Westside Gunn has recalled a crazy dream he had that included 2Pac and Biggie crowning him the greatest of all time.

The Griselda founder took to Twitter on Saturday (May 27) to explain his dream, which featured the two late legendary artists and ended in him burying one of Hip Hop’s current stars.

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“B.I.G. And PAC just came to me in my dreams and said ‘SUPER FLYGOD your the [goat emoji] NOW!!!!! and then I dropped one of y’all new fav rappers off the roof,” the Buffalo native wrote.

Of course, he didn’t reveal the identity of the rapper he had a violent encounter with, but that didn’t stop fans from asking Westside Gunn to name names.

“WHICH RAPPER?” one of his followers begged, while another dared him: “I bet you won’t name the rapper.”

In the vein of both 2Pac and Biggie being mentioned in the same conversation, Macadoshis — a member of ‘Pac’s Thug Life crew — recently opened up about ‘Pac wanting Big to join his group.

“We got an opportunity to meet Big,” Macadoshis said in an interview with The Art of Dialogue. “We went tour and we was doing the Thug Life tour. We started out at Jack the Rapper and ‘Pac actually bought Big up to the room.

Westside Gunn Is Retiring From Rap: ‘I Don’t Have Nothing Else 2 Prove’
Westside Gunn Is Retiring From Rap: ‘I Don’t Have Nothing Else 2 Prove’

“We was staying at the Marriott Marquis and Biggie came up to the room and he was hella cool, bro. I remember him being like, real down to Earth. He kicked it with everybody, smoked a blunt with him and we was just chilling with him.”

He went on to explain that this was all happening around the same time Thug Life — which consisted of 2Pac, Big Syke, Mopreme, Stretch, Macadoshis, and The Rated R — were working on their one and only album, 1994’s Thug Life: Volume 1.

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“We was moving forward with the Thug Life album at the same time Big was with Puff. So, it was not a conflict of interest, but I don’t feel like Puff was tryna let Biggie really come over there and do no Thug Life shit at the time while he was working with him,” Macadoshis explained.

“He wanted to be the first to break him and bring him out. He only had ‘Party and Bullshit’ out during that time. So I think that’s what really kinda held it up.”