Nicki Minaj has tabulated her own catalog of full-length releases since she got her start in the business, surprising many with her top pick.

On Friday (December 22), the New York MC took to Twitter and shared her “honest ranking” of the albums she’s put out since her debut studio release in 2010. The list is as follows, starting with her best: Pink Friday 2, The Pinkprint, QUEEN, Pink Friday, Pink Friday Roman Reloaded (The Re-Up).

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She added: “But I truly respect all gag city resident opinions. What the albums mean to you is your own truth based on where you were in your own life.”

Check out the “Super Bass” hitmaker’s assessment of her own work below:

Last week, Nicki Minaj scored her first gospel chart-topper with “Blessings.” In mid-December, Billboard reported that her collaboration with superstar Tasha Cobbs Leonard has gone to No. 1 on their Hot Gospel chart based on sales, streams and airplay.

Per the Dec. 8-14 tally, “Blessings” generated 3.1 million official streams in the United States. Additionally, it also sold 3,000 downloads. The pair previously collaborated on 2017’s “I’m Getting Ready,” though it didn’t place as high on the charts as their latest hit.

Nicki Minaj Teases Rihanna Collaboration On 'Pink Friday 2' Deluxe
Nicki Minaj Teases Rihanna Collaboration On 'Pink Friday 2' Deluxe

According to Chart Data, Nicki’s latest project has broken the record for landing the most number of songs on the Hot 100 from a rap album by a woman, with 17 of its 22 tracks securing a spot on the list.

14 of those debuted on this week’s index, with the Lil Uzi Vert-assisted “Everybody” being the highest at No. 26, followed by the Drake crossover “Needle” at No. 34 and “FTCU” at No. 42.

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Other tracks include “Barbie Dangerous” (No. 58), “Are You Gone Already” (No. 60), “Let Me Calm Down” featuring J. Cole (No. 63), “Beep Beep” (No. 64), “Big Difference” (No. 73) and “RNB” featuring Lil Wayne and Tate Kobang (No. 80).

“Super Freaky Girl” peaked at No. 1 last year, while “Red Ruby da Sleeze” (No. 13) and “Last Time I Saw You” (No. 23) had made appearances on the chart prior to the LP’s release.