Remember 2015? Gas was cheap, your skinny jeans still fit, and "Trap Queen" was playing on every single speaker within a five-mile radius of any house party. Well, Fetty Wap wants to take you back there - and honestly, we're not even mad about it.
As reported by Hypebeast, Fetty Wap has officially announced his 2026 Nostalgia Tour, a coast-to-coast live run celebrating ten years of the hits that basically soundtracked an entire era of millennial and Gen Z adolescence. We're talking "Trap Queen," "679," "My Way" - the whole catalog of bops that made your 2015 Spotify Wrapped embarrassing in the best possible way.
The comeback nobody knew they needed
This is no small deal. The tour marks Fetty's first major U.S. live run since his release from prison to home confinement earlier this year, which means there's a real weight to these shows beyond just nostalgia bait. This is a genuine comeback story, and the setlist is going to hit differently because of it.
The tour kicks off on June 6 in Atlantic City, New Jersey - a fitting, slightly chaotic starting point - before rolling through major markets including Brooklyn, Atlanta, Chicago, and Los Angeles, eventually wrapping things up in Denver. That's a solid coast-to-coast sweep for anyone trying to justify a road trip around a concert.
Why this actually matters
Look, "nostalgia tour" has become a bit of a punchline in 2025. Every artist from every decade is currently on one. But Fetty's case is different because the timeline is genuinely compressed - ten years ago feels like yesterday, and those songs have aged surprisingly well. "679" still slaps at a volume that upsets neighbors.
More importantly, this tour feels less like a cash-grab victory lap and more like someone reclaiming their moment. The 2010s rap scene was stacked, and Fetty carved out a lane that was entirely his own - melodic, hook-heavy, instantly recognizable. A tour celebrating that era isn't just nostalgia. It's a reintroduction.
Whether you were a day-one fan or someone who just knows every word to "Trap Queen" despite never buying the album (no judgment, we're all guilty), this one is probably worth marking on the calendar.





