Make America Slime Again Tour

2025 concert tour by YoungBoy Never Broke Again From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Make America Slime Again Tour (abbreviated as MASA Tour[1]) was the fourth concert tour by American rapper YoungBoy Never Broke Again, in support of his eighth studio album, MASA (2025).[2][3] The tour commenced on September 1, 2025, in Dallas, Texas, and concluded on November 12, 2025, in Seattle, Washington, consisting of 42 shows.[4] The tour is Gaulden's first in five years since his Still Flexin, Still Steppin Tour in 2020.[5][6][7] With a gross of over $69,820,786 based on 42 shows, the Make America Slime Again Tour is the tenth-highest-grossing tour by a rapper or hip hop artist in history.[8]

LocationUnited States
Associated albumsMASA
Start dateSeptember 1, 2025
End dateNovember 12, 2025
Quick facts Location, Associated albums ...
Make America Slime Again Tour
Tour by YoungBoy Never Broke Again
LocationUnited States
Associated albumsMASA
Start dateSeptember 1, 2025
End dateNovember 12, 2025
Legs1
No. of shows42
Supporting acts
Attendance553,565 (42 shows)
Box office$69,820,786 (42 shows)
YoungBoy Never Broke Again concert chronology
  • Still Flexin, Still Steppin Tour
    (2020)
  • Make America Slime Again Tour
    (2025)
Close

Originally a 27-date-long arena tour,[3] the tour was given new dates on several occasions due to increasingly high demand following its pre-sale, leading to an additional 18 dates being added to the tour: 5 in May,[9] and 13 in June.[10] Gaulden's set includes songs from different eras of his career; despite the tour supporting MASA, few songs are played from the album. The tour's supporting acts are DeeBaby, K3, Lil Dump, NoCap, Offset, and Toosii, with NoCap and Toosii switching for certain dates. Kevin Gates, Sexyy Red, Boosie Badazz, Yeat, Birdman, BossMan Dlow, Shy Glizzy, Skrilla, DJ Khaled, Hunxho, and several other rappers appeared as guest performers throughout the tour.[11] Teyana Taylor helped coordinate the creative photography and production direction for the tour.[12][13]

Background

On September 2, 2022, Gaulden's manager, Alex Junier, confirmed that he would embark on a 30-stop tour upon his release from house arrest with Never Broke Again signee, Quando Rondo.[14] Junier later revealed that Chicago would be the first stop on the tour, seemingly a dig at Chicago-based rapper, Lil Durk who Gaulden was in a publicized feud with, at the time.[15] However, on November 23, Gaulden took to his Instagram to denounce the tour, stating that he turned down a tour deal worth over $15 million: "Every $15 million tour come my way getting turned down. I don't wanna do another show. I don't want nothing but a bigger house. It gave me time for myself. My daughter know who I am – I know who I am".[16]

After years of being under house arrest, Gaulden was officially released on probation in April 2025.[17] Upon his release, on May 3, Gaulden released the tracks "Where I Been" and "Shot Callin" before his associate, Kyle "Montana" Claiborne revealed that he's working on an album and a tour.[18] On May 15, Gaulden and his Never Broke Again label announced the tour and its dates in a promotional trailer, revealing that tickets would be up for sale on May 20.[19]

Following the tour's pre-sale on May 15, resulting in several dates completely selling out, an additional five dates were added to the tour.[9] On May 18, EBK Jaaybo, a supporting act on the tour was arrested by Arkansas State Police for felony firearm charges. This resulted in rumors that he had been removed from the tour, which were later deemed false.[20]

On May 29, 2025, Gaulden was granted a presidential pardon by Donald Trump, permitting him to not have to submit to his previous probation restrictions.[21] Days later, on June 2, Gaulden and his team took to Instagram to announce an additional 13 dates due to high demand.[10]

On June 16, Gaulden took to his Instagram to announce that his album would drop on July 4, the day of independence for the United States, seemingly matching the name of his tour, which refers to Make America Great Again.[22]

Ahead of the first date of Gaulden's Make America Slime Again Tour in Dallas, Texas, he donated $50,000 to two non-profit charities, Manifest Freedom and Urban Specialists. Gaulden appeared on WFAA news and said: "You know, a lot of people be getting hurt, so it ain't really cool at this point to me, [...] I just want to help in any way I can".[23][24][25]

