
In the heart of 2025, while the world is busy chasing Amapiano remixes and Lagos street-pop bangers, a Hausa Afrobeat missile has exploded from the North and refuses to come down. The song tearing up TikTok, Spotify playlists, and every danfo speaker from Kano to Kaduna is “Wayo Allah Na” by O.G. Abba – a certified viral monster whose title literally screams “Oh my God!”
A Breath of Fresh Air from an Unexpected Corner
Northern Nigeria hasn’t exactly been the first place people look for feel-good party jams in recent years. Insecurity, banditry, kidnapping, insurgency – the region has carried more than its fair share of pain. Yet, out of that same soil comes O.G. Abba with a track that says: “Yes, the struggle is real… but so is the sweetness when you finally break through.”
This is more than music; it’s medicine. “Wayo Allah Na” is a defiant celebration of life in a place where tomorrow is never promised.

The Wayo Allah Na Message: Enjoy Today, Because Nobody Will Do It For You
At its core, the song is a loud reminder to live fully and spend boldly while you still can. In a land where death can knock unannounced, O.G. Abba preaches unapologetic enjoyment. Got money after grinding? Blow it. Haters talking? Let them talk. Enemies plotting? Let them dig their own graves. The vibe is pure resilience wrapped in danceable Afro-kalangu beats.
Verse 1 – The Bitter-Sweet Truth About Money and People
The opening stanza lays it bare – how the world treats you depends on what’s in your pocket:
Samun kudi bayan ansha wuya akwai dadi
Inkanada kudi, kanada aboki
Akasin haka, inka wuche, Suma tsaki
Cikinnan akwai addu’a
Bana tsoron Baki
Toh, toh, toh
The verse translates to mean:
Getting money after hardship comes with sweetness
If you have money, you have friends
The opposite? Go broke and they hiss at you
Deep inside it all, there’s prayer
I don’t fear people’s mouths
Okay, okay, okay)
Straight facts. No sugar-coating.
The Wayo Allah Na Chorus – The Cry That Became a Movement
Wayo Allah, Wayo Allah na
Wayo Allah, Wayo Allah na
Duniya na ban tsoro
“Oh my God… I don’t fear this world.”
That simple hook has become the soundtrack for millions who choose joy over fear.
Verse 2 – Resilience, Self-Assurance, and Sweet Revenge
Here comes the energy shift – pure “I’m in my lane, keep your drama”:
Wayo Allah na, wani abu ne ke damuna
Nina Dafa, kuma ya nuna
Nakusa dani yake zagina
Chachacha bayan Idona
Your Para no concern me
I dey my dey, na they dey find me
Ali yasan Ali
Ganewa sai mai hankali
I’m cooking success, it’s showing. Your hate? Doesn’t move me. Dance after Eid – life goes on, with or without the haters.

Verse 3 – Spend Your Money, Secure Your Peace
The final verse is the ultimate mic drop:
Kasamu kudin ka, kawai Ka kashe
Kar Ka bari su kashe maka
Ruwa na dukanka, Suko suna daka
Inbaka chi ba, su chi maka
Inkasamu kawai Ka kashe
Spend your own money. Don’t let anyone spend it for you. Your enemies are digging their own graves. If you don’t enjoy it, someone else will enjoy it on your behalf.
Cold. Hard. Truth.
Wayo Allah Na: A Defiant Soundtrack for Survival and Joy
“Wayo Allah Na” is more than a song – it’s a movement. In a region that has every reason to stay silent, O.G. Abba chose to turn pain into party, struggle into swagger, and fear into fearless celebration.
When tomorrow isn’t guaranteed, today becomes sacred. And right now, from Maiduguri to Sokoto, the North is shouting “Wayo Allah na!” while dancing like nobody’s watching – because nobody knows if they’ll get another chance. Even the South is into the mix, with everyone else shouting “Wayo Allah na” in the clubs, birthday parties and everywhere else including the radio airwaves. The song is here to stay. One wonders if it will win awards as time goes by.
Stream it. Vibe to it. Live it.
Because as O.G. Abba reminds us: Duniya na ban tsoro.
This world? We no dey fear am.