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Real Boston Richey Says He's Done With Rap and Choosing the Streets

The Florida rapper took to X to announce he's walking away from music — and reportedly made it crystal clear why.

Real Boston Richey Says He's Done With Rap and Choosing the Streets
Photo: XXL Mag
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The Desk

June 25, 2026 · 2 min read

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Some artists threaten to quit. Real Boston Richey went on X and just... said it.

According to reporting from XXL Mag, the Florida rapper posted a series of messages on Tuesday, June 23, declaring he's done with rap — and that he'd rather be back in the streets doing what he knows. No label drama teased, no album rollout hinted at. Just a man putting his cards on the table in real time.

And honestly? The culture has seen this movie before. But something about the way Boston Richey moved on this feels different from your average "I'm retiring" post that disappears by Friday.

When the Rap Life Stops Feeling Like Real Life

Here's the thing about artists who come from the streets and then make it into rap — the transition isn't always clean. The music industry runs on schedules, label politics, PR strategies, and optics management. That's a hard pivot for someone whose whole identity is built on authenticity and day-one loyalty.

Real Boston Richey built his following on being exactly that — real. His fanbase didn't find him because of a radio push or a cosign from a major. They found him because he sounded like somebody who was actually living what he was rapping about. So when a guy like that says the rap game isn't for him anymore, you have to at least take the statement seriously.

Reports suggest his posts weren't vague or cryptic. He was direct. And in 2025, direct is rare.

What This Means for His Trajectory

Now, whether this sticks is a whole other conversation. The rap retirement announcement has become something of a genre unto itself — artists step away, decompress, and come back recharged. It's practically a rite of passage at this point.

But if Boston Richey is genuinely frustrated with where he's at in his music career, that frustration is worth paying attention to. Independent artists grind differently. They don't always have the infrastructure to match the ambition, and sometimes the gap between the vision and the reality hits like a wall.

We're not here to talk him out of anything — that's not our place. But the talent is undeniable, and the audience he's built is real. Whatever he decides, the streets — literal or figurative — will be watching.

For now, reports suggest he's serious. And we'll give him that respect until he tells us otherwise.

Editor's note: Written in response to reporting by XXL Mag. Read the original at https://www.xxlmag.com/real-boston-richey-quit-rap/

Editor's note

This piece is original commentary from THACLIPPERS. Written in response to coverage by XXL Mag. Read the original report

Updated 4 min ago

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