End Game (song)

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"End Game"
Cover artwork of "End Game" by Taylor Swift featuring Ed Sheeran and Future
Single by Taylor Swift featuring Ed Sheeran and Future
from the album Reputation
ReleasedNovember 14, 2017 (2017-11-14)
Studio
Genre
Length4:04
LabelBig Machine
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
  • Max Martin
  • Shellback
Taylor Swift singles chronology
"...Ready for It?"
(2017)
"End Game"
(2017)
"New Year's Day"
(2017)
Ed Sheeran singles chronology
"Boa Me"
(2017)
"End Game"
(2017)
""Perfect Duet" version"
(2017)
Future singles chronology
"Real Thing"
(2017)
"End Game"
(2017)
"Patek Water"
(2017)
Music video
"End Game" on
YouTube

"End Game" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift from her sixth studio album, Reputation (2017). The song features the English singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran and the American rapper Future, who both wrote it with Swift and the producers Max Martin and Shellback. "End Game" is an incorporation of pop rap and R&B. It features loose vocal cadences and hip-hop-influenced drums that create trap beats. The lyrics are about finding true love amidst the gossip on ones' perceived reputations.

"End Game" was chosen as the album's third single, being promoted to radio stations in France and the United States on November 14, 2017. Contemporary critics received "End Game" with mixed reviews; some praised the hip-hop experimentation and Future's appearance and hailed the production as catchy, but others found the track and Sheeran's appearance uninteresting. The single reached the top 40 on the singles charts and received platinum certifications in Australia, Canada, and the U.S.

A music video for the single, directed by

Reputation Stadium Tour. Then she performed it as a surprise song at The Eras Tour
.

Production and composition

"End Game" was produced by

Sterling Sound Studios in New York.[2]

Musically, "End Game" is a hybrid of

cadences, trap beats, and hip hop-influenced drums, which Pitchfork's Meaghan Garvey described as representative of 2017's hip hop/R&B trends.[4][7] In the lyrics, the three artists talk about their true love amidst the gossip about their perceived reputations.[8] At the song's beginning, Swift asserts that she and her lover both have "bad" and "big reputations".[4] Future then echoes this perspective, saying that he has a "bad boy persona, that's what they like".[8] In his part, Sheeran raps about how his love interest was "born on the Fourth of July".[8][7] For Swift's part, she channels half-singing, half-rapping delivery found in hip hop,[9] making fun of the media gossip on her image: "I swear I don't love the drama / It loves me."[10][11] The chorus finds Swift singing "I wanna be your endgame" to her lover.[7]

Release and promotion

On November 7, 2017, Swift announced track listing of Reputation, where "End Game" was unveiled.

radio airplay,[14] while in the United States, Republic Records pushed the track to contemporary hit radio pannels.[15]

Swift and Sheeran performed "End Game" for the first time during the

Eras Tour concert on November 11, 2023.[18]

Critical reception

Critics praised the verse by Future (left), but were less favorable toward the verse by Ed Sheeran (right).

The song received mixed reviews from critics. Kitty Empire from The Observer selected "End Game" as an example for Swift's experimentation with R&B on Reputation, noting that it "isn't very good".[19] In a review by Pitchfork, Meaghan Garvey was not impressed by the guest appearances of Future and Sheeran, the former of which was seemingly a means to help Swift stay relevant with contemporary hip hop trends. Garvey also criticized the production as bland, feeling that the song is an "uninspired" attempt at the authentic hip hop sound: "The decisions here feel measured to the point of lifelessness; preoccupied by the end game, risks become liabilities."[4] Brian Josephs from Spin praised Future's verse, feeling that the rapper "fully owned it, making him a bizarrely good fit for a modern day Swift song". Josephs however was disappointed with Sheeran's appearance, and considered the song's overall theme of "attempting to find love in spite of real or perceived enemies" similar to previous "far better" songs by Future.[8]

Writing for PopMatters, Evan Sawdey picked "End Game" as one of Reputation's "misguided" songs, alongside "Look What You Made Me Do" and "This Is Why We Can't Have Nice Things".[11] Though complimentary of Future's appearance and Swift's lyrics, Lindsay Lozadz from The Ringer panned Sheeran's verse as "rapping so hard that you can practically smell the sweat he breaks trying to keep up with Future", which blemished the whole song.[7] Michelle Da Silva from Now was critical of Swift's lyrics about drama and vengeance, deeming it inauthentic to her persona.[20]

On a positive side, New York's Frank Guan lauded "End Game" as one of the best songs on Reputation, mostly thanks to the verse of Future and Swift's witty lyrics about her perceived image, and said that the song had potentials to be a chart success.[21] Raise Bruner from Time considered the song to be Swift at her peak: "emotionally open, but ready and willing to have some fun with the hype around her own persona".[22] Spencer Kornharber from The Atlantic called the song "maddeningly catchy" and compared its styles to music by Rihanna.[23] Rob Sheffield from Rolling Stone was similarly positive, calling it "deeply weird, wildly funny", praising the chemistry of the three artists and Swift's witty lyrics.[5]

