All The Ways Drake Has Been Promoting His Upcoming ‘ICEMAN’ Album
Drake's ICEMAN rollout builds anticipation with ice blocks, Raptors seats, livestreams, and spectacle, keeping fans engaged with mystery.

Drake has been in his bag with the ICEMAN rollout, and that’s part of why the anticipation feels so high right now. ICEMAN is set to be his first solo album since 2023’s For All The Dogs, and his ninth solo studio album overall. That alone makes it a big moment. After years of Drake dropping music at a relentless pace, this one feels different because he’s been teasing it as an event rather than just another upload.
The suspense has only grown because fans have spent the past couple of years getting a mix of full projects, side quests, and collaborative detours from him. For All The Dogs was his last solo LP, while 2025 gave us $ome $exy $ongs 4 U with PartyNextDoor. On top of that, the ICEMAN era has already produced livestream moments and songs like “What Did I Miss?,” “Which One,” (with Central Cee) and “DOG HOUSE,” (with Julia Wolf & Yeat), which helped keep the conversation alive even without a full album in hand.
And let’s be real: people love a good rollout, especially when it feels theatrical. Drake himself has said he was tired of the old formula and wanted something riskier, less predictable, and more exciting. That mindset explains why this whole campaign has leaned so hard into spectacle, mystery, and word-of-mouth. Instead of just tossing up an album cover and a date, he’s been letting the city, the internet, and his fanbase play detective in real time.
That’s also why ICEMAN feels bigger than just another Drake release. Between public teases at the Juno Awards, cryptic Instagram activity, livestream breadcrumbs, and full-on icy stunts across Toronto, he’s been building curiosity without fully showing his hand. The album still has some mystery around it, but the promo has already done its job: it made people talk, speculate, repost, and keep checking for what’s next. And with this extra rollout, it only makes sense to break down all the ways Drake has been selling the ICEMAN mood before the album even lands.
Here are all the ways Drake has been promoting ICEMAN so far:
Ice Blocks

The ice blocks are probably the clearest and most on-brand part of the rollout yet. Drake posted. cryptic “It’s in” message to his Instagram Story, and soon after, giant ice blocks started popping up in downtown Toronto. He later confirmed they were part of the rollout and said the ICEMAN release date was hidden inside. That’s smart promo because it turned a basic album update into a citywide scavenger hunt and gave fans something physical to obsess over.
Frozen Raptors Seats
Few artists can get their hometown NBA team in on the rollout, but Drake is not most artists. During a Toronto Raptors game in April, his usual courtside seats were transformed into a frozen display complete with faux ice and icicles. It was flashy, instantly meme-able, and impossible to miss. More importantly, it made ICEMAN feel like more than an album title — it became a visual theme people could recognize at a glance.
The Rented ‘ICEMAN’ Truck
One of the slicker rollout details has been Drake moving around Toronto with ice-themed vehicles and visuals tied to the project. The whole approach plays like guerrilla marketing with superstar budget: random enough to spark social chatter, but specific enough that fans immediately connect it back to ICEMAN. Even when every detail is not formally explained, that mystery is part of the strategy. It keeps people posting clips and trying to piece together the bigger picture.
Livestream Episodes
The livestreams are really where this era started to separate itself from a normal Drake album cycle. He launched the ICEMAN rollout in July 2025 with a livestream that previewed “What Did I Miss?,” then followed that format with more episodes tied to “Which One” and “DOG HOUSE.” Drake later explained that he liked the livestream approach because it broke away from the tired single-video-single rhythm. That made the rollout feel more like an unfolding series than a traditional promo campaign.
DJ Akademiks & Word-Of-Mouth Hype
Not every rollout move has come directly from Drake. Some of the buzz has been fueled by media personalities and rap platforms, especially DJ Akademiks, who shared updates about the album’s recording process and helped feed the idea that multiple versions of the project existed. That kind of outside chatter matters because it keeps the album alive in conversation even when Drake goes quiet. Sometimes the best promo is making people feel like they’re hearing insider info.
Cryptic IG Posts & Stories
Drake has also been using social media like a trailer instead of a diary. Billboard Canada noted a run of cryptic carousel posts and Story teases, and those little drops have helped maintain suspense around the album for months. He’s not over-explaining anything, which is exactly why fans keep over-analyzing everything. In a rollout like this, vagueness is part of the product.
The Juno Award Teaser
Even Drake’s Juno Awards appearance became part of the campaign. While honoring Nelly Furtado at the March 2026 Junos, he slipped in a simple but effective message: “Iceman coming soon.” It wasn’t some giant reveal, but it was enough to put the album back on people’s radar in an official setting. Sometimes one line from Drake does more than a whole press release.
Explosion & Film-Shoot Spectacle In Toronto
This might be the wildest out of the bunch. It’s been reported that a loud explosion and pyrotechnic activity at Downsview Park were linked to a permitted film shoot associated with Drake, with signage mentioning a project called “Video Bot.” Whether fans saw it as a video shoot, an album teaser, or both, it added a bigger cinematic feel to the rollout. Drake clearly wants ICEMAN to feel like an experience, not just a release date on a DSP calendar.
RELATED: Blowtorches & Pickaxes: Drake Hypes ‘Iceman’ Rollout By Burying Release Date In Ice



