BABYMONSTER just poured a new anthem into 2026: digital single SUGAR HONEY ICE TEA arrives as a glossy summer flex track with a very specific message. The hook spells out S.H.I.T., turning a cute drink phrase into a bold brag.
Framed as a special drop between their recent mini album and an upcoming full project, the song lands just as BABYMONSTER gear up for a new world tour cycle. In the music video, the members stir bright iced tea, desserts, and gossip screens, while lyrics and styling already spark debate.
Summer Single And Iced Tea Visuals
SUGAR HONEY ICE TEA is BABYMONSTER’s digital single, released June 8, 2026 with its music video.
The track rides a bouncy bass line and synths while the video jumps between tea shops, neon drink counters, and dessert tables, cut with fake gossip screens. Lines like “우린 무대 위의 queen, monster melody” underline the idea that these sweet visuals hide a group that owns the stage.
BABYMONSTER “SUGAR HONEY ICE TEA” Lyrics Meaning
At the center of the Babymonster Sugar Honey Ice Tea lyrics meaning is the chorus. When they chant, “I’m the sugar honey ice tea and you know it,” English listeners hear more than a drink, since “sugar honey iced tea” is a euphemism whose initials spell “shit”.
The song mixes dessert and money images to build that flex. “I’m sweet just like some ice cream, milk chocolate icing” turns the members into something you crave, then verses jump to “Just add the commas,” a straight cash line. In Korean, they sing about melting you gently and being queens on stage, tying sweetness to control.
Structurally, the track leans on repetition and talk-singing, with a rap from Ruka and Asa sharpening the mood while the hook loops like branding. It is built to be easy to shout at shows, fuel TikTok edits, and sell confidence even if you only catch the English.
Fan Reactions, Controversy And What Comes Next
Reactions are split. Some listeners praise the beat, glossy mix, and especially the pre chorus, bridge, and final chorus as addictive and stage ready. Others call the lyrics shallow, repetitive, and packed with filler like “yeah, yeah, yeah” and “yuh,” saying earlier songs such as “Forever” or “Love In My Heart” showed the members’ vocals and emotion better.
Another wave of criticism targets the concept, with international fans uneasy about choreography and camera angles that highlight younger members while they sing lines like “I’m so enticing.” Commenters question why a group that debuted with very young teens is already pushed toward a more sexualized image and urge YG to match their talent with less suggestive framing.
With a second full album slated for October and the 2026-27 Choom world tour starting June 26 in Seoul, SUGAR HONEY ICE TEA feels like a test case. Fans are watching to see whether upcoming tracks lean back into vocal driven songs like “Forever” or stick with this chant ready baddie lane on stage.
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