For fans of Swedish pop, for expats missing the sound of home, or for the curious listener who stumbled upon a random TikTok—this track is essential listening. It captures the specific ache of being a teenager in Scandinavia: the long nights, the social democracy of sadness, and the hope that somewhere, an "Oskar" is listening back.
Oskar (last name withheld in many early releases, adding to the mystique) emerged from this scene not with a bang, but with a slow-burning upload on TikTok. Unlike polished boy bands manufactured in a studio, Oskar represents the "bedroom pop" era of pojkart—a solo artist writing his own riffs about suburban longing and classroom crushes. The specific track fans refer to as the "pojkart oskar hit" is widely believed to be "Oskar, Jag Gav Dig Allt" (Oskar, I Gave You Everything) or, depending on the streaming platform, a viral single titled "Fotboll, Kärlek & Du" (Soccer, Love & You). The ambiguity of the title is part of the search problem; fans know the feeling of the song better than the name.
Due to copyright disputes over a sample used in the bridge (a loop from a 1999 eurodance track), the song was temporarily removed from Spotify in late 2024. When it returned, the title had been changed to "Pojkart #4" (unlisted), causing a wave of frantic searching by fans who only remembered the name "Oskar."