And that’s where Indigo becomes dangerous — because once you enjoy it, the line between avenger and monster blurs. She doesn’t cross it. She erases it. Then paints the floor with it, indigo and crimson swirling under hot lights.

No discussion of this track is complete without addressing its algorithmic dominance. Within 48 hours of release, had been used in over 500,000 TikTok videos. The trend is simple but effective: users film themselves "releasing their own revenge" — confronting a toxic boss, deleting an ex’s number, throwing away old love letters — timed to the drop at 0:17.

The first cut of revenge is cold — calculated, quiet, a blade slipped between ribs on a winter night. You watch them bleed slow, and you feel nothing but the satisfaction of geometry: action, reaction, balance restored.

She smiles, fangs glinting in the heat shimmer, and says: