Chen Xukai (; born 24 December 1998), known professionally as Skai Isyourgod (), is a Chinese rapper. His works combine Memphis rap and Cantonese culture.
In August 2024, Skai released his second album Stacks from All Sides (). Songs such as "Stacks from All Sides", "Karma Code" (), and "Blueprint Supreme" () in the album went viral on Western and Chinese social media. On 7 July 2025, he exceeded 3 million active monthly listeners on Spotify, becoming the most streamed Chinese artist of the month.
Chen Xukai was born in the city of Huizhou, Guangdong, China, in 1998. His father is from Leshan, Sichuan. He attended the private Sichuan Media College (Ã¥ÂÂå·Âä¼ åªÂå¦é¢) in the city of Chengdu, Sichuan, for undergraduate studies in performing arts.
On 20 December 2020, Skai released his first single "Know That" on NetEase Cloud Music, and then released several singles in succession, experimenting with several styles, including R&B. On 14 April 2023, he released the single "Lan Lao King". According to Skai in an interview with the Chinese hip-hop platform SoulSense TWH, it was the beginning of the creation of his signature Memphis rap style, his most recent experimental style.
On 10 September 2023, Skai released his first album, Shun Feng Shun Shui Shun Cai Shen ().
On 20 August 2024, Skai released his second album, Stacks from All Sides (). The album continued to use Memphis rap music as the creative basis, integrating Cantonese folk elements and ridicule of the workplace environment and human relationships in mainland China. The album went viral across social media, and Internet secondary creations, such as the Douyin broadcaster , further popularized Skai. In April 2025, Skai announced that he would go to Taiwan to hold a special concert on 27 July.
On 10 July 2025, Skai released his first Extended play album Stacks from All Sides: Fresh Off the Boat (å «æÂ¹æÂ¥è´¢ä¹Âæ±Âè¹堥海) on Music Streaming Services, which includes 9 new songs which had never been officially released before. He marks it as a part of Stacks from All Sides. Chinese Hip-Hop producer "Jacking" joins as Executive Producer. Nearly all tracks were produced by Jacking, excluding Track 8. Track 8 was produced by Jacking and another producer which artist named "Phantom".
On January 26, 2026, Guangdong rapper SoulHan (ç¦æÂÂSoulHan) released a new song titled âÂÂDou Zi Dingâ (ãÂÂé½ç¥订ãÂÂ) in collaboration with Y.H.LâÂÂshort for YoungHighLos, a trio consisting of A Niu, PlayerJ, and Bu Bu GaoâÂÂand SKAI ISYOURGOD. The name YoungHighLos is derived from a Cantonese slang expression literally meaning âÂÂyoung hai lo,â in which hai (éª) is a vulgar colloquial term; the phrase broadly refers to young men and carries a street-culture connotation The title is derived from the Cantonese phrase âÂÂdou zi deiâ (é½çÂ¥åÂÂ), which literally refers to knowing a place or location, and by extension conveys a sense of propriety or self-awareness. It is commonly used to describe someone who understands their situation, knows their boundaries, refrains from doing what they should not do, or is aware of their place in othersâ eyes. SoulHan also announced the formation of a rap group called âÂÂä¼Âæ¢ÂæÂÂâ (, literally âÂÂFive SevensâÂÂ). The group is expected to release a mixtape in the future under RCA Records Greater China, a division of Sony Music Entertainment China.
On January 28, the single was officially released on major music streaming platforms in mainland China. That evening, the main artists participated in an online fan interaction hosted by NetEase Cloud Music, during which SKAI ISYOURGOD mentioned that his next album is scheduled for release the following year.
On February 6, 2026, the rap group Wu Tiao Qiï¼Âä¼Âæ¢ÂæÂÂï¼Â, which includes SKAI ISYOURGOD, released their second single titled âÂÂBai Guan Er GeâÂÂï¼ÂæÂÂå ³äºÂå¥ï¼Â. (âÂÂGuan Er Geâ refers to Guan Yu, the second brother among Liu Bei, Guan Yu, and Zhang Fei in Romance of the Three Kingdoms. In Chinese folklore, paying respects to Guan Yu is traditionally done to pray for safety, wealth, and career success, and to honor his virtues of loyalty, righteousness, faithfulness, wisdom, benevolence, and courage.) The single was made available at 12:00 PM on major Chinese streaming music platforms the same day.
