Welcome! If you're looking to purchase Pouya: The Foreverglades Tour presale tickets (before the general public sale), you're in the right place. Scroll down to find your show and unlock the verified presale passwords you need to secure your spots early.
There are 8 upcoming presales!
To get notified the second new presale tickets are added, scroll down and locate your performance.
Swamp Stories with Pouya
Pouya came up from Miami's DIY rap scene, pairing quick, rubbery flows with bass that rattles small rooms.
Miami grind, swamp mindset
He carved his lane in the SoundCloud era, then stayed independent while sharpening storytelling about friends, risk, and Florida grit. Expect a set that jumps fast, with early wave staples like Get Buck and collab crushers like 1000 Rounds surfacing between newer cuts.Likely heat, plus curveballs
He often flips from chest-thumping bangers to reflective tracks such as Six Speed, which changes the pit pace without killing the energy. Crowds skew mixed in age and background, with locals in Marlins caps next to road-trippers mouthing every hook, and the vibe is protective but rowdy. Two small notes fans love to trade: he is of Cuban and Persian heritage, and he first built a following hosting a scrappy comedy channel with Fat Nick. You might also hear South Side Suicide if the room is leaning heavy into darker moods. These song picks and production ideas are educated guesses from past runs and could shift by city.The Pouya Scene, From Pit To Parking Lot
Florida threads, shared rules
You will see vintage Marlins caps, mesh shorts, thrifted tees, and silver chains, with a few swamp-green pieces nodding to the theme. Fans crowd the barricade early, but the front rotates as people step out to cool off and return, a quiet respect that keeps energy steady.Rituals without the gloss
Chants tend to be simple name calls for Pouya before drops and count-ins during hooks, with hands up rather than phones out. Merch leans into Florida cues, think gator graphics, cypress fonts, and black-on-neon hats that pop under venue lights. Older heads swap stories about tiny club shows, while newer fans compare playlists and debate which collab hits hardest. Pits break open and close fast, and people get picked up quickly, so the rough edges feel managed instead of reckless. After the set, small groups linger to trade photos of scraped knees and set notes, already plotting which city to catch next.How Pouya Sounds Live, Up Close
Pouya raps on top of the beat with clipped consonants, which keeps words clear even when the tempo jumps.