Songs Like Bad Bunny — Reggaeton & Latin Trap for the Conejo Malo Fan
Bad Bunny moved reggaeton from a regional sound to global pop's dominant language, partly by being weird about it — slow songs, sad songs, salsa interludes, a willingness to refuse the obvious hit.
These twelve tracks come from the same urbano universe — reggaeton heavyweights, Latin trap, and the artists operating in his exact orbit.
The list
01
PROVENZA
Karol G
Karol G is Bad Bunny's closest contemporary — global reggaeton with the same melodic confidence.
02
DESPECHÁ
ROSALÍA
Mambo-reggaeton hybrid from Bad Bunny's actual collaborator. Same playful experimentation.
03
Mi Gente
J Balvin, Willy William
Global crossover reggaeton — the wave Bad Bunny rode to a different shore.
04
Tusa
Karol G, Nicki Minaj
Heartbreak reggaeton with a Spanglish guest verse — the Bad Bunny–era playbook.
05
PEPAS
Farruko
Pure perreo for the after-hours. Different mood, same engine room.
06
Hawái
Maluma
Reggaeton ballad in the Bad Bunny vein — sad song dressed as a dance track.
07
Bzrp Music Sessions #52
Bizarrap, Quevedo
Latin trap from Argentina — the global expansion of the same scene.
08
La Modelo
Ozuna, Cardi B
Cross-language reggaeton with a guest verse — formative for the post-2018 wave.
09
Ginza
J Balvin
The 2015 track that taught the next decade how to write a reggaeton melody.
10
Una Vaina Loca
Yandel
Old-school reggaeton heat — the lineage Bad Bunny is part of.
11
Reloj
Rauw Alejandro, Anuel AA
Smooth contemporary urbano with Bad Bunny's slow-track sensibility.
12
Mamiii
Becky G, KAROL G
Heartbreak duet in the reggaeton lane — closes with the same emotional register.
Bad Bunny's peers are the urbano artists who treat reggaeton as a full creative language, not a singles factory. Drop any of these into Match This Vibe and the AI will surface another twenty producers and singers in the same expanded universe.
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