica grew up alongside a younger sister, Victoria Adeyinka, and a younger brother.[51] Victoria has achieved significant online fame as a TikTok star, amassing over 14.6 million followers by 2023, and has ventured into music as a recording artist.[1] The family provided a supportive environment, with Offica's parents expressing pride in their children's accomplishments.[51] Victoria's prominence in social media and music served as an indirect influence on Offica's interests, fostering a household dynamic that encouraged creative pursuits.[1] The family remains closely tied to Drogheda, where Offica continues to be based.[1]Interests and philanthropy
Offica maintains a relatively private personal life, prioritizing mental well-being and low-key habits away from the spotlight. He has spoken about using his signature mask early in his career as a means to protect his identity and convey a sense of mystery, stating, "When you are wearing a mask, people can’t really see your personality." This choice reflects a deliberate emphasis on privacy, which he later adjusted by revealing his face in 2020, allowing for more authentic public interactions while still keeping aspects of his daily routine shielded from scrutiny.[52] Beyond music, Offica's interests include anime, particularly the series Naruto, which has influenced his persona through elements like the Obito mask he adopted for its recognizability. He explained, "The mask is the Obito mask, he’s a very popular character so I knew that if I wore the mask people would know straight away what it was," highlighting how anime extends into his personal inspirations rather than solely his professional output. Additionally, he enjoys gaming, especially FIFA, as a way to unwind, noting, "I play a lot of FIFA," which underscores his ongoing connection to soccer through virtual play following his youth involvement in the sport.[52][2] Fitness forms another key part of Offica's routine, with regular gym sessions contributing to his balanced lifestyle. He has shared, "I’m in the gym too a lot these days," indicating a commitment to physical health as a counterbalance to his creative pursuits. While details on relationships or finances remain undisclosed, this aligns with his broader approach to maintaining boundaries, focusing instead on personal growth and community-rooted normalcy in Drogheda. There is limited public information on philanthropic endeavors or formal advocacy for issues like anxiety or immigrant youth support.[2]Discography
Singles as lead artist
Offica's singles as lead artist often incorporate drill beats with anime-inspired narratives, reflecting his unique storytelling style rooted in personal and cultural experiences. "Naruto Drillings", released on May 17, 2019, by MOVES Recordings, marked Offica's early breakthrough in UK drill with a sample from the Naruto anime theme, weaving street life metaphors into ninja lore for a viral freestyle narrative.[21][41] The track's music video amassed over 3 million YouTube views by 2021, establishing his signature blend of pop culture and gritty drill themes.[53] "Obito", released on May 14, 2021, also via MOVES Recordings, continued the Naruto motif by centering on the character Obito Uchiha to explore themes of resilience and hidden struggles in drill fashion.[54] It garnered 3.2 million YouTube views on its GRM Daily video, earning Offica the Irish Best Artist 2021 award from Olly's TV.[55][56][57] "O Di Dan Dan (Oliver Twist)", released on October 20, 2022, by MOVES Recordings, flipped D'Banj's classic into a drill remix with dancehall flair, narrating playful pursuit and cultural fusion through rhythmic, boastful verses.[58] Featuring D'Banj, the GRM Daily video reached 99,000 YouTube views, highlighting Offica's genre-blending approach.[59][25] The 2023 project Hokage: Pt. 1, released on October 27 via MOVES Recordings, served as a conceptual EP with 11 tracks extending Offica's anime-drill universe, including "Sharingan" (exploring perception and vigilance) and a reprise of "Obito" alongside "Overthinker" (featuring A92 and A92 BT, delving into mental strain).[34][60] The standout "Sharingan" track alone surpassed 1.2 million YouTube plays, underscoring the EP's thematic depth in personal growth amid adversity.[61] This was followed by Hokage Pt. 2: Hokage in Lagos, a 4-track EP released on November 17, 2023, via MOVES Recordings, featuring collaborations with PsychoYP and Odumodublvck on tracks like "O Di Dan Dan (The Remix)" and "Yahoo", further blending drill with Afrobeats influences and Lagos cultural references.[62][63] "Go Mo", released on April 25, 2025, by Greenback Records, shifted toward trap-infused drill with high-energy boasts on momentum and success, produced by 05sainttt and Black Coach.[64] Its lyric video accumulated 25,000 YouTube views shortly after launch, signaling Offica's evolving sound.[65] "Gyal Over There", released on August 22, 2025, also under Greenback Records and featuring Konshens, fused drill with dancehall to narrate cross-cultural attraction and confidence.[66] As Offica's lead release, it earned early streaming traction, aligning with his pattern of collaborative yet dominant narratives.[67] "Plotting", released on December 6, 2024, as a solo freestyle via Ditto Music, previewed Offica's 2025 projects with sharp, scheming lyrics over a nostalgic beat, approaching 1 million streams across platforms.[8][7]| Title | Release Date | Label | Peak Chart (Irish/Other) | YouTube Views (Milestone) | Key Theme |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Naruto Drillings | May 17, 2019 | MOVES Recordings | N/A | 3M+ (2021) | Anime-street fusion |
| Obito | May 14, 2021 | MOVES Recordings | N/A | 3.2M | Resilience via Obito lore |
| O Di Dan Dan (Oliver Twist) | Oct 20, 2022 | MOVES Recordings | N/A | 99K | Dancehall-drill pursuit |
| Hokage: Pt. 1 tracks (e.g., Sharingan) | Oct 27, 2023 | MOVES Recordings | N/A | 1.2M (Sharingan) | Growth in ninja metaphor |
| Hokage Pt. 2: Hokage in Lagos tracks (e.g., O Di Dan Dan Remix) | Nov 17, 2023 | MOVES Recordings | N/A | Emerging | Afrobeats-drill fusion |
| Plotting | Dec 6, 2024 | Ditto Music | N/A | N/A | Forward-looking scheming |
| Go Mo | Apr 25, 2025 | Greenback Records | N/A | 25K | Trap momentum |
| Gyal Over There (feat. Konshens) | Aug 22, 2025 | Greenback Records | N/A | Emerging | Cultural attraction |