In the album Stacks from All Sides, three songs went viral: "Stacks from All Sides" (), "Karma Code" (), and "Blueprint Supreme" (). Skai's southeast Chinese coastal roots are noticeable through his Cantonese accent and numerous allusions and literary devices.
In the first half of the album, Skai explores the ambitions of people in contemporary Chinese society to expand their material desires. In the second half of the album, he incorporates his own life into the album, exploring the contradictions during early adulthood, societal temptations, and cherishing loved ones.
The three viral songs come from the first half of the album.
The title track, "Stacks from All Sides" () begins by sampling Korean singer Insooni's 1987 song "ë¹ÂëÂÂìÂÂ¥ÃÂÂì ë±ì Âë²Âë Â" ("Beetle on Vinyl"). The song describes a life full of hustle. It opens with folk imagery, in which the protagonist dreams of social climbs, whether it be acquiring a better scooter, buying new fancy clothes, showing off his wealth, or upgrading to a white or yellow motorcycle license plate; white and yellow license plates in Guangdong and Hong Kong are a sign of success, and therefore, are a local status symbol. Wearing jade pendants for luck, keeping a home altar with incense and offerings, regularly bowing and praying, and seeking wealth from the divine, he is constantly chasing money and status, but not through glorified business. The man gambles, plays mahjong, and has side hustles in order to achieve this. He knows the methodology of his social ascension is bad, but he does it anyways, alluding to cultural elements, such as yin-yang from Taoism, and karma from Buddhism.
In the next song, "Karma Code" (), the protagonist is confronted by the divine about his unethical social rise by traditional Chinese deities, who seek to address the consequences of his deeds. Initially, the protagonist tries to appease the gods, then shift the blame, but is ultimately forced to reflect on and acknowledge his actions.
"Blueprint Supreme" () begins by sampling lines from a performance of the Cantonese opera The Flower Princess (). The lyrics paint exaggerated, humorous portraits of a nouveau riche lifestyle, describing absurdly lavish yet strangely familiar scenes of showy wealth in modern China, such as the scene of "singing karaoke in the villa and silver arowana in the pool" (), which is a unique way of "showing off wealth" for Guangdong's wealthy, rather than luxury cars and watches in the traditional sense. In addition, the plot of "the master writes the words himself" () in the lyrics comes from his parents' obsession with () and belief in Feng Shui during his childhood, as well as people's memory of using "qiu zi" (, )the practice of asking a master calligrapher or fortune-teller to write a character, typically for symbolic or auspicious purposesas a special way of socializing at that time.
Two music videos were released for these three songs. "Blueprint Supreme" has its own music video, while "Stacks from All Sides" and "Karma Code" has a combined music video in which the first song transitions into the second.
The three songs have gone viral in Western social media, such as TikTok and Instagram Reels, being used as background for clips or memes, with countless spin-offs and remixes. One popular meme referred to as "Dog Singing In Chinese" or "Dog Rapping Skai Isyourgod" begins with the lyrics, "May god bless you with mountains of silver and gold" from his song "Karma Code" (å æÂÂ), and has received over 10 million views. Apart from the Orientalism, users noted the perceived wisdom in the album that Western discography seems to lack.
The song "Stacks from All Sides" sparked debate over the term "", meaning "bastard" (the orthodox spelling for the phrase is , which means ""), which some interpreted as a derogatory slur. However, the artist clarified that it's a colloquial term for "brother" in certain southern dialects, aiming to convey camaraderie rather than insult, similar to the comparable American slur nigga, which can also imply camaraderie in certain contexts.
Tiffany Ap of Bloomberg described his music as a "mix of Memphis-style rap with Mandarin, Cantonese and Hakka rhymes."