Lil Uzi Vert dislikes individuals who launch singles and albums before they are fully prepared for an official release.

Uzi, having experienced leaks firsthand, criticized leakers in a conversation with Pitchfork’s Over/Under series.

When asked to choose something they considered overrated, Uzi replied: “Leaks are extremely overrated.” The leaks are not prepared for presentation. When you all encounter leaks, fans, or the leak police, or the leak scammers, or the individuals in those chat rooms and Discord servers, when you sit there and you find 82 of my leaked songs, understanding that I haven’t arranged them properly.

Uzi additionally attributed leaks to distorting views about an artist: “[People] come here and say, ‘Oh, Lil Uzi is terrible.’” You all are essentially observing me as I get ready in my closet. I don’t have my clothes on yet. “So, you all essentially see me undressed.”

They said: “So all of you are garbage. All of you, you’re worthless. You all aren’t allowing me a moment to get ready. Before I had the chance to enhance the song, you all critiqued it. Leaks are terrible. It’s neither over nor underappreciated; it’s just terrible.

Lil Uzi Vert also thinks that the use of nitrous oxide is overrated.

In the same interview, Uzi remarked: “Avoid doing whippets! Those things will — they are tough! Hey, don’t do those. They are not good. They’ll make you try foods you’ve never tasted, and they’ll introduce you to people you’ve never spent time with. “That’s all I heard.”

They stated: “To be honest, without funds and no story, whippets is truly terrible.” I genuinely mean that. I’m not saying that anything is wrong; I’m the person who enjoys everything. “Whippets are really terrible, man.”

Whippets is a colloquial term for nitrous oxide and appears as small metal canisters.

Extended use of the medication can result in brain injury, along with issues in other organs and a deficiency in vitamin B12.

Uzi also responded to fan worries regarding their supposed use of nitrous oxide on their recent album Eternal Atake 2.

On the first track “We Good,” the Philadelphia artist addressed the gossip by rapping: “They claimed I was gone, they believed I was a deceased man, I was on that NOS.”