L-Tido Predicts Maggz Will Have The Best Verse On The Upcoming Stogie T Song With A-Reece & Nasty C
L-Tido Predicts Maggz Will Have The Best Verse On The Upcoming Stogie T Song With A-Reece & Nasty C. L-Tido is stirring up conversation in South African hip hop after boldly predicting that Maggz will deliver the best verse on Stogie T’s upcoming track featuring A-Reece and Nasty C.

The collaboration, already a headline-maker for uniting two rappers often seen as rivals, has become an even bigger talking point thanks to L-Tido’s fiery remarks and his defence of Maggz’s lyrical prowess.
“There’s a new song that’s dropping. Stogie T featuring A-Reece, Nasty C and Maggz,” L-Tido said.
“This is the first time A-Reece and Nasty C get on a record together because they are obviously supposed to be some ops, and now it is the first time they are getting on a record together, and this is a Stogie T song. You get casual hip hop listeners because you cannot be a hip hop fan and have that type of opinion. You have casual hip hop listeners saying, ‘hey, we don’t want Maggz on that song, we want A-Reece and Nasty C.'”
L-Tido voiced his frustration over the disrespect directed at Maggz, noting that many people speak without fully understanding South African hip hop and its key players. Despite the criticism aimed at Maggz, L-Tido confidently made a bold prediction, telling Mzansi that Maggz will deliver the best verse on the upcoming track, even alongside the impressive lyrical talents of Nasty C, A-Reece, and Stogie T.
“I got so pissed off seeing that because what has happened right now in Hip hop is we have a lot of people that just don’t do the knowledge, that are not students of the game, that are just casual fans for the sake of like, ‘oh this one is the most popular.’ I’m telling you guys now, before the song drops, Maggz is gonna have the best verse on that song. I’m saying it. This is L-Tido, I’m speaking for myself.”
L-Tido’s remarks do several things at once. They shine a spotlight on the historical weight of the pairing, defend the place of veteran lyricism in modern hip-hop, and frame the upcoming release as more than a popularity contest. By calling out what he sees as casual fandom, L-Tido is asking listeners to pay attention to craft, context and the subtle work that goes into a great verse.
Why the lineup matters is easy to explain. A-Reece and Nasty C together is a rare moment, given the narratives and rivalries that have swirled around parts of the scene. Stogie T, known for curating songs that balance message and lyricism, has handed the mic to three voices that each bring something different.
Above all, if Maggz delivers the verse L-Tido promises, the ripple effects could be notable. Casual fans might revisit older catalogues, critics will dissect bar-for-bar moments, and the narrative around what success looks like in SA hip hop might tilt, even briefly, from numbers to nuance. Conversely, if A-Reece or Nasty C dominate the conversation, the track will still stand as a landmark simply for assembling such notable artists.




