Outside of the EDM world, the name Slxughter doesn’t look like anything other than a typo. In truth, it’s the stage name of a Russia-born, Brazil-based producer who composes tracks that are mostly notable for their heavy, distorted basslines.
In the pop world, Slxughter receives little fanfare, but over the past month, his music has generated more traffic on YouTube than any other artist. Not even Taylor Swift and Bad Bunny can keep up with this anonymous hitmaker.
Slxughter is one of the most prominent producers of phonk music, an electronic subgenre influenced by Southern hip-hop and (of course) funk. Brazilian phonk artists have been featured in scads of YouTube Shorts uploads, providing the soundtrack for many “brainrot” clips that give Gen Alpha the unbridled absurdity it craves.
Subscribe to get the latest creator news
In 2025, phonk hit the big time
For people like me who spend their days analyzing the most-watched YouTube Shorts videos, the most popular phonk tracks are inescapable. You may not know them by name, but you might recognize how they sound — especially if you listen to the slowed-down versions that creators often utilize.
“Passo bem Solto,” a track by the Italian producer ATLXS, is arguably the standard bearer of the phonk movement. Shorts featuring “Passo” topped YouTube’s year-end rankings in multiple countries, including India and Canada.
Even mainstream artists are getting in on the phun. The producer Diplo recently released a phonk mixtape titled d00mscrvll Vol. 1. And you know you’ve made it in the music world when you get a derisive write-up in Pitchfork.
Phonk is a Gen Alpha vibe
In my 20 years of YouTube series, I discussed the generational shift that occurred on YouTube in the mid-2010s. As Gen Z supplanted Millennials as the primary driver of contemporary internet culture, they brought new priorities to their content consumption. Whereas shared cultural reference points and nostalgia defined Millennial content, Gen Z content was more interested in evoking specific vibes or moods. The success of vibey Zoomers like Emma Chamberlain and David Dobrik underscored that paradigm shift.
These days, Gen Alpha is driving the internet culture clown car, and while their cultural touchstones may flummox previous generations, they are as interested in vibes as their Gen Z predecessors. The Alphan vibe just happens to be a bit more chaotic.
Phonk is the genre that projects that vibe to the world. It expresses the loud, zany, over-the-top tone that can be found in so many “brainrot” Shorts. If you’re looking for phonk to be more than that, well, you might be thinking about it too hard.
The Brazilian revolution is just beginning
Brazil-based producers like Slxughter and Portuguese-language tracks like “Passo bem Solto” underscore phonk’s close ties to South America’s largest nation. Phonk is a distinctly Brazilian phenomenon — which is how tracks like Tenzoo’s “BLOODY BRAZIL” have racked up tens of millions of YouTube views to date.
The rise of phonk is part of a broader cultural phenomenon that is pushing Brazil to the forefront of internet discourse. A national obsession with Roblox has allowed many Brazilian creators to rank among YouTube’s most-watched channels, and phonk provides the soundtrack for many of those Roblox clips.
Brazil’s time in the YouTube spotlight may wax and wane, but the nation’s music scene has cemented itself on the internet stage. Gen Alpha’s tastes will change as the generation grows up, but don’t expect them to give up the phonk so easily.









