EsDeeKid has spent two years becoming one of the most talked-about names in British rap without ever showing his face, and 2026 has turned that gamble into a full-blown breakout. The masked Liverpool artist’s latest single, “RockWave,” arrived in late June as the newest chapter in a run that already includes a record-setting debut album, roughly 18 million monthly Spotify listeners and a guest appearance that briefly convinced the internet a Hollywood star was rapping under the balaclava.
The Rapper Who Hides His Face
EsDeeKid performs in a balaclava and has never publicly revealed his real name, his age or his face. The anonymity is not a gimmick bolted onto the music so much as the frame around it: the mystery keeps the focus on the songs and the mythology, and it has become inseparable from the brand. According to a Liverpool profile of the artist, he still lives in the council house he grew up in, a detail that sits pointedly against the scale of his streaming numbers.
The sound matches the mystique. EsDeeKid raps in a thick Scouse accent with a slurred, laid-back delivery over cloud-rap and trap production shot through with the jittery “jerk” style bubbling out of the UK underground. Critics and fans reach most often for comparisons to Yeat and Playboi Carti, but the accent and the regional slang keep the music unmistakably British.
Anonymity has a long lineage in music, from masked metal acts to faceless electronic producers, but it has found new power in the streaming and short-video era. A balaclava reads instantly on a phone screen, travels across borders without the baggage of a personal backstory, and lets the music carry the myth. EsDeeKid did not invent the approach, yet few have scaled it this fast, and the mask has become one of UK rap’s most recognisable images almost by stealth. It is a reminder that in 2026, an image can travel further than a name.
From SoundCloud to Two Billion Streams
The rise has been steep. After early credits in 2023 and a run of SoundCloud uploads, EsDeeKid released his debut album Rebel on June 20, 2025 through Lizzy Records. The project became a genuine chart story, reaching No. 16 on the UK Albums Chart and No. 23 on the US Billboard 200, and it went on to become one of the longest-charting UK rap albums the American chart has logged.
The catalogue behind it is enormous for an artist this new. His breakout single “Phantom” has pushed toward 290 million streams, “4 Raws” past 260 million and “LV Sandals” beyond 170 million, part of a body of work that has now cleared two billion streams in total. Around 18 million people were listening to EsDeeKid on Spotify each month as of April 2026, numbers that put a masked, independent-minded rapper from Liverpool alongside the genre’s established mainstream.
Just as striking is how much of this happened outside the traditional major-label machine. Building through Lizzy Records and a relentless release schedule, EsDeeKid turned SoundCloud loyalty into hard chart data without the standard radio-and-press rollout, a path that has become increasingly viable for artists who own their audience. The numbers did the work that publicists once did, and the industry followed the streams rather than the other way around.
RockWave and the Sound of Right Now
“RockWave” is built to keep that momentum moving. Produced by Bhristo and paired with a video from his long-time collaborator Archie Erskine, the track folds electric-guitar textures into EsDeeKid’s usual palette, a high-energy swing that reaches for something bigger than the insular cloud-rap template. It is the kind of release designed to translate from headphones to a festival crowd, which is exactly where he has been spending his year.
The single also underlines how quickly EsDeeKid moves. “RockWave” is one of several 2026 drops, and the steady drip of music has kept him in the conversation between larger projects rather than disappearing between album cycles. For an artist whose appeal is partly built on ubiquity and mystery in equal measure, the pace is part of the point.
The Timothee Chalamet Moment
No single episode captured EsDeeKid’s strange gravity better than the “4 Raws Remix.” In December 2025, actor Timothee Chalamet turned up on the track, and because no one could see the rapper’s face, a viral theory briefly spread that Chalamet himself was EsDeeKid. It was widely understood as a marketing moment rather than a genuine reveal, but the fact that it was even plausible says everything about how the anonymity works in his favour. The stunt drew a wave of mainstream attention that most underground rappers never touch.
The co-sign fit a broader pattern of the culture leaning in. A BRIT Award nomination for Best Breakthrough Artist gave the industry’s stamp to what the streams had already proven, and EsDeeKid entered 2026 as a name the wider pop world had learned to watch.
A Liverpool Export Goes Global
The live story has grown just as fast. EsDeeKid has played sold-out headline dates across North America, Australia and New Zealand, appeared at festivals including Rolling Loud and Summer Smash, and built a reputation for mosh-pit-heavy shows staged in near-darkness, the anonymity extended from the studio to the stage. A career-defining set at London’s Electric Ballroom helped cement his standing at home.
The scale of those shows matters for a masked act. Performing in near-darkness with the crowd as the main light source turns a practical necessity, hiding his face, into spectacle, and it has helped EsDeeKid build the kind of live reputation that sustains a career beyond streaming spikes.
His success also lands in a fertile moment for regional British rap. RapStar.News has tracked the scene’s range elsewhere, from the way nyb collan folds a Kampala edge into UK drill to the genre-melting London fusion of Billy G. Mac. EsDeeKid’s Liverpool-to-the-world arc is a different flavour of the same story: a UK scene increasingly comfortable exporting its accents and its subgenres without sanding them down for an American audience.
What Comes Next for EsDeeKid
The open question is how far the model scales. Anonymity that thrilled a fanbase of a few hundred thousand becomes harder to maintain at arena level, and the pressure to reveal, evolve or expand only grows with the numbers. For now, EsDeeKid is answering with more music, bigger stages and singles like “RockWave” that widen the sound without breaking the spell.
There are real tests ahead. A second album will have to prove the debut was a foundation rather than a peak, and the bigger the rooms get, the harder it becomes to protect the mystery that made him. Rivals are already studying the blueprint, and the jerk-inflected cloud-rap lane he helped popularise is filling with imitators. Staying ahead will take more than a balaclava.
What is not in doubt is the scale of what he has built. In barely two years, a masked rapper from a Liverpool council estate has turned mystery into one of British rap’s most bankable brands, and every metric, from the streams to the festival bookings, suggests the story is still climbing. Whatever EsDeeKid does next, he has already rewritten the ceiling for what an anonymous UK artist can reach.

