From the opening notes, the track plunges the listener into a somber, melancholic atmosphere. It utilizes the classic Arabesque formula: a weeping melody—often featuring a bağlama or synth-strings—paired with a slow, heavy hip-hop beat. It feels less like a polished studio recording and more like a diary entry shouted into a microphone in a dimly lit room.
Like much of Arsız Bela's work, the language is "street"—raw, unrefined, and deeply relatable to youth who feel marginalized or unheard.
Arsız Bela’s vocal style is polarizing but effective for the genre. He doesn't just rap; he laments. His voice often cracks with intentional strain, emphasizing the "arsız" (unabashed/shameless) nature of his grief. While it lacks technical "flow" in the traditional sense of global hip-hop, it excels in emotional delivery, capturing the "damar" (vein-cutting) essence that Arabesque fans crave.
Metin portrays love not as a shared journey, but as a crime scene where he is the victim.