Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Quavo and Offset reignited reunion rumors when the Migos Instagram returned on May 5 with studio photos and Quavo’s Story teasing a posthumous TakeOff album. Offset’s short reply and images from a May 3 session have fans debating tribute, comeback, and legacy.

There was a short, electric moment on Tuesday, May 5, when the Migos Instagram account flicked back to life and sent the internet into immediate speculation. The first post in more than two years was a small collection of studio photos: Quavo and Offset shoulder to shoulder, Offset later caught in the vocal booth. The images read like a breadcrumb trail — familiar, charged, and very intentionally public.
Fans noticed quickly. The post racked up more than 335,000 likes, and social feeds filled with screenshots, hot takes, and the kind of nostalgia that arrives when a band that helped soundtrack a decade nudges at a comeback. It is difficult not to read those pictures as an invitation.
Quavo followed with a more explicit tease on his Instagram Story over the weekend, a flurry of text that named projects and made a promise. In full, he wrote:
“Warriors Never fold. Jobs Not Finished. TAKEOFF ALBUM. UNC N PHEW 2. LAST ????? ALBUM. REAL MIGO BLOOD RUN IN MY VEINS!!! AINT NO NEW CHAPTER JUST THE NEXT ONE.”
Offset replied succinctly: “On dat.” Short, but enough to fuel talk of a formal reunion or at least a coordinated tribute. The photos from a May 3 studio session, showing Offset behind the mic and Quavo in production chairs, added more teeth to the rumors — not a press release, but the next best thing in the social era.
This matters because of what was lost. TakeOff, born Kirshnik Khari Ball, was shot and killed after an incident at 810 Billiards & Bowling in Houston on November 1, 2022. His absence is not a footnote. It is the center of any Migos conversation now, and Quavo’s language about a TakeOff album and a “LAST ????? ALBUM” carries grief, obligation, and the thorny ethics of posthumous work.
The three had been drifting before TakeOff’s death; their last full-group moment came on Culture III in 2021, a record that debuted at number two on the Billboard 200 with roughly 130,000 album units, according to Luminate. That album was framed as a capstone at the time, the supposed final chapter for a trio that changed Atlanta rap syntax and mainstream cadence. But grief rewrites roadmaps.
For fans who loved hearing Migos in packed rooms, the idea of Quavo and Offset back in the booth together hints at a return of the call-and-response energy that made their shows feel like group therapy. Imagine chants of simple hooks and the loose choreography of three voices sliding in and out; now imagine that same crowd grappling with an empty space where TakeOff used to stand. Excitement and discomfort will ride together.
There is also the practical: the photos and the few public words are not a contract. They are a tease, a public-facing draft. But in an era when a single Instagram Story can move markets and frame narratives, Quavo and Offset chose to make their reunion ambiguous and public, rather than private and quiet. That will keep speculation alive.
Whether this is the prologue to a full Migos revival, a tribute project, or a series of collaborations between Huncho and Set, fans will be paying attention to the next post, the next studio clip, or any signs that the three-voice chemistry will be honored rather than replicated. For now, social timelines are the place where grief, commerce, and legacy are negotiating the next move.