BANDLE
Hints & Answer Guide
Sunday, March 8, 2026
Play Official Bandle
Daily Bandle · March 8, 2026
Today’s Hints & Answer
Listen to each instrument layer — use the hints below to guess before tapping Reveal Answer.
Instrument Layers
Revealed one at a time in-game
1
of 6
Drum Machine
A driving electronic drum beat at 125 BPM — a tight, punchy 4-on-the-floor kick with clipped snares and a big club energy
Hardest
2
of 6
Bass Synth
A thick, wobbly sub-bass synthesizer locking in under the beat — deep electro-house low end that defines the track’s G minor groove
Hard
3
of 6
Synth Lead
The song’s signature buzzing synth riff — a sharp, staccato electro melody repeating over the beat. This is the hook you’ve heard in countless TV shows, ads, and viral moments
Medium
4
of 6
Synth Pads & FX
Sweeping synth pads and electronic effects — airy, washed-out chords and pitch-shifted fills that add atmosphere and tension between verses
Medium
5
of 6
Hook Vocals
Dev’s breathy, sing-rap hook — a cool, almost deadpan female voice delivering the iconic chorus. Her lazy California delivery became instantly recognisable in 2010
Easy
6
of 6
Lead Rap Vocals
Far East Movement’s rapid-fire rap verses — energetic, boastful club-rap rhymes over the electro beat. Opening line name-drops “sizzurp” and references Three 6 Mafia
Final
Song Hints
01
Released April 13, 2010 as the lead single from the group’s third studio album on Cherrytree / Interscope Records.
Release
02
The album is titled Free Wired — a concept the group coined to represent living connected 25 hours a day, 8 days a week.
Album
03
Genre is Electro-hop / Hip house — a collision of electro-pop, hip-hop and dance club music. Key of G minor, 125 BPM.
Genre
04
The main act is an Asian-American quartet from Los Angeles. This song made them the first Asian-American artists ever to hit #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Artist
05
The song features a female vocalist from Manteca, California who the producers discovered on MySpace, plus an electro production duo from Berkeley.
Features
06
The title’s two-word phrase refers to a luxury private jet — something even “flyer than a G4.” The song sold over 4 million digital downloads in the US alone.
Title
Song Profile
Artist: Far East Movement
Features: The Cataracs & Dev
Album: Free Wired (2010)
Released: April 13, 2010
Label: Cherrytree / Interscope
Tempo: 125 BPM · G minor
Features: The Cataracs & Dev
Album: Free Wired (2010)
Released: April 13, 2010
Label: Cherrytree / Interscope
Tempo: 125 BPM · G minor
Chart Performance
Billboard Hot 100: #1 (3 weeks)
New Zealand: #1
Australia / UK: Top 10
RIAA Certification: 4× Platinum
Historic: First #1 by Asian-American artists
New Zealand: #1
Australia / UK: Top 10
RIAA Certification: 4× Platinum
Historic: First #1 by Asian-American artists
The Answer
Far East Movement
Like a G6
feat. The Cataracs & Dev
Free Wired · 2010
The electro-hop anthem that stormed every club in 2010 — built on a buzzing synth riff, a thumping 125 BPM kick, and Dev’s unforgettable deadpan hook. The “G6” refers to a Gulfstream private jet, meant to be even flyer than the G4 Drake rapped about. It reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100, making Far East Movement the first Asian-American artists to top that chart.
Billboard Hot 100 #1
Peaked at #1 for three non-consecutive weeks — chart dated October 30, 2010. Sold 4 million+ digital downloads in the US.
Historic Achievement
First #1 single on the Hot 100 by Asian-American artists — and the first by any East Asian act since Kyu Sakamoto’s “Sukiyaki” in 1963.
4× Platinum (RIAA)
Certified quadruple platinum by the RIAA. Topped charts in New Zealand and reached the top ten in Australia, Canada, UK, and several European countries.