User:CrowzRSA/Sandbox/Sandbox 2/Eazy/Str8 off tha Streetz of Muthaphukkin Compton

Reception
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, a senior editor for Allmusic, gave the album two and a half out of five stars, saying that the album was "the farthest thing from a graceful departure." Erlewine considered that "Tha Muthaphukkin Real" and "Ole School Shit" to have illustrated Eazy's rapping abilities, but since Eazy was "tied to his pedestrian production," the critic considered the majority of the album to be "depressingly by the book."

Entertainment Weekly's David Browne rewarded the album with a B, and called it Eazy's "last testament." Browne favored the fact that the album had both songs and snippets of Eazy in conversation. He declares that "the sort of stories that earned gangsta rap its menace-to-society image. He still taunts his former partners in N.W.A and brags about his prowess with artillery and women."

On February 17, 1996, the album made it's peak position of number one on the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. That same day, the album peaked at number 3 on the Billboard 200. It peaked at number 20 on the Recording Industry Association of New Zealand sales charts. It entered the chart on March 3, 1996 at number 34, and left on March 31, 1996 at number 45, totaling five weeks.