The video uses period-appropriate costumes and elaborate set fabrications by Nick J. Henderson to ground the "madness" in a tangible, eerie world.

Unlike typical narrative raps, the artists designed the music video as a series of nightmare-like vignettes intended to evoke the game's sense of unease rather than strictly retelling its plot.

The beat was produced by Tuna Beats, featuring chaotic, "wacky," and cartoonish tones that mirror the game's distorted reality.

It includes a parody of the famous Indiana Jones idol-swap scene , featuring a model of The Stupendium's head.

The song moves away from the nautical setting of the first game to focus on the urban horror of the .