Concert synopsis

The Make America Slime Again Tour concerts are divided into three acts. They are often performed without guest appearances; however, there are exceptions on certain dates, during which Gaulden may choose to bring out a guest performer, for example, during the tour's first night, Kevin Gates joined Gaulden to perform their song, "TTG".[26]

Gaulden's sets were often lit with a gloomy, dark green color.[27] The choreography, directed by Teyana Taylor's The Aunties Production,[28] featured numerous women dressed in "military colors", as was Gaulden who adopted a mix of a hip-hop and rock fashion style.[27] Gaulden's outfits often incorporate leather jackets, wallet chains, large boots, gloves, and bedazzled belts.[27]

The stage screen often played videos of a cemetery with tombstones in the background, with hallucinations of ghosts rising above several Crucifixes, giving a spooky aesthetic.[26] The stage set-up included a model house with American flags, in reference to the cover art of his album, MASA.[26] The shows opened with the first verse from "MASA". Gaulden made his stage entrance through a coffin descending from above with Gaulden inside, with "his hands draped over his chest like a Chrome Hearts Dracula". As the coffin descended, "a line of dancers in American flag bandanas and fatigue skirts" shot fake rifles at a coffin descending from above with Gaulden inside.[26]

On several occasions, the model house on the stage would break in half with the roof lifting off so that Gaulden could "start aggressively rapping, standing supreme while the house crumbles around him", which critics would compare to the 2025 horror, Sinners.[27] Thousands of people at the shows were equipped with green bandanas, which were being sold by vendors outside the arenas for $7 each, with critics noting that the shows resemble a "2000s video game set in the Florida Keys swamp".[27] Critics also pointed out the "pungent" smell of cannabis in the arena, despite it being prohibetted.[27]

Critical reception

The tour received highly positive reviews from critics, who praised Gaulden's performance.

Reviewing the tour's fourth night in Houston, Texas, DeVaughn Douglas for the Houston Press wrote that "the stage show itself also reflected [Gaulden's] growth" and that "what once was a no-frills display of raw mixtape energy has evolved into a full-scale production", praising the tour's production.[29] He continued, writing that "the show underscored how far YoungBoy has come as a performer" and that Gaulden balances "raw energy" with "production designed for arenas".[29] Reviewing the same night in Houston, Shawn Grant for The Source wrote that "everything about the show was turned up" and that "the bass was so heavy you could feel it in your chest", continuing that "the lights and visuals kept shifting with every beat, and YoungBoy's dancers and team made sure the momentum never dipped".[30] Grant concluded, writing that "this wasn't just a rap concert. It was a generational moment".[30] In a review of the tour seventh night in Oakland, California, Riff Magazine's AJ Tinio wrote that Gaulden "delivered a theatrical, tightly focused set that leaned heavily into the tour's green theme".[31]

In a review of the tour's seventeenth night in Newark, New Jersey, Jayson Buford of Rolling Stone begun his review, noting that the number of songs Gaulden performed was almost "overwhelming" and that despite the potential of "a sensory overload", you will never be bored by Gaulden's "compulsion, appetites, or his enduring melancholy that exist in the fog of the music, even when he is being violent, even when he is an egotistical maximalist".[27] Commenting on the stage design, Buford wrote that "compared to other rap tours, YoungBoy's stage design was more catered to the contemporary rap fan than to an elitist crowd", describing the concert as "a carnival of distrust".[27] In another positive review of the tour's seventeenth night in Newark, New Jersey, The Fader's Dylan Green wrote that "the crowd's energy rarely faltered throughout the night" and that Gaulden "approached the show with a quiet magnetism".[26] Green Continued writing that "every ballad [became] the largest karaoke session in Newark".[26] Green concluded his review noting that, "the bleeding heart at the center of his music rang even louder than the cries of the adoring arena".[26]

Commercial performance

After the final show, the rapper was declared the first artist from Baton Rouge to sell out more than 40 arenas on a single tour, with 42 shows in total.[32] Reportedly, the tour made $75 million in total revenue with 500,000 tickets sold and every show sold out.[33]

Set list

This set list is representative of the show in Dallas, Texas, on September 1, 2025.[34] It does not represent all of the concerts for the duration of the tour.[35]

