New Footage of NBA Youngboy Smacking Lul Tim (King Von’s Killer) Is Going Viral!

 

⚠️ The Throne Cracks: NBA YoungBoy, Lil Tim, and the Death of Loyalty ⚠️

The internet, a boundless theater for performative loyalty and calculated betrayal, just got hit with its latest, most contemptible drama: blurry footage that purportedly shows NBA YoungBoy delivering a calculated open-handed check to Lil Tim mid-show. This isn’t just another fleeting moment of celebrity misbehavior; this is the sound of a carefully constructed street empire collapsing from within. It’s a stunning display of hypocrisy from a man whose brand is built on the very “loyalty” he seems so eager to discard the moment a soldier becomes a liability.

 

🐍 The King’s Liability: When Loyalty Becomes Dead Weight

 

For those who track the dark, unforgiving history of modern street rap, Lil Tim is not just a footnote; he is the man inexorably tied to the infamous 2020 shooting that left King Von dead. He was, for a time, the embodiment of defiance for YoungBoy’s camp, the individual who took the “smoke” so the boss could reign untouchable. YoungBoy and Quando Rondo even cashed in on this bloodshed with their collaborative project, 3,860, a callous victory lap that glorified the violence.

Yet, Tim’s own words from previous interviews reveal a crucial, damning detail: YoungBoy hesitated to release that tape, wanting to “wait” and “distance himself.” This new footage, where YB seemingly delivers a public, cold-blooded correction, rips the mask off the entire relationship. If the clip is legitimate—and in the vicious economy of hip-hop beef, perception is legitimacy—it exposes the grotesque transactional nature of YoungBoy’s inner circle.

This wasn’t a brotherly warning; it was a power play. It was the CEO reminding a high-risk asset that his value is depreciating. For years, YB has been under relentless attack from Lil Durk and the Von camp, with lyrics constantly questioning his “slide” count and his commitment. Having Lil Tim—the walking, talking trigger-man who attracts police scrutiny and endless beef—standing next to a man obsessed with his “untouchable” image has clearly reached a boiling point. The moment Lil Tim stopped being a shield and started looking like a target, YoungBoy made his move. The hypocrisy is deafening: preaching solitude while surrounding yourself with soldiers, only to discard them when their usefulness wanes.

 

👑 The Dictator’s Cold Calculus: Fear Over Brotherhood

 

What makes the potential smack so significant is its chilling lack of passion. It wasn’t a brawl. It was allegedly a calm, authoritative gesture—a boss checking an underling. It screams one thing: “Don’t forget who feeds you.” YoungBoy has always cultivated an image of absolute dominance, where fear is the primary currency. His entire career is a testament to cutting off anyone who might challenge his control, be they friends, family, or collaborators.

The man who once offered Tim calm counsel after his bond-out—“Don’t worry about what the industry saying, bro. You ain’t did nothing wrong”—has clearly evolved into the ruthless dictator who sees every association as a calculation. By humiliating the very soldier who fought his war, YB is signaling a terrifying transition: he is cleansing his empire. He is sacrificing a loyalist to project a “cleaner” image as he seeks to grow his brand, distancing himself from the very chaos he weaponized for profit.

The timing couldn’t be more strategic, or more contemptible. YB’s career is on an upward swing, moving past legal troubles and gaining greater industry visibility. Meanwhile, Lil Tim’s momentum has flatlined, his potential career suffocated by the shadow of the King Von killing. The slap is the final, brutal severance, a cruel reminder that in YoungBoy’s world, the street code is secondary to the spreadsheet. Loyalty is a contract, and the boss just tore it up in public.

 

💔 Silence and Smirks: The Inevitable Fallout

 

The consequences of this display are catastrophic for the “Never Broke Again” brand of brotherhood. Quando Rondo, the bridge between these two controversial figures, has gone eerily silent, a silence that speaks volumes of fear and strategy. The proposed tour that was supposed to unite the trio has long since crumbled, the victim of house arrest and logistical liabilities. When money and movement are restricted, brotherhood becomes a fairy tale.

This viral footage is not an ending; it is a declaration of war on his own circle. While fans argue whether it was a “slap” or a “tap,” the result is the same: the unbreakable bond is now perceived as irrevocably shattered. The one thing Lil Durk couldn’t achieve—breaking YoungBoy’s inner structure—may have been executed by YoungBoy himself, a magnificent, self-destructive power move fueled by paranoia.

YoungBoy believes that being feared is better than being loved, and this footage proves he’ll use that philosophy on everyone, including the people who bled for him. It confirms the tragic, cyclical flaw at the heart of his empire: the survival mechanism that keeps him alive is the same mechanism that ensures he remains utterly, cynically alone. This isn’t just a breakdown; it’s the definitive, cold-blooded demonstration of how loyalty is discarded when it no longer serves the narrative of absolute control. And somewhere, Durk is smirking, because the cost of that control is always, inevitably, self-betrayal.