During an interview with Billboard, Offset accuses rappers of stealing Migos' flow. He said, “It’s a fact. If you go back in time and listen to music prior to 2013, the cadence and the flow didn’t matter. It was more about the bars and what you’re saying. Now, people get away with not saying nothing as long as the cadence and flow are good, and I feel like we created that. We did.”
He also discussed the lack of homage paid to the group, saying, “I remember when Quavo was most influential in 2013. It just don’t be no respect given but that’s how my generation is anyway. A lot of kids don’t know about Tupac Shakur and don’t respect it. It just be blowing my mind. I just take it as, you gotta keep proving to people who you are. And that’s OK with me, because that’s been my life story.”
Elsewhere in the interview, Offset also discussed voting for the first time in the presidential election in November 2020. He said, “With voting, I just never felt like I was a part of that. I was young, too. I’m just a grown man now, and I understand the importance and we can only change things by voting. When I went to Gwinnett County, I know I helped Biden win on that. I don’t want to name him in the thing, but it’s the facts. Gwinnett County was in the red at first, and then when I did that, it went to blue. It’s the first time Georgia did that in like 10 or 20 years. Contributing to that, I felt the power, and it was just the right thing to do.”