  1. "MASA"
  2. "Dangerous Love"
  3. "Kacey Talk"
  4. "Lil Top"
  5. "I Came Thru"
  6. "Right Foot Creep"
  7. "Bitch Let's Do It" (Interlude)
  8. "No Smoke"
  9. "Sexin Me"
  10. "Kick Yo Door"
  11. "I Got the Bag”
  12. "Wagwan"
  13. "Bad Morning"
  14. "Bad Bad" (Interlude)
  15. "Gravity"
  16. "TTG"
  17. "I Got that Shit"
  18. "Ranada"
  19. "Nevada"
  20. "Untouchable"
  21. "Games of War"
  22. "Smoke Strong"
  23. "Never Stopping"
  24. "Where I Been"
  25. "Finest"
  26. "Shot Callin"
  27. "Survivor" (Interlude)
  28. "Slime Belief"
  29. "Fresh Prince of Utah"
  30. "Valuable Pain"
  31. "Death Enclaimed"
  32. "Life Support"
  33. "All In"
  34. "Heart & Soul" (Interlude)
  35. "XXX"
  36. "Vette Motors"
  37. "Bring 'Em Out"
  38. "Outside Today"
  39. "Top Tingz”
  40. "The Last Backyard..."
  41. "Next"
  42. "Black Ball"
  43. "Kickboxer"
  44. "How I Been"
  45. "Chopper City"
  46. "Dead Trollz"
  47. "Lonely Child"
  48. "I Hate YoungBoy" (Outro)

Notes

  • During the September 1 show in Dallas, Kevin Gates joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Power" and "TTG".[34]
  • During the September 6 show in Houston, OTB Fastlane joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Look Like Money" and Crank".[29]
  • During the September 10 show in Los Angeles, Sexyy Red joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Pound Town" and "Bow Bow Bow (F My Baby Dad)".
  • On the September 13 show in Sacramento, Gaulden performed "Red Eye", "Ten Talk", "Murder Business", and "Hot Now".
  • During the October 1 show in Washington, D.C., Boosie Badazz and Shy Glizzy joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Set It Off" and "White Girl".
  • During the October 3 show in Philadelphia, Skrilla joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Doot Doot (6 7)".
  • Starting with the October 9 show in Columbia, "Bring the Hook", "Green Dot", "We Poppin", "Deep Down", "Put It on Me", "Bandit", "What You Is", and "You the One", were added to the setlist; Birdman joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "We Poppin".
  • During the October 11 show in Orlando, Gaulden also performed "House Arrest Tingz" and "Make No Sense"; Birdman joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "100 Rounds".
  • During the October 13 show in Miami, BossMan Dlow joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Get in with Me" and DJ Khaled made an on-stage appearance.
  • During the October 15 show in Atlanta, Pluto and YK Niece joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Whim Whamiee", Hunxho joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Highly Performing"; Boosie joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Set It Off"; and Birdman and Herm tha Blacksheep joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Fuck That Nigga".
  • During the October 19 show in New Orleans, Sexyy Red joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Bow Bow Bow (F My Baby Dad)" and Birdman and Herm tha Blacksheep joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Fuck That Nigga".
  • During the October 20 show in New Orleans, Gaulden also performed "Carter Son", "Gunsmoke", "No. 9", "38 Baby", and "Purge Me".
  • During the October 30 show in Dallas, Big Yavo joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "No Pen" and "Webbie Flow".
  • During the November 9 show in Dallas, Yeat joined Gaulden on-stage to perform "Flawless", "Come n Go", and "IDGAF".

