The Memphis rap scene just got another messy chapter, and this time, FNG Lil Marc is done staying quiet. In a fiery social media rant that quickly went viral, Lil Marc went straight at Finesse 2Tymes, accusing him of betrayal, clout chasing, and breaking a brotherhood that once seemed unbreakable.
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The tension erupted after Finesse publicly claimed he had “forgiven” Moneybagg Yo, a move that didn’t sit well with Lil Marc — especially given the long-standing complications and shifting alliances within their circle. For Marc, it wasn’t about Moneybagg. It was about respect.
“I ain’t got no beef with Big 30,” Marc clarified, before turning his focus back to Finesse. “But don’t put my name in some s**t like I’m the reason you falling out with folks.”*
That’s when things turned personal.

In an emotional outburst, Lil Marc reminded fans — and Finesse — who really stood solid when things weren’t glamorous. “When you was locked up, who held you down?” Marc said, clearly hurt. “I was there. I didn’t switch up. I didn’t clout chase.”
Then came the line that lit social media on fire:
“Hit my line and tell me you sorry.”
It wasn’t just a demand — it was a plea. One rooted in loyalty, history, and frustration.
Marc accused Finesse of moving different since his release, suggesting fame changed the dynamic. “Soon as you touch freedom, you acting like folks disposable,” he implied, calling out what he sees as selective forgiveness and fake unity for headlines.

Fans immediately split into camps. Some sided with Lil Marc, praising him for speaking on loyalty and “real street principles.” Others accused him of dragging private issues online for attention. Meanwhile, Finesse 2Tymes stayed silent — a silence that only poured gasoline on the fire.
The drama taps into a familiar hip-hop theme: brotherhood versus fame. In an industry where alliances shift fast and loyalty is currency, Marc’s rant struck a nerve. Was Finesse trying to clean up his image by forgiving Moneybagg? Or did he really leave his day-ones behind?
As of now, there’s been no apology. No phone call. No response.
And in hip-hop, silence often speaks louder than diss tracks.
Whether this feud ends with reconciliation or escalates into a full-blown rap war, one thing is clear: this isn’t just industry noise — it’s personal. And the internet? It’s watching every move.