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Rb Hip Hop

Soulja Boy Reacts to Drake’s ‘Super Soak’ Sub: ‘This Not Gon’ Be the Best Idea for You’

Big Draco took to IG Live to issue Drizzy a warning.

Soulja Boy performs during halftime of the BET Experience celebrity basketball game on June 29, 2024 in Los Angeles, Calif.

Soulja Boy performs during halftime of the BET Experience celebrity basketball game on June 29, 2024 in Los Angeles, Calif.

Julia Beverly/Getty Images

Soulja Boy responds to Drake‘s supposed “sneak diss” on his new song “Super Soak” with Lil Yachty.

The Atlanta rapper took Drake mentioning Soulja’s label Stacks on Deck (SODMG) as a response to him waking up and tweeting about how he disappointed he is in Drizzy the other day. “You disappointed me,” he wrote at the time. “Doing all them weak a– songs with them n—az look where It got u none of them n—az you collab with or took on tour had yo back.”


Then about a week later, Kai Cenat played “Super Soak” with Lil Yachty and Drake on his stream, where the Toronto rapper, said, “I’m watchin’ the moves, playin’ it close/ S.O.D., super soak.”

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Obviously, Big Draco felt the need to respond.

He hopped on Instagram Live and had a message for the OVO boss. “And Drake, you up here talkin’ about some S.O.D. super soak,” he said as he walk around his house. “Boy, stop playin’ wit’ me, boy. That better be a f—king shout out, n—a. If you in any way try to sneak diss me or play with me in any type of way, bruh, I’m tellin’ you, my n—a, Imma get on your a– … How the f—k you let Kendrick Lamar cook yo’ a– and then the first thing you respond is you tryna come at me.”

He later added: “Drake, you better keep that s—t light, my boy. This your first and only warning.” Soulja also suggested “this not gon’ be the best idea for you, family,” and then told Drake to “speak on how you feel” so they can “get to it.”

Billboard has reached out to Drake’s rep for comment.

It’s also relevant to point out, Soulja also has a song named “Super Soak” that he dropped in 2007.

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This article was originally published by Billboard U.S.

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Perry Bamonte of The Cure performs at Shoreline Amphitheatre on June 2, 2000 in Mountain View, Calif.
Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images

Perry Bamonte of The Cure performs at Shoreline Amphitheatre on June 2, 2000 in Mountain View, Calif.

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Perry Bamonte, The Cure’s Guitarist & Keyboardist, Dead at 65 After ‘a Short Illness’

He "was a warm hearted and vital part of The Cure story," the band said in a statement.

Perry Bamonte, The Cure‘s guitarist and keyboardist, died over the Christmas break, the band announced in a message posted to its website on Friday (Dec. 26). The musician was 65 years old.

“It is with enormous sadness that we confirm the death of our great friend and bandmate Perry Bamonte, who passed away after a short illness at home over Christmas,” the Grammy-nominated band began its statement. “Quiet, intense, intuitive, constant and hugely creative, ‘Teddy’ was a warm-hearted and vital part of The Cure story.”

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