🔥Suge Knight BLASTS Master P: “You Stole Everything from Death Row!” 😡 Claims No Limit Was Just a Cheap Copy🧢

Suge Knight accuses Master P of lying about visiting him in prison to buy off Snoop Dogg's rights for $2m

Suge Knight didn’t hesitate when asked about his long-simmering tension with Master P.

He came out swinging, accusing the No Limit boss of copying Death Row Records down to the last detail—style, chains, image, and even slogans.

“You tried to make your company behind Death Row,” Suge snapped.

“You tried to act like Death Row.

I’m the [__] that started the Death Row chains, then you want to start a No Limit chain.”

From the jump, Suge made it clear that any idea Master P was some kind of West Coast heavyweight was laughable.

“You started in New Orleans.

They basically ran you out of New Orleans.

You went to Texas—got ran out.

Then you went to the Bay,” he said.

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According to Suge, once Master P landed in California, he was surrounded by soft company, and any street credibility he claimed was built on other people’s reputations.

Suge also took aim at P’s alleged claim that he helped bring Snoop Dogg to No Limit.

“You lied and said you came to visit me in prison, which you never did,” Suge spat.

“You said you got Snoop from me—you never did.

I sold Snoop’s [__] to Priority Records, who then loaned him to you.

” That’s not just an industry technicality—that’s Suge calling out a major piece of Master P’s narrative and branding it as straight-up fiction.

And when Snoop got into trouble during his No Limit days? Suge says Master P did nothing.

“Everything you do is behind someone else,” he said, implying that P never had the backbone to handle problems himself.

The disrespect didn’t stop there.

Suge turned his attention to Master P’s actual music catalog—and completely torched it.

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He claimed that during his time in prison in the 1990s and 2000s, nobody was bumping No Limit music.

“You walk on the yard and hear Death Row music all day long.

I ain’t never really heard nobody bumping No Limit,” he bragged.

In fact, Suge went as far as saying that Master P was buying his own music to inflate sales—a brutal accusation that cuts at the heart of P’s commercial success.

“If you go to your podcast right now and say, ‘Bring me a Chronic CD, Doggystyle, All Eyez On Me,’ somebody will show up,” Suge said.

“Say, ‘Bring me a No Limit CD…’ it won’t be many.”

Suge then dropped a disturbing bombshell: that Master P’s team stole an unreleased Tupac track and had C-Murder—currently incarcerated—record a song using Tupac’s original lyrics and tracklist.

“That was disrespectful,” Suge said.

“You took something you shouldn’t have had.

Do you think Suge Knight was actually intimidated by Master P's confidence and unwillingness to back down, or was Suge just trying to flex his power and control over the West Coast

” And the way they allegedly got it? By exploiting a top-security breach at Death Row, according to Suge, who accused either security or someone close to the label of letting the track leak.

But perhaps the most ruthless moment came when Suge mocked Master P’s family hustle, claiming he got his son a USC scholarship “on another [__]’s back.

” He blasted P for building his empire off the work and sacrifice of others, calling him a “country bumpkin” who had to ride coattails to gain legitimacy.

Suge didn’t even hold back when it came to P’s brother, claiming he’s now stuck working at a gym—“unheard of,” in Suge’s words, for someone once connected to a supposed rap empire.

It was a reminder that, in Suge’s view, No Limit was always smoke and mirrors, lacking the staying power or authenticity of Death Row.

He also addressed the broader narrative that’s painted him as the villain over the years.

Suge insists he’s not here to bash anyone for sport—but says facts are facts.

“Even though I just kicked some facts, cut the [__] out,” he warned.

Master P fala sobre ter salvo vida de Snoop Dogg em briga com Suge Knight

“Every drug dealer wanna be famous.”

The message was clear: Suge sees Master P not as a mogul, but as a pretender.

A man who built his image off a stolen identity.

Someone who tried to emulate the Death Row formula but lacked the power, music, and street roots to make it last.

“Everything he took, he took from someone else,” Suge concluded.

As the dust settles, one thing is certain: the bad blood between Suge Knight and Master P is far from over.

And while Master P has remained relatively quiet about the feud, Suge’s words have reignited a fierce debate about authenticity, legacy, and who really built the house that West Coast rap still stands on.

For Suge, the answer is obvious—and he’s ready to fight for his legacy, bar for bar, beat for beat, and chain for chain.