BYAK plunges us into the push-and-pull of a fiery, on-again-off-again romance where temptation always wins over logic; Alvaro Díaz and Rauw Alejandro trade verses that confess how their lovers’ quarrels, jealousy games and late-night messages only fuel an explosive chemistry they can’t quit. The lyrics paint a cycle: they fight, drift apart, then gravity drags them back into steamy encounters full of bold imagery (sexts, bedroom dominance, windows fogging up). Beneath the explicit sensuality pulses a relatable theme: two people who know they are “bad” for each other yet crave the rush of reconnection because it feels uniquely intense, “diferente.” In short, the song is a mischievous ode to that intoxicating relationship we cannot explain or escape, wrapped in slick rhythms that make the confessional feel like a seductive secret shared on the dance floor.