Game of Love kicks in with a groove that doesn’t ask, it moves you. The bass and drums lock into a rhythm that has weight but keeps it light, the kind of tempo that makes your foot tap without thinking. Michellar and Rad Dutsun trade lines like they’re in a conversation, voices overlapping and pulling apart, each one pushing the tension between them. You can hear the hesitation, the play, the draw, it’s all in the phrasing.
The track is it’s about the early stages of love. It’s not about sweeping gestures but about noticing the small cracks and pulls, the way two people test each other and themselves. Lines like “You catch me when I’m slipping, I catch you when you fall” plays with that tension — between confidence and vulnerability, desire and restraint — without spelling it out.
It sits between pop and something more intimate. Synths and guitars fold around the vocals, filling space without crowding it. There are moments where the rhythm pauses just enough to make the back-and-forth between the singers feel like a heartbeat, like a push and pull you can’t look away from. It’s measured to make the voices land.
Game of Love is the kind of song that makes you move while making you feel, a balance between rhythm and story. If you liked Michellar’s older work, this feels like a step forward — more assured, more layered, more alive. It’s a reminder that chemistry between two voices can carry a track as much as the beat or the production.
Listen to the full track here:
The song is available across Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube.





