Kendrick Lamar is rumored to be making his video game debut by collaborating with Fortnite.
According to leaks, a new bundle is on the way for the popular game called âSit Down, Be Humble,â named after the refrain from Kendrickâs 2017 hit âHUMBLE.â
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The bundle will apparently include an emote that is Kendrick themed, as well as one of the rapperâs songs, believed to be âHUMBLE.â
Neither Kendrick nor Fortnite publisher Epic Games have yet commented on the speculation.
KENDRICK LAMAR x FORTNITE EMOTE CONFIRMED đĽ
⢠âSit Down, Be Humbleâ Bundle with an Emote & Song
⢠Emote might be from the girl in âNot Like Usâ (Silhouette Below)
⢠The Song is most likely âHUMBLEâ pic.twitter.com/wu0OR5z7kmâ HYPEX (@HYPEX) March 11, 2025
If Kendrick does collaborate with the game, he would not be the first rapper to do so.
Eminem famously linked up with Fortnite in 2023, allowing players to use skins of the Detroit native inspired by various looks from throughout his career.
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One creative player even used the feature to recreate the iconic rap battle scene from the end of 8 Mile, to the approval of Emâs longtime manager Paul Rosenberg who commented on the viral clip: âI mean⌠wow!â
Travis Scott also put on a virtual concert for Fortnite players back in 2020, during which he premiered his âThe Scottsâ collaboration with Kid Cudi.
Snoop Dogg, Ice Spice and the late Juice WRLD have also appeared as playable characters in Fortnite since the battle royale game launched in 2017.
Meanwhile, a potential Fortnite collaboration isnât the only non-music project that Kendrick Lamar has in the pipelines.
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The Compton rapper is also currently working on his debut movie with South Park creators Matt Parker and Trey Stone, which is set to premiere this summer.
New details about the film recently surfaced, revealing it is called Whitney Springs and will star Chloe East and Celeste Octavia, as well as possibly Kendrick himself.
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According to a synposis, the live-action comedy follows a Black man interning as a slave re-enactor at a history museum who finds out that his white girlfriendâs ancestors once owned his.
Brian Robbins, CEO of Paramount Pictures, which owns the distribution rights to the movie, described it as âone of the funniest and most original scripts weâve ever read and itâs certain to create some fireworksâ at CinemaCon last year.