"End Game" was one of the award-winning songs at the 2019

BMI Awards.[24] It also won Pop Award at the 2019 BMI London Awards, in honor of songwriters and producers.[25]

Accolades

Year Organization Award Result Ref.
2018 Teen Choice Awards Choice Music Collaboration Nominated [26]
2019
BMI Awards
Award Winning Song Won [27]
Publisher of the Year Won
BMI London Award Pop Award Won [28]

Commercial performance

Swift performing "End Game" on her Reputation Stadium Tour (2018)

"End Game" was the only non-single song from Reputation to debut on the US

Mainstream Top 40, before rising to number 26 the following week.[31] It debuted at number 38 on the Adult Top 40, eventually peaking at number 13.[30] In its third charting week, "End Game" rose to number 39, giving Swift her 55th Hot 100 top-40 chart entry and becoming Reputation's fifth top-40 song, following "Look What You Made Me Do", "...Ready for It?", "Gorgeous", and "Call It What You Want".[32] "End Game" later reached a peak of number 18.[33] The single peaked at number 10 on the Mainstream Top 40, and number 25 on the Rhythmic Songs chart.[34] It was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for exceeding 1,000,000 units based on sales and streaming in the U.S.[35]

In Canada, "End Game" peaked at number 11 on the

UK Singles Chart.[38] The song was also certified gold in Brazil and double platinum in Norway.[39][40]

Music video

On December 2, 2017, Sheeran confirmed at the

Jingle Ball festival that a music video for the song would be released.[41] On January 10, 2018, Swift revealed through her social media app "The Swift Life"—an app created with Glu Mobile for fans in support of Reputation[42]—with a still image from the video and text that the music video for the song would be released on January 12, that she would be releasing more stills, and that after a snippet of the video would premiere on Good Morning America on January 11.[43] Swift premiered a 20-second snippet on Good Morning America, and posted it on her social media accounts later that day.[44]

On January 12, 2018, Swift uploaded the video onto her

double decker bus in London.[46] While singing/rapping with Future, Swift is seen riding shotgun in a Lamborghini Aventador with him.[47] In one of the London scenes, Swift is seen sitting on a bar playing Snake on a handheld game console, a reference to her reputation as a "snake" during promotion of the album.[48] This reference is also noted in one of the Tokyo scenes, in which Swift rides a motorcycle in a snakeskin-patterned bodysuit.[47] The superyacht MIZU was used for the Miami filming.[49]

Frank Guan from New York observed that the video effectively eschewed Swift's previously well-known girl next door image, by "drinking, playing a game on her mobile phone, hamming it up at a karaoke bar, cheerfully failing at Dance Dance Revolution, really getting into Future, having a crowd of friends with only a few white girls and no white guys [apart from Ed Sheeran] in sight". Guan was impressed by the video's nighttime aesthetics featuring darkness against flashing lights and vivid colors, writing that "the end result is as simple as it is appealing".[29] Lyndsey McKenna from NPR Music was less enthusiastic: "It's pretty hard to buy Swift and Sheeran's casual outing in Tokyo or Swift's supposedly uninhibited dance moves."[50]

Credits and personnel

Credits are adapted from the liner notes of Reputation.[2]

  • Taylor Swift – vocals, songwriter
  • programming
  • Shellback – producer, songwriter, keyboards, programming, drums, bass
  • Ed Sheeran – vocals, songwriter
  • Future – vocals, songwriter
  • Ilya – additional vocal producer
  • Sam Holland – engineer
  • Michael Ilbert – engineer
  • Seth Ferkins – engineer
  • Cory Bice – assistant engineer
  • Jeremy Lertola – assistant engineer
  • Sean Flora – assistant engineer
  • Peter Karlsson – assistant engineer
  • Mike Synphony – assistant engineer
  • Daniel Watson – assistant engineer
  • Serban Ghenea – mixing
  • John Hanes – mix engineer
  • Randy Merrill – mastering

Charts

Certifications

Certifications for "End Game"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[37] 3× Platinum 210,000
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[39] Gold 20,000
Canada (Music Canada)[36] Platinum 80,000
Norway (IFPI Norway)[40] 2× Platinum 120,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[38] Gold 400,000
United States (RIAA)[35] Platinum 1,000,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Release dates and formats for "End Game"
Region Date Format(s) Label Ref.
France November 14, 2017
Radio airplay
Mercury [86][14]
United States Contemporary hit radio [15]
February 22, 2018 Rhythmic radio [87]

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External links