Feid does what he does best: looking cool while doing very little. The camera loves his signature glasses and the effortless swagger. Sky Rompiendo, on the other hand, anchors the production side, giving the visual a gritty, behind-the-boards feel that reminds you this is a track first.
Underneath the visuals, Sky Rompiendo’s production is crisp. The bass wobbles with that signature Medellín bite. Feid’s vocals float between autotuned croons and percussive muttering. It’s not Ferxxo at his most poetic, but it is him at his most rhythmic. The track is built for clubs and car speakers—not headphones.
If you’ve ever wondered what it feels like to scroll through a mood board at 2 AM while listening to reggaeton, this “Pseudo Video” is your answer. Feid and Sky Rompiendo have delivered something that isn't quite a music video, isn't quite a commercial, and isn't quite a vlog—but somehow works perfectly as all three.
Why call it "Pseudo"? Because it frees the artists from expectations. Without the pressure of a $200k narrative video, Feid and Sky Rompiendo lean into lo-fi texture . Expect grainy overlays, jump cuts that feel accidental but are clearly intentional, and a heavy dose of lens flares. It feels like a leaked rehearsal tape or a discarded TikTok trend that somehow became art.
Let’s be clear: this is a pseudo -video. Don’t come looking for a storyline. There’s no protagonist getting the girl or losing the car. Instead, the video thrives on aesthetic atmosphere . The "Old Navy" tag is intriguing—not because of the clothing brand directly, but because of the color palette . We’re talking washed-out indigos, safety-cone oranges, and that specific 90s mall lighting that feels both nostalgic and unsettling.