Rooga Drops “Fed Up,” Takes Aim at Fivio Foreign in New Video

Rooga Drops “Fed Up,” Takes Aim at Fivio Foreign in New Video

Chicago rapper Rooga has officially entered diss-track territory with the release of his new song and video, “Fed Up,” a record widely viewed as a direct shot at Fivio Foreign and several other names tied to ongoing rap tensions.

The video for “Fed Up” surfaced online this week and immediately caught traction across social media and YouTube, with fans dissecting lyrics and debating who exactly Rooga is addressing.

While Rooga doesn’t rely heavily on subliminals, his bars make it clear that the track is fueled by frustration, industry politics, and long-simmering street and rap conflicts.

Over a dark, menacing beat, Rooga delivers aggressive verses packed with pointed lines and a confrontational tone that matches the title of the song. The visual keeps things raw and stripped down, leaning into realism rather than flashy production—an approach that mirrors the directness of the message itself.

Fivio Foreign, a Brooklyn rapper who rose to mainstream fame through his association with Pop Smoke and later Kanye West, has not publicly responded to the track as of this writing. However, fans online were quick to connect Rooga’s lyrics to previous comments, affiliations, and rumored behind-the-scenes issues involving both artists.

“Fed Up” also continues Rooga’s reputation for speaking openly about betrayal, loyalty, and the pressures that come with navigating both street life and the music industry. 

The release has already sparked reaction videos, breakdowns, and debates across hip-hop platforms, with many listeners applauding Rooga’s intensity while others speculate whether the track could escalate into a broader rap back-and-forth.

Diss records have long been a staple of hip-hop culture, and “Fed Up” fits squarely within that tradition—serving both as a warning shot and a personal statement. Whether Fivio Foreign chooses to respond or not, the song has undeniably added a new chapter to the ongoing tension between regional rap scenes and competing camps.

For now, Rooga has made one thing clear: he’s fed up—and he’s not holding back.