Game Time

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Game Time
Studio album by Lil' Romeo
Released December 17, 2002 (USA)
Recorded 20012002
Genre Hip hop
Label The New No Limit/Universal
Producer Master P (exec.)
Lil' Romeo chronology

Lil' Romeo
(2001)
Game Time
(2002)
Romeoland
(2004)
Singles from Game Time
  1. "2-Way"
    Released: April 23, 2002
  2. "True Love"
    Released: October 22, 2002
  3. "Play Like Us"
    Released: April 29, 2003
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [1]
Entertainment Weekly D [2]
Rolling Stone [3]

Game Time is the second studio album by American rapper Lil' Romeo, son of American rapper and record producer Master P. It was released on December 17, 2002 under Master P's No Limit Records. The only two charting singles was "2 Way", which peaked at #38 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks and True Love at 116 on the Billboard 200's chart. The album peaked at 33 on the Billboard 200 and 10 on Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums selling 80,000 copies the first week.

Track listing

No. Title Length
1. "Intro"   0:57
2. "Too Long"   4:46
3. "Play Like Us" (featuring Lil' D of Rich Boyz & Tyron) 3:12
4. "True Love" (featuring Solange Knowles) 3:47
5. "Clap Your Hands"   3:33
6. "Boyfriend and Girlfriend"   2:55
7. "Bring It"   3:33
8. "Wanna Grow Up"   3:29
9. "Still Be There"   2:57
10. "Commercial" (featuring Lil' D & Master P) 3:17
11. "Feel Like Dancing"   2:48
12. "Richie Rich"   2:51
13. "My Biz" (featuring Master P) 3:08
14. "Throw Em Up"   3:05
15. "We in There"   3:02
16. "Where They At II" (featuring Master P) 3:03
17. "Make U Dance" (featuring Lil' Zane & Afficial) 3:28
18. "2-Way" (featuring Master P & Silkk The Shocker) 3:24
19. "We Can Make It Right"   4:48
Samples
  • "True Love" contains a samples of "So Amazing" by Luther Vandross
  • "2-Way" contains a sample of "It Takes Two" by Rob Base & DJ E-Z Rock

Chart positions

Chart Peak
position
Billboard 200 33
Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums 10

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. Ford, Robert (2003-01-10). Gametime Review. Entertainment Weekly. p. 70. Retrieved 2012-05-28. 
  3. Rolling Stone review at the Wayback Machine (archived June 19, 2008)


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