Lol at old heads....nikka u just young as hell. But on topic I think that's when people started to consider jigga that dude. Seemed like people were desperate to find a new king of hip hop with the death of big and pac and that album put him in that position.
That's why I say Jay is like the B student getting his shine on because all the A+ students are absent.
If you was around during those prime years of hip hop(92-96) not to many people were even mentioning Jay like that.Not even as a prospect or "nikka you have to keep an eye on"
He had "ain't no nikka" with Foxy, but to be honest with you, most people was digging the track because of Foxy.She was even more of a 'star"/more popular because of that track than Jay was back then.Not saying she was a better rapper, but nikkaz was

hearing a young bytch spit like that.It's what really made that song catch peoples ear.Of course the females was feeling it.They basically control the market.Whatever females start to dig is destined to blow up.
And skip all the revisionism....Reasonable Doubt got lost in the shuffle in '96.I'm not knocking it, that's my favorite Jay album, but that album was 3rd tier status back when it dropped.Jay was still "the little engine that could" amongst all the juggernauts that year "(Snoop...Pac...Big...Bone Thugs..etc)
But I agree, Hard Knock Life is when Jay took over that
#1 spot.97-99 was the most vulnerable years in hip hop history.The market was literally begging to be taken over....the hip hop community was in a slumber, a general malaise.That's why Puff & Mase had success with that shiny suit shyt.Coming out the tragic period of Sep '96-March of '97, the masses would've accepted anything just to be distracted from all the drama and bullshyt.
Nobody grabbed the bull by the horns like Jay.Now he is what he is today