The Boy is not done climbing. Drake National Treasures has risen to a new peak Global Spotify position of #3, adding three spots to its previous high. The track pulled in 5.47 million streams in a single day, proving that audiences are still discovering and replaying the cut weeks after its initial release.
Unlike songs that explode on debut then vanish, “National Treasures” has built momentum methodically. The track gained three positions to land at #3, trailing only the current chart-toppers. For an artist of Drake’s stature, any movement upward this long after release signals sustained listener interest rather than hype-driven numbers.
The song appears on a project that has already generated multiple hits. But “National Treasures” is carving its own path. Streaming data shows the track picking up in multiple territories simultaneously, suggesting algorithmic playlist placement and organic word-of-mouth are working in tandem.
Drake has dominated charts for over a decade. A new peak might seem routine. But the context changes everything. The global Spotify chart is more competitive than ever, with younger artists constantly flooding the top ten. For a veteran to climb three spots, not debut, not fall, but climb, that is unusual. That is staying power.
The 5.47 million daily streams place “National Treasures” in rarefied air. Only two songs are currently outperforming it worldwide.
The track still has room to grow. Number two is within striking distance. Number one is not impossible if streaming numbers continue their upward trend. Drake has not announced a music video or additional promotion for this specific song. But he rarely needs to. The music finds its audience. “National Treasures” is proving that again. The new peak at #3 may not be the final peak. The Boy is still climbing.


