Termanology & Royal Flush Link Up for Royal Terms — Pure East Coast Energy
When two artists with real history lock in on the same project, you can usually hear it right away. That’s exactly what happens on Royal Terms, the new collaborative album from Termanology and Royal Flush.

The project officially dropped on May 1, 2026, and it feels like something built for people who still care about bars, production, and album structure.
For anyone familiar with both artists, the pairing makes sense. Termanology has spent years carrying that underground East Coast sound, working with names like DJ Premier, Statik Selektah, and Paul Wall while building one of the more consistent catalogs in independent hip hop. Royal Flush brings a different kind of history. Coming out of Queens, his 1997 album Ghetto Millionaire became one of those cult classic records that still gets brought up anytime people talk about overlooked New York rap albums from that era.
Royal Terms keeps everything in that lane. Hard drums. Soul samples. Straight verses. The production lineup alone tells you what type of time they’re on, with contributions from Statik Selektah, araabMUZIK, Spunk Bigga, Cartune Beatz, Melks, Nef, Tahmell, and both artists themselves.
Tracks like “Legendary Blocks” featuring Tek of Smif-N-Wessun and UFO Fev bring that street-corner cypher energy, while records like “Crack Era Survivors” lean into reflection and experience instead of nostalgia. Nothing feels forced. Nobody’s trying to sound younger than they are. That’s part of what makes the album work.
The chemistry is what really carries the project though. Termanology’s technical approach balances well with Royal Flush’s gritty delivery. It feels natural, not thrown together for the sake of a collab release.
At a time where a lot of albums feel built for quick clips, Royal Terms feels made to actually sit with. Front to back. No shortcuts. Just real East Coast hip hop done by artists who still understand the assignment.