Miami, FL (March 2, 2026) — Following yesterday’s release across digital platforms, Moreno X4 unveils “Maniaque,” a high-impact collaboration with Dominican drill artist Little Homie. The track marks Moreno X4’s third single in his current FONO era and his first featured collaboration of the campaign — further expanding the sonic blueprint of Drilla Corridos, the hybrid sound he pioneered.
“Maniaque” is now available on all major streaming services. The official music video will premiere Tuesday, March 3 at 9:00PM PT / 12:00AM ET on Moreno X4’s YouTube channel.
Built on tension-heavy regional instrumentation layered with drill cadence and street-forward lyricism, “Maniaque” represents a direct bridge between two Spanish-language movements: Moreno X4’s Drilla Corridos — a fusion of corridos tradition and urban edge — and Little Homie’s internationally recognized Dominican drill style.
The result is a transnational collision: Sacramento grit meets Santo Domingo energy.
A Strategic Third Chapter “Maniaque” follows the momentum of “Estrategia” and “Como La Espuma,” two releases that established Moreno X4’s solo identity under FONO while refining his Drilla Corridos aesthetic. With this collaboration, he expands the universe — sonically and geographically.
Where the earlier singles reinforced his individual voice, “Maniaque” widens the lens. It introduces a high-contrast feature that connects the regional Mexican underground to the Spanish-language drill movement emerging from the Caribbean and gaining traction in Spain and across Latin markets.
Moreno X4 has been widely recognized for helping define Drilla Corridos — a sound built on regional Mexican instrumentation with the urgency and rhythmic aggression of drill. His background founding Grupo Diez 4tro laid the groundwork for this hybrid lane. Now, as a solo artist, he continues evolving the formula with sharper, globally conscious collaborations.
Little Homie: Dominican Drill Voice with International Reach Hailing from Santo Domingo, Little Homie is widely associated with the rise of drill en español. He first gained attention with “Bailando Drill,” a breakout record that remains one of his most recognized songs and helped introduce Spanish-language drill to broader audiences.
With a growing international footprint — including visibility in Spain and across Latin America — Little Homie brings a distinct Dominican cadence to “Maniaque.” His presence elevates the record beyond regional fusion into a pan-Latino drill conversation.
Together, Moreno X4 and Little Homie create a record that feels less like a feature and more like a meeting of movements.
Sound, Story, and Pressure Clocking in at 2:36, “Maniaque” is concise but intense. The lyrics channel themes of loyalty, ambition, paranoia, pressure, and power — balancing confidence with the emotional undertone of success earned through isolation.

With the audio already live and the visual arriving next, the rollout unfolds in two deliberate beats — first the impact, then the amplification.









