Triple F Life: Friends, Fans & Family received generally positive reviews from
music critics. At
Metacritic, which assigns a
normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an
average score of 66, based on 14 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews". David Jeffries of
AllMusic gave the album three and a half stars out of five, saying "His sophomore effort,
Triple F Life, threatens to confuse the issue with its subtitle dedication to "Friends, Fans & Family," but there's way too much strip-club music here to consider this a heartwarming concept album, so spend a solemn moment with the RIP dedication to Slim Dunkin—Waka's friend and cohort who was murdered in late 2011—and then get ready for the expected slam session." Evan Rytlewski of
The A.V. Club gave the album a C+, saying "What
Triple F Life lacks in inspiration, it can sometimes compensate for with sheer sweat, and particularly during its many strip-club salvos, Flocka’s shouted enthusiasm and manic ad-libs keep the record animated." Ian Cohen of
Pitchfork gave the album a 7.0 out of 10, saying "It's tough to imagine Waka repeating
Flockaveli and somehow improving on it, but under the cloak of Triple F's blatant crossover appeals, he slyly exceeds expectations by making a record better than it really needs to be." Andres Vasquez of
HipHopDX gave the album two and half stars out of five, saying "While there are some highlights on the album, they don’t nearly make up for the glaring flaws throughout, the lack of noteworthy lyrics or the redundancy in topics, flows, hooks and beats." Ralph Bristout of
XXL gave the album an XL, saying "Some will say
Triple F Life finds Waka trying to do much, reaching too far out of his zone. But the rapper coolly exceeds expectations in his artistic self-awareness and this go-round shines like his diamond-studded Fozzy Bear chain." Kyle Anderson of
Entertainment Weekly gave the album a B−, saying "Several tracks in, his second disc begins to bow under the weight of its own aggro intensity. That leaves his own bevy of A-list guests — including Nicki Minaj, Drake, and an especially elastic Ludacris — to bring some fresh jujitsu to Waka's flailing fight game, and provide occasional respite from
Triple F Life's single-minded mania." ==Commercial performance==