Fivio Foreign lit up social media on March 15 with a string of blunt tweets aimed at several major figures in hip-hop. The Brooklyn drill rapper called out 50 Cent, Lil Baby, Young Thug, and Boosie Badazz while weighing in on multiple rap debates dominating the culture.
Fivio’s first message focused on what he described as a rival ignoring a direct challenge. In street and battle rap culture, public call-outs carry serious weight.
“Smt idc how many niggas Rugga box.. Man 2 Man I told him let’s get it on,” Fivio wrote. “Every street nigga kno. all call outs is Mandatory. So he forever Pussy in my eyes.”
The tweet suggested the Brooklyn MC believes someone refused to answer a challenge he issued privately. In his view, that silence breaks long-standing street rules about accountability.
Fivio then shifted his attention toward 50 Cent, who recently stirred controversy by criticizing younger New York rappers online. According to Fivio, the Queens mogul chose the wrong targets.
“50 pussy for coming at the old YN’s when TI old illiterate country ass on his heels,” Fivio posted, referencing Atlanta rap veteran T.I.. “Ain’t no changing subjects niggas.”
Fivio Foreign Goes Off About Lil Baby, 50 Cent, Young Thug, Boosie Badazz & More
He also took aim at the lack of unity among New York artists during the back-and-forth.
“I hate how NY didn’t stand together bout that shit but fuck it,” he added.
Fivio’s final tweet touched on another heated topic moving through hip-hop circles: the “protective custody” conversation and the “F The Streets” narrative surrounding Young Thug’s legal battles.
The rapper criticized Westside Boogie for leaving him off a list of artists involved in that debate.
“Boogie bugging for leave me and a couple other RN’s off that list,” Fivio wrote.
He also questioned Lil Baby’s loyalty within Atlanta’s rap landscape.
“Baby weird for riding around w thug too,” he added.
Taken together, the tweets show Fivio stepping into several ongoing hip-hop conflicts at once. The posts tap into bigger issues shaping rap right now: regional loyalty, street credibility and who stands where when pressure hits.
