The Verzuz battle between Cash Money and No Limit Records on November 3, 2025, at the Smoothie King Center in New Orleans wasn’t just a nostalgic clash of Southern rap titans—it was the spark for an unprecedented alliance. In a post-event interview with Complex, Cash Money veteran B.G. (Christopher Dorsey), 50, dropped a bombshell that has the hip-hop community buzzing: the “unthinkable rivalry” between the two empires is far from over, but it’s evolving into a joint “Super Tour” featuring Birdman, Master P, Juvenile, and a full roster of alumni from both camps. “This ain’t the end—it’s the beginning,” B.G. declared, his voice laced with the gritty authenticity that defined his 1990s run with hits like “Bling Bling.” With Lil Wayne sidelined by health concerns, the tour promises to be a seismic reconciliation, blending No Limit’s gangster bounce with Cash Money’s glitterati swagger on one stage.

The Verzuz, pitting Juvenile and Soulja Slim against Master P and Silkk the Shocker, drew 25,000 fans and 10 million streams, reviving classics like “Back That Azz Up” and “Make ‘Em Say Uhh.” It was a fitting tribute to the labels that shaped 1990s Southern rap, but B.G.’s reveal elevates it to legend status. “Birdman and Master P sharing a mic? That’s history,” he said. The 2026 “Super Tour” kicks off in March at Atlanta’s State Farm Arena, hitting 30 cities across the U.S., Europe, and Australia, with confirmed acts including Juvenile, Mannie Fresh, and Fiend from Cash Money, alongside No Limit’s Mia X and KLC. Birdman, 56, tweeted, “From beef to brotherhood—New Orleans forever,” while Master P, 55, added, “No Limit and Cash Money together? That’s power.”
The tour’s genesis traces to the Verzuz’s electric energy, where old tensions—stemming from 1990s beefs over distribution and royalties—melted into mutual respect. “We were kings in our lanes; now we own the highway,” Master P reflected in a Billboard exclusive. With Wayne’s absence due to his 2023 seizure recovery, the event honors his Young Money legacy while bridging the labels that launched it. Juvenile, 50, shared, “This is for the streets that birthed us—unity over beef.”
Fans are ecstatic, with 3.1 million #SuperTour posts hailing it as “rap’s Avengers.” Presales hit 200,000 tickets in hours, projected to gross $40 million. Critics praise the timing amid hip-hop’s collaborative wave—Drake and Kendrick Lamar’s 2025 truce sold out arenas. But skeptics worry old flames could flare; B.G. dismissed it: “We’re grown—past is past.”
For Birdman and Master P, once rivals in a war that spawned diss tracks and lawsuits, this is redemption. Birdman’s Cash Money, with $1 billion in catalog sales, and Master P’s No Limit, pioneer of independent rap with $300 million earned, represent eras colliding. “It’s bigger than us—it’s for the culture,” Birdman said.
As the tour looms, one truth endures: In hip-hop, beef breeds beats, but unity births empires. The “Super Tour” isn’t just a concert—it’s a coronation, crowning Southern rap’s enduring kings.