Shows

More information Date, City ...
Date City Country Venue Opening act(s) Attendance Revenue
September 1, 2025 Dallas United States American Airlines Center K3, Lil Dump, Dee Baby, Toosii, Offset 29,691 / 29,691 (100%) $3,914,926
September 2, 2025
September 5, 2025 Austin Moody Center 12,631 / 12,631 (100%) $1,733,725
September 6, 2025 Houston Toyota Center 12,971 / 12,971 (100%)[29] $1,854,072
September 9, 2025 Los Angeles Crypto.com Arena 27,798 / 27,798 (100%) $3,809,244
September 10, 2025
September 12, 2025 Oakland Oakland Arena 12,893 / 12,893 (100%) $1,317,547
September 13, 2025 Sacramento Golden 1 Center 13,683 / 13,683 (100%) $1,476,648
September 15, 2025 Phoenix PHX Arena 13,219 / 13,219 (100%) $1,442,177
September 17, 2025 Denver Ball Arena 13,428 / 13,428 (100%) $1,559,327
September 20, 2025 St. Louis Enterprise Center 13,174 / 13,174 (100%) $1,598,327
September 21, 2025 Kansas City T-Mobile Center 13,386 / 13,386 (100%) $1,415,408
September 22, 2025 Minneapolis Target Center 13,208 / 13,208 (100%) $993,136
September 25, 2025 Columbus Nationwide Arena 14,241 / 14,241 (100%) $1,841,339
September 27, 2025 Brooklyn Barclays Center 13,569 / 13,569 (100%) $1,998,945
September 28, 2025 Boston TD Garden 13,386 / 13,386 (100%) $1,761,070
September 29, 2025 Newark Prudential Center 12,847 / 12,847 (100%) $1,547,872
October 1, 2025 Washington, D.C. Capital One Arena 13/310 / 13,310 (100%) $2,193,460
October 3, 2025 Philadelphia Xfinity Mobile Arena 13,937 / 13,937 (100%) $2,372,938
October 4, 2025 Baltimore CFG Bank Arena 12,701 / 12,701 (100%) $1,878,344
October 8, 2025 Columbia Colonial Life Arena 24,991 / 24,991 (100%) $3,384,859
October 9, 2025
October 10, 2025 Jacksonville VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena 12,390 / 12,390 (100%) $1,491,034
October 11, 2025 Orlando Kia Center 13,487 / 13,487 (100%) $2,102,089
October 13, 2025 Miami Kaseya Center K3, Lil Dump, Dee Baby, NoCap, Offset 13,166 / 13,166 (100%) $1,291,977
October 15, 2025 Atlanta State Farm Arena K3, Lil Dump, Dee Baby, Toosii, Offset 13,286 / 13,286 (100%) $2,051,727
October 16, 2025 Nashville Bridgestone Arena K3, Lil Dump, Dee Baby, NoCap, Offset 13,395 / 13,395 (100%) $1,497,189
October 19, 2025 New Orleans Smoothie King Center 27,306 / 27,306 (100%) $4,051,408
October 20, 2025
October 22, 2025[a] Birmingham Legacy Arena 12,237 / 12,237 (100%) $1,437,744
October 24, 2025 Raleigh Lenovo Center K3, Lil Dump, Dee Baby, Toosii, Offset 13,307 / 13,307 (100%) $1,521,272
October 26, 2025 Charlotte Spectrum Center K3, Lil Dump, Dee Baby, NoCap, Offset 13,225 / 13,225 (100%) $1,457,749
October 28, 2025 Houston Toyota Center 13,271 / 13,271 (100%) $1,115,207
October 29, 2025 San Antonio Frost Bank Center 13,339 / 13,339 (100%) $1,543,730
October 30, 2025 Dallas American Airlines Center 13,218 / 13,218 (100%) $1,193,852
November 1, 2025 Oklahoma City Paycom Center 13,291 / 13,291 (100%) $1,198,004
November 5, 2025 Anaheim Honda Center 13,391 / 13,391 (100%) $1,190,004
November 6, 2025 Glendale Desert Diamond Arena 13,311 / 13,311 (100%) $1,193,265
November 7, 2025 San Diego Viejas Arena 8,079 / 8,079 (100%) $905,131
November 9, 2025 Las Vegas T-Mobile Arena 15,543 / 15,543 (100%) $1,841,258
November 11, 2025 Portland Moda Center 11,181 / 11,181 (100%) $585,285
November 12, 2025 Seattle Climate Pledge Arena 13,589 / 13,589 (100%) $1,438,301
Total 553,565 $69,820,786 (42 shows)
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Cancelled shows

More information Date, City ...
List of cancelled concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, and reason for cancellation
Date City Country Venue Reason
September 24, 2025 Chicago United States United Center Security concerns from the United Center related to Gaulden's feud with Lil Durk and the Black Disciples.[36]
October 6, 2025 Detroit Little Caesars Arena Unforeseen circumstances from the Little Caesars Arena.[37]
October 18, 2025 Atlanta State Farm Arena Due to an alleged altercation between Gaulden's camp and the Atlanta Police Department.[38]
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Notes

  1. Rescheduled from October 18, 2025.

References

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