"FALSEDAD" is Rauw Alejandro’s fiery confession of heartbreak and obsession. The Puerto Rican artist paints his ex as a seductive snake who shed her skin and switched partners without warning. He compares her kisses to venom, himself to a wanderer dying in a desert, and their past nights together to moons he once pulled down just for her. Despite recognizing that her love is seasonal and rehearsed, he cannot shake the memory of intimate summers, stolen moments under the moonlight, and the belief that no one else will touch her the way he did.
The chorus is a pleading challenge: “¿Qué se necesita pa’ sentirte otra vez?” (“What does it take to feel you again?”). Rauw flips between anger and longing, boasting that he still holds the “antidote,” yet admitting she alone can cure him. With swagger, vulnerability, and sharp tropical imagery, the song captures that maddening space where you know someone is bad for you but the craving refuses to die. "FALSEDAD" is both a warning about counterfeit love and a confession that even the most poisonous relationships can be irresistibly addictive.