• Record Label: Island
  • Release Date: Mar 23, 2010
Metascore
68

Generally favorable reviews - based on 8 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 4 out of 8
  2. Negative: 0 out of 8
  1. The 16-year-old's follow-up to last November's "My World" shrewdly elevates him from a fleeting teen phenom into an evolving pop artist.
  2. Bieber makes all the right, charming moves for a teen, and he covers all the bases. The dance-pop songs are light on the ears yet memorable; the unrequited material sounds deeply felt; the ballads have all the necessary us-against-the-world teen-love dramatics.
  3. This full-length sequel, My World 2.0, in stores March 23, won't likely affect any adults not in the direct blast radius of Bieber's target range. That said, the kid seems to know what he's doing.
  4. Despite the clunky moments, there’s ample proof that Team Bieber know exactly what they’re doing and who they’re talking to. As you’d expect, it’s the ballads that hit the hardest.
User Score
3.4

Generally unfavorable reviews- based on 579 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. MichaelW
    Mar 30, 2010
    0
    I wish there was a score below a zero, but there isn't.
  2. BryceS
    Jun 7, 2010
    0
    People who gave it an 8 or higher. I rate based on the music i hear, I don't care what his age is, this is a kid who has little talent. People who gave it an 8 or higher. I rate based on the music i hear, I don't care what his age is, this is a kid who has little talent. His constant moaning of ohhhhh after every word is quite annoying. terribly composed even with the glassed over studio vocals. Full Review »
  3. DaveH.
    May 5, 2010
    2
    It is so depressive to see how quality in music has been downgraded so much in the recent years, in this album, songs have repetitive lyrics, It is so depressive to see how quality in music has been downgraded so much in the recent years, in this album, songs have repetitive lyrics, stupid choruses and senseless meaning of lyrics. Even seeing the album cover makes one feel bad. Full Review »