“Eminem’s Leaked Suge Knight & Ja Rule Diss Track ‘Smack You’ Is the Rawest We’ve Heard in Years”

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“This game gon’ be the death of me… but I’ma expose the truth even if it kills me.”

leaked studio-quality track rumored to be titled “Smack You” just hit the underground rap scene — and it’s pure fire. Allegedly recorded by Eminem during the early-to-mid 2000s but never released, the track sounds like a nuclear diss aimed directly at Suge Knight, Ja Rule, and the entire Murder Inc. movement.

And it’s not just angry. It’s disturbing, deeply personal, and shockingly fearless — even by Eminem’s standards.

Targets: Suge Knight, Ja Rule, Irv Gotti, and Even 50 Cent’s Enemies

In the leaked audio, Em goes on a blistering attack, accusing Suge Knight of being directly responsible for the deaths of Tupac Shakur and The Notorious B.I.G. — a claim that’s floated in hip-hop circles for years, but never said this directly on record.

He raps:

“I’m holdin’ Suge responsible for the death of the two greatest rappers that ever graced the face of this planet.”

And that’s just the start.

He rips Ja Rule for mocking his daughter, Hailie, in the infamous 2002 diss “Loose Change,” turning the tables in the most brutal way possible:

“You already called her a [__]… Now we bring your daughter up?”
“We don’t need to stoop to Ja Rule’s level… but if we did, we’d only be one foot two.”

The bars are dark, heavy, and emotionally charged — showing a protective father ready to burn everything down to defend his daughter’s name.


Inside Eminem’s Mind: Unfiltered and Off the Leash

The flow is classic Slim Shady — manic, biting, and overflowing with venom. He seems furious with the industry, sick of the fake alliances, and determined to air out dirty truths.

“This game’s gonna be the death of me, but I’m gonna expose the truth even if it kills me.”

Eminem also calls out fake gangster rappers, mocking them for copying Pac, selling out to major labels, and desperately clinging to washed-up labels like Death Row and Murder Inc.

“You made a deal with the devil who’s giving you permission / To imitate a legend we all love so much we miss him.”

He even calls out the silence in hip-hop, questioning why nobody speaks on the shady stuff happening behind the scenes:

“We see it but no one says a f**king thing. We pretend it doesn’t exist. But it does.”

This is not Eminem the entertainer. This is Eminem the executioner.


A Lost Diss Track or an Intentional Leak?

There’s still no official confirmation from Eminem’s camp — and that makes it even more intriguing. Some insiders say this track was recorded between 2003–2005, during the peak of the Aftermath vs. Murder Inc. feud. Others believe it was meant for a scrapped diss mixtape that never dropped.

But what’s clear is this:
“Smack You” is one of the hardest, most disrespectful and personal diss tracks Eminem has ever made.

If it had dropped back then, it could’ve sparked an all-out war.


Final Thought

Eminem may have evolved since his early Shady days, but “Smack You” reminds us just how dangerous he was — and still is — when provoked.

This isn’t just rap beef.
This is a lyrical carpet bombing with real-world implications.

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