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List Price: $11.94 | | Label: Virgin
Salesrank: 205301
Released: February 7, 2006 |
| Our Price: $0.24 |
| Used Price: $0.01 |
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| Media: Audio CD |
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On Top of Our Game Track Listing:
1. My Music (Featuring Bun B)
2. I Think They Like Me Remix (Featuring Jermaine Dupri, Brat, Bow Wow)
3. Ridin' Rims 4. Bricks
4. The High (Featuring Jim Jones & Damon Dash)
5. You Know What It Is
6. Lean Wit It, Rock Wit It
7. Freaky As She Wanna Be (Featuring Trey Songz)
8. Stop Callin' Me
9. Give Props
10. Suckas Come & Try Me
11. Don't Play With Me (Featuring Three 6 Mafia)
12. They Don't Like That
13. Bonus/Hidden Track: White T Remix Feat. Jermaine Dupri & The Kid Slim
On Top of Our Game Reviews:
When did rap music go downhill? 
2007-10-15 - There is more white kids out there today wanting to be black then black kids wanting to be white. Thats not a racist statement its just a fact of life. White kids will hear rap and go out and buy the cds, the clothes, maybe a drink the rap has hawked, or maybe a movie about there life story and how hard it was for them growing up. MTV brings out about 14 new rappers a day and its just a case of who can say the next big statement that will be popular for a month. Rap today sucks. There are a few rap artist I listen to but I cant stand it. When did rap get so mainstream? Well when did rap die? Well I think real rap died in about 1994. Think before 94, Dre dropped the Chronic, Snoop had a good cd and wasnt promoting himself everywhere you can think of, Wu Tang dropped probably the greatest rap cd ever, Ice Cube wasnt Hollywood, and same goes for Flavor Flav and Biggie and Tupac were still alive. Then 2Pac and Biggie days, rap hits mainstream and then it dies from there. Rappers will bring out friends to rap on cds and get there own contract and it will build from there. Real rap is dead and now we got fake rappers trying to pick up the pieces but it'll never be the way it was in the early 90's.
Dem Franchize Girlz 
2006-12-20 - HMMMM where do I begin? These clowns cant rap, the beats are putrid,plus their beef with D4l is about as interesting as a round of golf. Lean wit it, rock wit it has to be in the top 5 worst dance records ever plus the dance itself is stupid as f***! Am I the only one who sees something remotely gay about a bunch of guys dancing, snapping and popping with no females in the equation? As freaky as she wanna be(their dedication to their girlfriends D4L),featuring Trey Songz(he must want his career to end with all these bad collaborations), is about as childish as Cam'ron's Suck it or not. Songs like Dont play with me and Suckas wanna try me suffer from severe cases of lame hooks disease and lame rhymes disease. I think they like me was always trash and will someone please explain to me how do you ride rims(I wanna know)? Bottom Line: These c**nts need to disappear out of sight like their down low boyfriends D4l. They have no game to be on top of. F*** these losers and their lame ghetto square dance!
Uhhhhh.... 
2006-12-17 - This album wasn't really good, it can get a little catchy like in "I Think They Like Me" and "Ridin' Rims", but I think "Freaky As She Wanna Be" was the worst song in this CD. I heard this album some where in google, but forgot. I really didn't like rap, I can't believe I wanted this album at the first place. I'm not a rap fan, but I think this would be perfect for many rap fans. Enjoy n***as!
terrible 
2006-12-13 - pure unadulterated garbage...this is the reason why the South is killing hip hop. This snap music crunk bull crap is killing rap right now and franchize boyz are the leaders in it. If you like rap at all, do not purchase this album.
Dumb Franchize Boyz 
2006-10-26 - Dem Franchize Boyz drifted around the ATL music scene and dropped a number of independent releases, but then their song "White Tee", while not necessarily becoming a major hit by Billboard standards, did give them some brief attention. But that's nothing compared to the popularity they've received thanks to their latest album, On Top of Our Game.
I personally don't see what the big deal is about this album. Before I listened to it, I thought I would be annoyed by all the snap music, but it turns out that the problem isn't necessarily the music itself, but the below-average lyrics that all four members of Dem Franchize Boyz put on wax. I never was that impressed by "I Think They Like Me" (an obvious single because it's censored), but the thing is, that's actually the best song on the album.
Many of the songs feature all-too-familiar subject matter, like cars ("Ridin' Rims"), bling-blingin' ("You Know What It Is"), and hardcore sex ("Freaky As She Wanna Be" -- and why does Trey Songz keep wasting his talent like this?). The choruses can get a little uncreative too: "Don't Play With Me" has "B, don't play with me" while "Stop Callin' Me" has "B, stop callin' me" (by the way, calling the latter song wack would be an understatement). And "They Don't Like That" makes me wonder if they were reading our minds.
The production also tends to get repetitive; when I heard "Suckas Come and Try Me", I felt like singing: "I think I think they like me!" And the remix of "White Tee" is unnecessary, especially because they mention their white tees in just about every song on here. I'm also starting to think my brother was right when he suggested that D4L and Dem Franchize Boyz are the same group.
The only thing more annoying than the group's rapping is when Damon Dash shows up on "Bricks 4 the High". No, he isn't rapping; he's instead talking -- no, not talking; WHINING about severed ties with Jay-Z and Roc-a-Fella (*sigh*...is he still talking about that?). In the end, while I wouldn't call this the worst So So Def album ever (Young, Fly & Flashy Vol. 1 gets that honor), it's pretty darn close. If this is Dem Franchize Boyz at the top of their game, what does rock bottom look like?
Anthony Rupert