Drake has transformed his Bridal Path mansion into a frozen fortress, and the internet can't stop staring. The rapper's website, now rebranded with an arctic edge, offers a chilling virtual tour of his multimillion-dollar estate—every room, every vehicle, every surface locked in ice.
One image captures the entrance: three luxury cars parked in the driveway, all encased in a thick, glistening shell of frost. Inside, the kitchen and dining area sit frozen in time, a lone laptop abandoned on the counter as if the cold swept in mid-sentence.
Visitors can wander through Drake's personal spaces—his closet, bedroom, recording studio, even the pool—each one transformed into a crystalline wonderland. The studio, dubbed El Chico Studios, hides a hidden gem: the instrumental for "Wick Man" from his Scary Hours 3 mixtape, waiting to be discovered.
This icy aesthetic isn't just a website gimmick—it's the latest in a series of sub-zero stunts leading up to his album *Iceman*. Earlier, he installed frozen courtside seats at Scotiabank Arena for a Raptors game, then dropped a massive block of ice downtown, sparking a fan frenzy that drew police to control the crowd.
Things escalated quickly. A giant ball of fire erupted at Downsview Park in North York as part of a controlled video shoot—an explosion so jarring it rattled nearby residents and eventually prompted City Hall to tighten rules on pyrotechnics. The backlash didn't stop there.
Even the Cleveland Cavaliers got in on the action, trolling Drake during their playoff victory by blasting Kendrick Lamar's scathing diss track "Not Like Us" through the arena. It was a sharp reminder that not every ice-cold moment belongs to the rapper.
*Iceman* is set to drop on May 15. Until then, the frozen mansion stands as a towering, glistening symbol of anticipation—one that dares you to step inside and feel the chill.
