KC Rebell responds to PA Sports’ deleted diss track for the first time. Fans are now hoping for a reconciliation.

The diss track “Guilty 400” marked the climax of the conflict between KC Rebell and PA Sports in 2018. In 17 minutes, the then 28-year-old rapper PA Sports, real name Parham Vakili, reflected on his career so far and apologized to his former rivals Massiv and arrest warrant for his hostility. At the same time, he made serious allegations against his former childhood friend Hüseyin Kökseçen, alias KC Rebell.

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The statement “KC Rebell was the biggest mistake of my life” was followed by a series of accusations: KC Rebell, three years older than him, had taken advantage of PA Sports’ ignorance and success to get ahead in the rap business. “I opened every door that was closed for you” and “From day one you were gripped by envy,” the song says. These allegations sealed the break between the two childhood friends in 2018. Is reconciliation now near?

PA Sports deletes the diss track

In early 2025, PA Sports removed the diss track from its channels during the month of Ramadan. The song is still circulating on YouTube, but no longer on the rapper’s account. He didn’t make a big deal about it and there was no official statement. Only in a stream with Saad did he mention that the track was now offline and that there was no longer any hostility between him and KC Rebell. What does that mean exactly?

KC Rebell is conciliatory

In an interview with “Deutschrap ideal”, KC Rebell reported that he became aware of the removal of the song through the streamer Ghazi47. He received this gesture positively. He was fundamentally open to reconciliation, but emphasized that more was needed. “There’s no point in taking this diss offline,” said the musician. A detailed conversation would be the next step in the right direction for him. “The situation to speak has not yet arisen, perhaps it will arise in the future.” What happens next remains unclear at the moment. Fans have been hoping for a peace deal for years. “Finally get along, you are brothers,” says one user on TikTok, for example.

Rivalry as part of rap culture

Conflicts like the one between PA Sports and KC Rebell are not uncommon in rap, but are part of the scene. They reflect rivalry, ego and authenticity – central elements of hip hop culture. More recently, the exchange of blows between Nura and Schwesta Ewa on TikTok made headlines. Such disputes show how thin the line is between artistic competition and personal strife. It seems all the more remarkable when long-standing rivals like PA Sports and KC Rebell cautiously approach each other again.

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