Young Thug opened up about the feud between Drake, Metro Boomin, and Future during a September 30 appearance on Adin Ross’ livestream.
Asked by a fan to “bring Drake and Future back together again,” the Atlanta rapper admitted he has been working behind the scenes to repair the relationship between the two chart-topping stars. Young Thug wants the reunion to happen just as much as the fans.
“I gotta bring Drake and Future back? Listen, I’m trying,” Thug responded. “I can show y’all text messages in my phone. I’ve been trying this shit. For sure. I was trying to [do this] in jail.”
The comments marked a rare acknowledgment from Thug about the fallout between the OVO and Freebandz leaders. He recalled attempting to reconcile the two while incarcerated from 2022 to 2024, noting that his efforts even extended into his songwriting.
Can Young Thug Make A Drake/Future/Metro Boomin Reunion Happen?
“The shit I said in this song, ‘I’ve [been] trying to get him [Drake], Metro, and Pluto on the same page,’ it actually happened,” he said. “That ain’t no cap. That’s really happened. A lot. I just try to make it work, you know? ’Cause I know, like, shit. All y’all biggest hits… Well, some of y’all biggest hits, are together, you know?”
His remarks highlight the cultural weight of Drake and Future’s collaborations. From their 2015 joint project What a Time to Be Alive to blockbuster singles like “Jumpman” and “Life Is Good,” their chemistry has defined an era of rap dominance. Both artists have remained prolific individually, but their absence as a duo has not gone unnoticed among fans who see their partnership as essential to hip-hop’s modern canon.
By positioning himself as both mediator and fan, Thug acknowledged the broader significance of their alliance beyond personal friendship. His plea displayed how much the pair’s joint catalog continues to resonate. Their reunion could reshape the landscape once again.
Though Thug did not disclose the source of the tension between Drake and Future, his admission confirms that multiple attempts have been made to bridge the gap. For him, bringing the two back together is less about orchestrating a collaboration than about restoring a creative dynamic that produced some of rap’s most indelible anthems.


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