As the group progressed, they began to experiment with new sounds, collaborating with producers and artists from across the globe. The Crooklyn Clan V3's music became more refined, incorporating elements of trap, drill, and Afrobeat into their signature style. Their lyrics, too, became more introspective, tackling themes of social justice, personal struggle, and the harsh realities of life in Brooklyn's inner city.
If you spin Top 40, hip-hop, or Latin clubs, you know the struggle: you play a new hit, but the energy dips because the original production lacks low-end. You play a classic, but the younger crowd looks confused.
Jax was the Clan’s premier code-breaker, a young netrunner with cybernetic optic nerves that allowed him to see raw data streams flowing through the air. He sat in the center of a heavily fortified bunker beneath the ruins of the old Barclays Center, surrounded by his crew. There was Lex, a master of heavy augmentations and street tactics, and DJ Hyphen, who could weaponize localized sonic frequencies to shatter glass and scramble riot drones.