600 Breezy is back in the headlines — and this time, he’s making bold claims about the viral rap battle between Kendrick Lamar and Drake. According to the Chicago rapper, bots were used to inflate Kendrick’s numbers during their epic lyrical war.
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“I know the bot sh⁰t is real because I left a comment on Drake’s page, and I had thousands of Kendrick bots on my page for weeks,” Breezy said. “They’re not real people. Who do you know that dropped a song and got 50 million views in 10 minutes Nobody.”
That comment has reignited a debate many thought had died down.
Did Kendrick Really Use Bots?
Let’s break it down.
Kendrick’s diss tracks — especially “Not Like Us” — went crazy viral. The music video alone reportedly hit tens of millions of views within hours of release. Critics and fans credited the numbers to Kendrick’s massive global support and the raw energy of his delivery.
But Breezy insists the numbers were unnatural and bot-boosted. He claims he witnessed a wave of bot accounts flooding his own page after siding with Drake.
What Does Spotify Say?
Spotify officially denied any bot usage when the topic first came up. The streaming giant said Kendrick’s streams came from real users, and no suspicious patterns were detected. That should’ve settled things — but some fans still aren’t convinced.
Why Are We Back to the Bot Theory?
First, it was “Kendrick only won because of bots.”
Then, when that fizzled out, some fans said Kendrick’s win was because of that now-famous “Certified Lover Boy turned Certified PDF” line — a dig at Drake’s alleged legal issues.
Now, the bot theory is trending again, thanks to Breezy’s latest comments.
What Should We Believe?

Here’s the truth:
Kendrick’s win in public opinion was more than just numbers — it was narrative, momentum, and timing. His disses were sharper, more personal, and backed by a wave of public support. Even if bots were involved (which isn’t confirmed), they couldn’t have created the impact Kendrick had on the culture.
Real Talk: Could Bots Boost Numbers?
Yes — in theory. Bot farms can be used to:
Inflate streams or views Boost social media comments Create the illusion of popularity
But platforms like Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube have strong detection systems, and it’s hard to fake organic virality the way Kendrick achieved it.
