The audio alone was enough to send the internet into a frenzy. Now, 50 Cent and Max B have delivered the full visual treatment, and the streets are paying attention all over again. The official music video for No More Tricks, No More Tries dropped on March 11, 2026 — just days after the track itself made waves as one of the most talked-about hip-hop releases of the week.
50 Cent Returns to the Booth With a Purpose
The Queens rapper and G-Unit mogul has spent much of the past decade building his Power television empire, but this week served as a sharp reminder that the mic never left his hand. The collaboration with Max B is the second release 50 dropped in a matter of days, arriving alongside No One Told Us What We’re Here For, a Leon Thomas-assisted theme song for the upcoming Power— Origins show.
What makes No More Tricks, No More Tries stand out is the energy behind it. The track was not born out of a routine creative session. It emerged in the middle of a simmering feud with Atlanta rapper T.I. — and the record carries every bit of that tension. 50 took over hook duties and delivered a verse that targets informants, criticizes those moving recklessly, and lands threats with the composed confidence that has always defined his style. The outro, where 50 reportedly laughs through the final bars, signals just how unbothered he is by the back-and-forth.
Max B Brings the Wave God Energy
Max B, known as the Wave God, is no stranger to commanding a record. His contribution to No More Tricks, No More Tries is rooted in his signature carefree charisma — melodic, braggadocious, and built to stick. The track is a remix of No More Tricks from his 2025 project Public Domain 7— The Purge, with 50 stepping in to reshape and sharpen it into something that feels entirely new.
The production matches the mood. Dark synth layers, steady drum patterns, and deep basslines build a tense, atmospheric soundscape that gives both artists room to operate. The result is a street-focused collaboration that earns its replay value not through gimmicks but through sheer conviction.
From Audio to Visual — Why the Video Matters
When the audio version surfaced on March 7, it racked up over 308,000 views on YouTube almost immediately. The track spread fast — partly because of its musical quality and partly because of the context surrounding it. Fans who had been watching the 50 Cent and T.I. situation unfold in real time understood exactly what they were hearing.
The arrival of the official music video elevates the record further. Visuals give a track permanence. They turn a song into a moment, and for a release this charged with subtext and street credibility, the video was always the missing piece. Now it is here, and the conversation is only getting louder across hip-hop circles, social media timelines, and fan communities that closely follow every development.
A Feud That Is Still Very Much Alive
The beef between 50 Cent and T.I. has been building steadily, and this week 50 made clear he had no intention of staying quiet. Between the Power— Origins theme and this Max B collaboration, he delivered two distinct responses in one week — each landing differently but both sending the same message.
T.I. had been vocal for days, and 50 finally answered with more than anyone anticipated. Whether the feud continues to escalate or cools off from here, No More Tricks, No More Tries has already secured its place as one of the defining hip-hop drops of early 2026.

