Lil Tjay Drops Big One Edition With Real Boston Richey Diss
lil tjay has released Big One Edition, the deluxe version of his fourth studio album They Just Ain’t You, and the move adds a new diss track aimed at Real Boston Richey. The track, “Go Tati,” pushes an already public dispute back into view with direct bars tied to Tatiana Chanell’s allegations.
Go Tati on Big One Edition
Big One Edition includes one new song, “Go Tati,” and the song makes its target plain. Lil Tjay rapped, “She said she don't want no rat no more, shawty want a goon / On the 'Gram tellin' your business like he tellin' in that room,” turning the release into a direct shot at Richey’s public image.
He followed that with, “What you say? Go Tati, do your big one / Know you want a Richie, he keep playin', you gon' get one.” The track does not hide its target in metaphor; it names the feud and adds another commercial asset to the deluxe package.
Tatiana Chanell’s Posts
65 images sat at the center of Chanell’s recent posts on X, where she accused Real Boston Richey of abuse and said she would release the pictures in her possession. She also wrote, “All different days btw.”
Three images and a video showing damage to her eye appeared alongside her allegations that she was kidnapped and kept naked in a van with men for an eight-hour drive from Orlando to Alabama. That detail gives “Go Tati” more than feud energy; it ties the song to a separate, already-moving accusation stream that has put Richey under public scrutiny.
What Lil Tjay Added
Lil Tjay did not stop at one line aimed at Richey. He also rapped, “None these goofies gettin' saved, who allowed these boys to rap?” and “I could tell how he stay postin' 20s, he got baby racks.”
The result is a deluxe release built around conflict, not just extra tracks. For listeners, Big One Edition now carries a new diss record that extends the conversation around Richey and Chanell rather than leaving the album as a routine repackaging. That is the commercial move here: one more song, but also one more public reason for the feud to keep circulating.
The sharpest read is simple: if Lil Tjay wanted Big One Edition to feel like more than a standard deluxe drop, “Go Tati” does the job by making the album part of an active rap dispute.