Close X

Asia

No one is safe from 3Li¥en & ANARCHY on ‘Mooove B*tch’

The Nigerian-Japanese MC teams up with a Rap vet for an unapologetic warning shot

LiFTED | Marcus Aurelius | 14 Jul 2026


Twenty-five years after Ludacris' ‘Move B*tch’ became a Hip Hop anthem, 3Li¥en and ANARCHY put their own spin on the concept with ‘Mooove B*tch.’ While it borrows the confrontational spirit of the original, the pair use it as a declaration that anyone standing in their way should step aside.

Nigerian-Japanese rapper 3Li¥en [pronounced "alien"] comes out swinging. She takes aim at artists she sees as inauthentic, calling out lip-syncing, manufactured personas, and people who believe they can buy their way into Hip Hop culture. Opening with, "Demons out/Good fortune in," she makes it clear she's here to challenge anyone she believes isn't keeping the culture real.

Legendary Japanese MC ANARCHY matches that intensity. His verse criticizes rappers who, in his view, all sound the same and prioritize viral attention over lyrical ability. It's a classic ANARCHY performance as he reinforces the song's central message: move aside or get left behind.

The video's confrontational tone has also sparked discussion online. Some viewers have noted the appearance of a character resembling Japanese rapper Litty, though neither 3Li¥en nor ANARCHY has publicly confirmed that the character is intended to represent any specific artist. The ambiguity only adds to the song's provocative edge.

Check out 3Li¥en and ANARCHY on ‘Mooove B*tch’ below.