🐍 “From Best Friends to Silent Enemies”: The Day Snoop Dogg Turned His Back on 2Pac — and Never Looked Back 🎯💔

Snoop Dogg Was Jealous Of 2Pac's Success, Says Napoleon Of The Outlawz

When Tupac joined Death Row in late 1995 after his prison release, Snoop Dogg was already the label’s crown jewel.

His 1993 debut Doggystyle had broken records, and he’d survived a high-profile murder trial that threatened to derail his career.

Pac’s arrival brought new energy — and new tension.

Pac was a soldier.

Aggressive, unapologetic, ready to name enemies and declare war on the East Coast, particularly The Notorious B.I.G.and Puff Daddy.

Snoop was diplomatic, preferring smooth talk to open confrontation.

The difference worked — until it didn’t.

The breaking point came in September 1996.

With the East–West feud at a boiling point, Snoop appeared on New York’s Hot 97.

Instead of adding fuel, he said he had “love” for Biggie and Puffy — men Pac had accused of trying to kill him.

To Pac, it was a betrayal.

2Pac Tried To Fight Snoop Dogg Over Perceived Disloyalty, Suge Knight  Claims - HipHopDX

In his mind, you couldn’t smile at the enemy in the middle of a war.

When Snoop returned to Los Angeles, the atmosphere had shifted.

The man who had once been all laughter and jokes with Pac was now met with silence.

Their last shared moments were tense.

On a private flight with Suge Knight’s crew, Snoop noticed his own security wasn’t allowed onboard.

Reading the mood, he grabbed a knife and fork, sat in the back, and prepared for the possibility that the flight might end in violence.

“If I’m going to get killed,” he thought, “somebody’s dying with me.”

It wasn’t always this way.

The two first met at the wrap party for Poetic Justice in 1993, trading verses in an impromptu rap battle that left both impressed.

Pac was there for Snoop during his murder trial, showing up to court in solidarity.

“Today is We Love Snoop Day,” Pac told reporters then, a show of loyalty few rappers receive.

But Death Row was a battleground disguised as a label.

2Pac, Biggie Arrest Fingerprint Cards Up for Auction | Hypebeast

When All Eyez on Me dropped in 1996, Pac became the label’s centerpiece.

Fans swarmed him, and even Snoop noticed the shift: people still asked for his autograph, but the question they really wanted answered was “Where’s Tupac?”

The split between them widened after Pac’s infamous “Hit ’Em Up” dropped — a scorched-earth diss aimed at Biggie, Puff, and the entire East Coast.

Snoop admitted he didn’t like the track, thinking it only “bought more problems.

” Pac saw this as a lack of commitment to the cause.

Then came Las Vegas, September 7, 1996.

After watching Mike Tyson’s fight at the MGM Grand, Pac, Suge, and their crew brawled with Southside Crip Orlando “Baby Lane” Anderson in the casino lobby — a fight caught on

camera.

Hours later, a white Cadillac pulled alongside Suge’s BMW and opened fire.

Pac was hit multiple times and died six days later.

Snoop wasn’t in Vegas.

But within weeks, his actions would add another layer to the fracture.

Snoop Dogg se souvient de sa conversation avec Biggie juste après la mort  de 2Pac | Mouv'

In April 1997, just six months after Pac’s death, Snoop appeared alongside Puffy on The Steve Harvey Show, calling for an end to the East–West war.

To Death Row loyalists, it looked like Snoop had switched sides entirely.

The most explosive accusations, however, came from Suge Knight himself.

In recent interviews and on his Collect Call podcast, Suge claimed Snoop and Daz Dillinger had worked on a track with DeAndre “Big Dre” Smith — allegedly linked to the car that

carried Pac’s killers.

Suge even alleged that Snoop had bragged about involvement in Pac’s death, with singer Ray J supposedly relaying the claim to him directly.

In February 2025, Suge dropped yet another bomb: Snoop, he claimed, was trying to bail out Keefe D, one of the key suspects in the Tupac murder investigation.

According to Suge, Snoop might be worried about what Keefe D would say if he decided to cooperate with authorities.

Whether these claims hold any truth is another matter.

Snoop has never been charged or officially implicated in Pac’s murder, and much of what Suge says is impossible to verify.

Still, the accusations have fed a decades-long narrative that Snoop’s loyalty to Pac was never absolute — and that self-preservation guided his moves in those volatile years.

For Snoop, the story has always been simpler.

He says he wasn’t interested in the beef, that he respected Biggie and Puff as artists, and that he wanted to keep making music without being pulled deeper into a war he didn’t believe

in.

Snoop Dogg évoque le jour où il fut la cible d'une fusillade à cause d'un  appel de Biggie (video)

“I wasn’t thinking about his emotion,” Snoop once said of Pac’s anger.

“I was thinking about the way I felt at the time.”

To Suge Knight, that mindset was unforgivable.

“If that’s loyalty,” Suge said, “I don’t need that kind of loyalty.”

The truth may lie somewhere in the middle — between Pac’s all-or-nothing approach to loyalty and Snoop’s instinct for survival.

What’s certain is that by the time the plane touched down from New York to L.A.

that September, their friendship was already over.

And within days, Tupac Shakur would be gone forever, leaving behind not just unsolved questions about his murder, but an unhealed wound between two men who once saw each other as brothers.