The 21 Club: Hidden Truths About XXXTentacion and Juice WRLD
Exploring the Theories, Coincidences, and Hidden Clues
What if XXXTentacion and Juice WRLD never really died? The details surrounding their deaths raise intriguing questions:
Both artists passed away at the age of 21, fueling the idea of the "21 Club."
Their birth and death months share the same initial letter: X was born in January and died in June; Juice was born and died in December.
Both died on dates involving the number 8: June 18 and December 8.
Juice WRLD famously rapped, "We ain't making it past 21," eerily predicting his own death months after X's passing.
In unreleased Juice WRLD tracks, fans claim to hear edits suggesting he says, "I'm still alive," interpreted by some as a hidden message.
X's death scene reportedly showed no blood, and Juice's medical emergency lacks clear footage.
Police and media coverage were unusual, with close-up filming of X's body and
swift narrative control.SAD! by X was released on Jun 28, 2018, X died on Jun 18, 2018. Unless they filmed it before he died, and predicted his death, He is not dead.
These coincidences have led to theories that:
They might have faked their deaths to escape fame, pressure, or for their own safety.
They were placed in witness protection after witnessing or exposing something
dangerous.They were silenced, controlled, or even worse, with the public being misled about their deaths to conceal deeper truths.
Well, of course, it isn’t locked up, with being silenced, controlled, or even worse, with the public being misled of that they died. Because they were spotted after death.
This isn't just about faking death, it's about a coded message hidden in dates, lyrics, and silence.
By analyzing their final songs and social media posts, fans believe clues have been left behind. The truth may be closer than we think… if we're willing to uncover it.
And it isn’t the end yet. Trippie Red took a photo with X. The Iphone 11 was released after X’s death. The photo was took with the Iphone 11. The photo was released in 2020. Something’s not adding up…
What fans noticed:
The body in the car and at the crime scene had no visible tattoos on the face or neck, which was a huge red flag since X was covered in distinctive tattoos there.
The way the body was filmed was very careful, limited angles, almost like they wanted to hide details.
No visible blood, no signs of a real struggle or trauma on the body.
Security footage and police videos are low-res or edited.
Why use a mannequin or body double?
To sell the illusion of death without actually losing the artist.
To keep the public convinced while the real X disappears or goes underground.
To protect the real person from danger or allow a future “resurrection.”
Supporting the idea:
The funeral footage and images from the morgue don’t show clear tattoos.
Some fans who are experts on X’s tattoos say the body doesn’t match.
The way the media covered the death seemed rushed, suspiciously clean.
What if the “death” was staged around this mannequin?
It’s a prop in the grand act.
The real X is somewhere else, living a different life.
The body double takes the fall symbolically.
Now, we must uncover the truth. Somewhere.