Entertainment
PlaqueBoyMax Revives Viral Song Wars Competition for Underground Rappers
Viral Twitch streamer and artist PlaqueBoyMax has restarted his notorious “Song Wars” competition after leaving it dormant for nearly a year. Earlier Song Wars runs in 2024 and 2025 helped establish the series as a regular stop for underground rappers looking to test unreleased tracks on stream. The new “Rising Stars Edition” of the series has artists play their unreleased music for a panel of judges. The first iteration was certainly a memorable one. The contest, where artists tried to impress a small room of judges and gain new listeners has contestants joining a video call live while their track is played and scored zero to ten. Notably, contest and previous “In The Booth” guest 2Slimey left the show early after a poor response to his music. Here’s how the stream went down, and what’s next for Max in 2026.
Over the past year Max shifted some of his focus away from streaming and toward his own music career. He still streams regularly, and has many brand partnerships, including recent streams with Nike in London for example. But Max has also jump-started his own music career. In May 2025, he formally announced a joint deal with DJ Zack Bia’s Field Trip Recordings and Capitol Records and began focusing on touring and promotion. Max also recieved praise by probably being the first Twitch streamer to be nominated for a Grammy. He was nominated for Best Dance/Electronic Recording for his production on the song “Victory Lap”, a collaboration with Fred again.. and Skepta. Max spoke about the nomination on stream and in interviews, describing how he first heard the news while he was live and then watched the clip circulate across social media In mid-March, Max announced that Rising Stars Song Wars would return with updated rules.
In the Rising Stars stream, which aired three days ago on March 15th, Max tells viewers he invited thirteen artists and that each one will play one song while judges score from zero to ten in a single night competition. He also says he intends to repost the records on his own channels, through playlists and SoundCloud uploads, so the songs keep moving after the stream ends. With a focus mainly on the underground, the Rising Stars lineup included BabyChiefdoit, BabyFace E, 1300Saint, Teezus, Slayr, alongside lesser known artists like Bleood, Chucky, Sk8star and 2Slimey. The judging panel gave this competition more reach than a typical Twitch stream. Multi-platinum producer Southside, DJ Akademiks, BruceDropEmOff and ImDontai all joined Max on the panel. The show aired live on PlaqueBoyMax’s Twitch channel and later appeared in full on YouTube, allowing viewers to watch the entire competition after the stream ended.
Most coverage after the stream focused on 2Slimey’s appearance and exit. Known for his auto-tuned, heavily distorted music, the Oklahoma-based rapper was polarizing for the panel. During Rising Stars, he played his track “New Swag,”. Almost the entire panel gave him zero out of ten, with Akademiks as the only judge willing to go as high as five. 2Slimey then left the call after hearing the mostly negative feedback. Reaction content framed that moment as the main story from the stream, replaying and commenting on 2Slimey’s segment, although Chicago rapper Lil Noonie also received low scores from some of the judges. Several creators uploaded dedicated reaction videos to the Rising Stars stream, focusing on the judges’ scores for 2Slimey and replaying the moment he left the call. Slayr, from Philadelphia, won the competition and received praise and positive feedback from the judges.
Song Wars now operates at a different scale than it did when it first helped build Max’s profile. He comes into this version as a working rapper with label support and streaming numbers, not just as a Twitch host sorting through submissions. Artists still show up because the room can move them into playlists, social posts and writeups that would take longer to reach on their own. Outlets such as The Fader and NPR have since profiled Max’s streams and competitions, treating Song Wars and In The Booth as central to his rise from Twitch into wider hip‑hop coverage. The Rising Stars competition shows that this mix of risk and opportunity remains in place, and it shows that Max still wants one strong song, played once in front of the right crowd, to matter.