For those seeking the full Victory Lap experience, here is the official tracklist. Each song is a chapter in Nipsey’s autobiography.
| # | Title | Featured Artist(s) | Producer(s) | |---|---|---|---| | 1 | Victory Lap | – | 1500 or Nothin’, G. Ry | | 2 | Rap Niggas | – | Ralo, June, Killa Keys | | 3 | Last Time That I Checc’d | YG | Mike & Keys | | 4 | Young Niggas | – | Mike & Keys | | 5 | Dedication | Kendrick Lamar | Mike & Keys | | 6 | Blue Laces 2 | – | Rance of 1500 or Nothin’ | | 7 | Hussle & Motivate | – | Buddah Bless | | 8 | Status Symbol 3 | Buddy | G. Ry, Jahaan Sweet | | 9 | Succa Proof | – | Mike & Keys | | 10 | Keyz 2 the City 2 | TeeFLii | Sap, Jiggy Hendrix | | 11 | Grinding All My Life | – | Happy Perez, Mike & Keys | | 12 | Million While You Young | The-Dream | G. Ry, Jazzy, Smash David | | 13 | Loaded Bases | CeeLo Green | BlaqNmilD | | 14 | Real Big | – | Rance of 1500 or Nothin’ | nipsey hussle victory lap zip 2021
Deluxe Edition Bonus Tracks (2021 streaming re-issue): For those seeking the full Victory Lap experience,
Pro Tip: If you need an offline MP3 zip for a long flight or a device without streaming, buy the album on Amazon Music or iTunes, then download the files legally. You can then create your own personal zip folder. Pro Tip: If you need an offline MP3
Artists drop "deluxe editions" every week. Usually, it’s two throwaway tracks and a sped-up remix for TikTok. The 2021 Victory Lap ZIP was the opposite. It was quiet. It wasn't pushed heavily on billboards. It was discovered—shared on Reddit forums and The Coli, linked in Twitter bios and YouTube descriptions.
For the fans who had been there since the Slauson Avenue days, the ZIP file was a headstone you could hold in your hand. It represented the completion of a loop: Nipsey started by giving away music on corners and selling hard drives out of his Marathon Clothing store. He ended with a Grammy-nominated album. But the ZIP file proved that the spirit never left the neighborhood.
In a 2021 interview, his brother Samiel "Blacc Sam" Asghedom noted that Nipsey always wanted the music to be accessible, but never free. "The ZIP cost something," he said. "Even if it was just five dollars. Because when you pay for something, you value it."