The Scottish band took home the £20,000 prize, beating the likes of FKA Twigs, Damon Albarn and Bombay Bicycle Club
Hip-hop group Young Fathers won this year's Mercury Music Prize but unsurprisingly Twitter is asking, 'WHO?!'
Musos will already be clued up on their incredible album Dead, which beat 11 other shortlisted acts tonight including Damon Albarn, Bombay Bicycle Club and favourite FKA Twigs.
But if you aren't aware of the band, here's what you need to know..
The Edinburgh-based trio, made up of Alloysious Massaquoi, 'G' Hastings and Kayus Bankole, formed in 2008 and are signed by Black Sugar Records.
They also picked up the award for Best Scottish Album for their EP, Tape Two, in June this year, beating Biffy Clyro and Edywn Collins, but they were not tipped to win tonight.
According to the BBC, Young Fathers has developed a reputation for making a unique blend of music, utilising diverse influences that reflect their different backgrounds.
Massaquoi is originally from Liberia, Scots-born Bankole has Nigerian parents, while Hastings hails from Drylaw in the north of the city.
Talking about their time in the spotlight, G Hastings recently told Drowned in Sound: "We've been together since we were fourteen, so it's been a long time coming for us.
"We've been about for years, listening to people tell us all kinds of things and it got to the point where we were just fed up so we decided to record something in a week and whatever it was we'd put it out.
"Even though there were people who didn't want us to do it, we did it anyway and as soon as we did it felt like a release of sorts, but it also felt good to disobey people.
"Tape One was also the best music we'd ever made. It felt like we'd figured ourselves out and found our sound."
Before they won the award they also admitted many of the bands on the list this year had never heard of them, which they thought was a good thing.
Hastings added: "The award itself is ... fine, I guess. Look, nobody is going to tell us something we don't already know.
"It doesn't matter to us what happens now. We've already won, because more people have heard us now from being on that list."
The band have just 21,500 fans on Facebook, compared to 141, 612 music lovers who follow FKA Twigs and 295,000 who have 'liked' Damon Albarn on the site.
Young Fathers also beat Jungle, Kate Tempest, Anna Calvi, East India Youth, GoGo Penguin, Royal Blood, Polar Bear and Nick Mulvey when they picked up the prize at the Roundhouse in Camden, north London tonight.
Band member G Hastings, from Edinburgh, said afterwards: "We'll take it in our stride. We always wanted to make something bigger than the city we were living in."
We'll think they'll definitely have a lot more fans on Facebook by tomorrow morning.