Most Hitmaka kits contain a vocal ad-lib saying "Woo Woo" or "Big Bs." Throw this on the downbeat of the chorus. It psychologically tricks the listener into thinking the beat is louder. Where to Find the Legitimate Hitmaka Drum Kit Be warned: Hitmaka himself has not officially released a "Drumkit" on Splice or Producer Grind (as of this writing). However, the collective production community (Decap, Drum Broker, and r/Drumkits) has reverse-engineered his sound perfectly.

When you download a kit, check for a folder called "Processed Stems" or "Clipped One-Shots." These are drum hits that have already been run through an analog emulation (like J37 or Decapitator). Using pre-clipped drums allows you to make a beat that slaps immediately without needing expensive mixing plugins. Having the kit is step one. Programming the drums is step two. Here is the standard Hitmaka workflow in a DAW like FL Studio or Ableton Live:

In the modern landscape of Hip-Hop and R&B, few producer tags are as immediately recognizable as the curt, confident "Big B's..." followed by that signature, hard-hitting snare. That tag belongs to Hitmaka (formerly known as Yung Berg), a producer and songwriter who has defined the sound of 2020s urban radio. From Chris Brown and Tyga to YG and Cardi B, Hitmaka’s production style is synonymous with bounce, minimalism, and devastating pocket weight.

For any aspiring beatmaker, the question isn't if you want to sound like Hitmaka, but how . The answer lies inside a specific piece of sonic gold:

Find a soul sample or a mellow Rhodes loop. Hitmaka beats are driven by the sample. If the loop doesn't groove, the drums won't save it.