DDG and Reggie feud escalates from album critique to personal attacks on family during Twitch streams
-Instagram@ddg
A feud between rappers DDG and Reggie (Lil Rodney Son) erupted on Twitch, quickly escalating from music critique to personal attacks. The controversy began when Reggie reacted to a clip of DDG discussing fake support for his latest album. Reggie dismissed the project as “mid,” despite previously praising parts of it.
DDG responded on his own Twitch stream, accusing Reggie of being inconsistent. “You just listened to my old album... and said it was hard,” he said, urging Reggie to “watch full clips” before commenting on his music.
Reggie pushed back, saying he never praised the entire album—just “one or two tracks.” He also criticized DDG for inserting himself into matters unrelated to him. “You're a grown man… why are you even worried about another man’s relationship?” he said, adding, “Sometimes you got to mind your business.”
The tension escalated sharply when Reggie referenced DDG’s son, Halo, during a viral stream, questioning his parenting while participating in Twitch drama. “Where your son at?” Reggie said, accusing DDG of neglecting responsibilities and adding, “You’ll have to live with this for the rest of your life.”
Streaming from Italy, DDG retaliated with a harshly titled broadcast, “REGGIE DAD GONE,” directly referencing Reggie’s late father. “You bring my family into it, I’ll bring yours into it,” he told viewers, saying he’d lost all respect for Reggie.
Lil Rodney Son says DDG was trying to promote his YouTube channel at his brother’s funeral pic.twitter.com/cKiZR5xTJJ
— FearBuck (@FearedBuck) July 3, 2025
Lil Rodney Son reacts to DDG putting his deceased father’s picture as his lock screen and says he won’t diss anyone’s deceased because it’s unnecessary pic.twitter.com/KCUxxs3xzK
Despite his anger, Reggie said he wouldn’t stoop to dissing the dead, urging viewers to “protect your peace.” He criticized DDG for using his father's image as a Twitch backdrop, calling it “lame” and “unnecessary.”
What began as music criticism has turned into a viral dispute touching on family, grief, and the limits of online behavior.