
Gunna delivering a Wun World Tour performance. Photo Credit: Desmond K Ye Photography
Live Nation just recently shed light on the commercial results behind the tour’s North American leg, which kicked off on November 17th and wrapped this past Friday. All told, Gunna moved roughly 200,000 tickets across 18 shows – among them a pair of concerts in Toronto and a sold-out Madison Square Garden performance.
Now, the Georgia-born artist has teed up three festival appearances in Africa: Lagos’ Detty December Festival on December 29th; Cape Town’s Milk & Cookies Festival on January 3rd; and a follow-up Milk & Cookies spot, this time in Johannesburg, on the 10th.
After that, Gunna’s scheduled to play Rolling Loud Australia on March 7th and 8th before heading to Europe to close out the month with eight shows. According to Live Nation, all but two of the Europe leg’s gigs – second dates at Amsterdam’s AFAS Live and London’s O2 – have already sold out.
Interestingly, Gunna’s also making a splash at the intersection of fitness and fan engagement; the 32-year-old complemented seven of the Wun Tour stops with “Wunna Run Club 5K” events. Overall, those outings are said to have drawn north of 5,000 participants.
(Diplo’s continuing to book “scenic 5K” runs of his own, and Travis Barker’s Run Travis Run has been active on the year as well.)
As mentioned, 2025’s been a bit of a mixed bag for live entertainment – and particularly rap artists, some of whom have grappled with rocky ticket sales. On the other hand, well-established acts like Gunna and Lil Wayne have still achieved largescale tour-attendance success.
Technically, the rap legend Lil Wayne’s Tha Carter VI didn’t make huge streaming waves upon debuting in June; the 21-track deluxe edition has racked up about 128 million total Spotify streams thus far. Gunna’s 25-song The Last Wun, for its part, has generated closer to 600 million Spotify streams since dropping in August.
Worth highlighting in conclusion: November brought the official end of Travis Scott’s marathon Circus Maximus Tour, which Live Nation touted as “the biggest rap tour from a solo artist in history.” Per the promoter, the six-continent series “sold over 2.2 million tickets and grossed over $250 million.”