Fido, born Awosika Olayemi Josiah, first caught fire in 2025 with his breakout single “Awolowo,” a gritty street anthem laced with infectious hooks that topped charts for weeks. His rapid ascent came with the usual pitfalls: heated online spats, accusations of arrogance, and a very public fallout that left fans divided. Just three weeks ago, on February 24, 2026, he owned it all in a heartfelt apology, admitting ego and inexperience had clouded his judgment.
Fast-forward to Sunday afternoon, March 15, and Fido isn’t whispering regrets anymore. In a fiery two-post X thread from his @MrFidooooo account, the singer unleashed on the doubters still lurking in his path.
“U know when some fools just think they can make u and break u, make i remind u na, u na no be God,”
Fido begins with frustration at the keyboard warriors who thrive on downfall. He doesn’t hold back on the critique, zeroing in on a familiar Naija issue:
“mostly Nigerians wey suppose dey support there brothers and sisters, but they won’t, all they want is bad news.”
Fido flips the script quick, refusing to let the noise dim his light.
“who get glory don get glory, I don’t blame most of them cause they’ve never in there lives done anything great and they don’t know what it means to be great and talented, they use there useless mindset to talk down on u so u feel depressed and end up being like them.”
Yet, true to his pivot toward positivity, Fido ends one of the posts on a spiritual high note.
“But at the end of it all u na must still Dance For Jesus, so if you like die if you like block ur ear drums whenever u hear my music headache go one kill all of una wey be haters for no reason.”
Not one to let the moment breathe, Fido follows up later with a mic-drop affirmation.
“I good na confidence no be pride, if you can’t accept my confidence den go and die.”
