Iyanya Drops “Like” Video Featuring Davido & Kizz Daniel

Iyanya is wasting no time this year. The veteran hitmaker has dropped the official music video for “Like,” his catchy single featuring Davido and Kizz Daniel — a link-up that feels like pure Nigerian pop muscle memory.

“Like” is built to move fast: smooth melodies, flirty writing, and that familiar Afrobeats bounce that sits comfortably between radio-friendly and club-ready. The record was produced by Reward Beatz, and you can hear the intention in the groove — it doesn’t overcomplicate itself, it just locks in and keeps the momentum rolling. It’s the kind of beat that lets three very different personalities shine without fighting for space.

Davido slides in with the confident ease you expect — the “I know what I bring to the table” energy — while Kizz Daniel does what he always does: makes it sound effortless. His delivery is light, clean, and catchy, the type that sticks after one listen. Iyanya stays at the center of it all, proving again why his longevity isn’t luck — he knows how to build a record that sounds current without begging for relevance.

Visually, the video leans into clean, modern Afrobeats aesthetics. Directed by Olu The Wave, it keeps things simple and watchable: performance-driven scenes, glossy styling, and that “everyone came to look good” energy that music video culture thrives on. It’s not trying to be a short film — it’s doing the job: match the song’s vibe, make the collaboration feel big, and give fans something to replay.

“Like” also lands as a smart reminder: when artists with strong identities collaborate, the result doesn’t need gimmicks. Sometimes, the biggest flex is just making a good, replayable record — then delivering visuals that look as premium as the names on the tracklist.

Watch the video below.

Seun Badejo

Seun Badejo is the founder and editor of District234, Nigeria's home for Afrobeats, alté, and African pop culture commentary. He built the platform to give Nigerian music and culture the serious, intelligent coverage it deserves — from genre-defining moments to the underground sounds shaping the next generation. With over 270 published pieces, Seun writes at the intersection of music, identity, and what it means to be young and African today.

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