YG steps into one of the biggest Verzuz battles of the year when he faces longtime Compton rival The Game this Thursday.
YG steps into one of the biggest Verzuz battles of the year when he faces longtime Compton rival The Game this Thursday.
The showdown goes live July 23 at 6:30 p.m. PDT, streaming on Apple Music, Complex, and the official VERZUZ channels.
Both rappers claim Compton as their foundation, but they built their names in completely different eras of the city’s sound.
Social media lit up the moment Verzuz confirmed the pairing, with longtime fans calling it one of the most anticipated bills of the year.
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The hype makes sense given how rarely two artists from the exact same city, era gap aside, get put on the same stage.
Bragging rights are really what’s on the line here, since both men have represented Compton across very different eras of West Coast rap.
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The Game announced himself in 2005 with The Documentary, a debut that shot straight to number one on the Billboard 200.
Hits like “How We Do” and “Hate It or Love It” turned him into a household name almost overnight.
Doctor’s Advocate and The R.E.D. Album followed, both hitting number one, and he kept it going with Jesus Piece, The Documentary 2, and 1992.
YG’s debut, My Krazy Life, dropped a decade later and went platinum behind “My Hitta” and “Who Do You Love?”
He kept the momentum going with Still Brazy, home to the protest anthem “FDT,” and later dropped Stay Dangerous, powered by the hit “Big Bank.”
Those albums built a catalog that carried his name well outside Compton’s borders and across the country.
YG dropped his seventh album, The Gentlemen’s Club, on June 19, trading street energy for a more reflective tone, according to Billboard.
The Game hasn’t dropped a new full album yet, but he’s stayed busy with fresh singles all year.
He linked with his daughter Cali Dream for the tender “Like Father Like Daughter,” then teamed with SLIMUS and Smokey 4-6 for “GUSI.”
West Coast Verzuz battles carry their own history and this matchup follows some memorable ones.
Snoop Dogg and DMX brought coastal rap history into the format when they squared off in an East-meets-West showdown.
Too Short and E-40 later repped the Bay Area in “Legends of the Bay,” one of Verzuz’s most streamed installments.
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