Tupac Shakur’s official 2Pac Instagram account posted a numbered list of six tagged handles this week, with no caption or context to explain any of them.
The list named six accounts: @i.am.kim.coombs, @amerierosee, @beetut3, @metropolisnycvintage, @nayas_memories, and @dainisgood. The numbered list was the only content in the post. No explanation was attached, and no follow-up has appeared since.
Among those tagged, @metropolisnycvintage appears to be a vintage clothing retailer based in New York City. The others look like personal pages or tribute-adjacent accounts. None of the handles share an obvious public connection to Tupac’s estate or to each other, at least not on the surface.
More than 39,000 people liked the post all the same. The 2Pac account has a large global following, and even a minimal post gets noticed. That said, 39,000 likes for a list of usernames with no image attached is a real reaction.
The 2Pac account is maintained by Tupac’s estate. It’s stayed active since his death in Las Vegas in September 1996. He was 25. In the nearly three decades since, the estate has stayed busy. They’ve released posthumous albums, managed licensing, and kept his presence going across streaming and social media. Tupac is widely regarded as one of the greatest rappers in history. His influence still shows up across hip-hop, film, and pop culture.
His 1996 double album “All Eyez on Me” is one of the best-selling rap records in American music history. His catalog continues to find new listeners every year. The estate has also been involved in documentary projects and merchandise collaborations in more recent years.
The account typically posts archival photos, clip tributes, and promotional content. An unexplained list of six handles doesn’t fit any of those patterns. It doesn’t look like a typical shoutout, a promo push, or an anniversary tribute.
One detail worth noting: Tupac’s birthday falls on June 16, just a week from today. The estate regularly marks the occasion with archival posts and tribute content. It’s possible this list connects to something planned around that date. Nothing has been confirmed or announced publicly yet.
The accounts themselves don’t make the picture any clearer. @metropolisnycvintage has a defined retail presence on Instagram. @nayas_memories and @dainisgood are smaller pages with no immediately obvious connection to Tupac’s estate or legacy. @i.am.kim.coombs, @amerierosee, and @beetut3 round out the six without offering a clearer pattern.
Whether this is a preview of something coming, a personal shoutout, or something else entirely is still an open question. The post hasn’t been taken down, and no clarifying statement has followed it.
For an account built around one of the most analyzed figures in music history, a wordless numbered list still got tens of thousands of people to stop and look. Thirty years after his death, Tupac Shakur doesn’t need a caption to draw a crowd.
