Destroy Lonely Unreleased: The Complete Leak & Era Guide
Inside Destroy Lonely's unreleased vault — the NO STYLIST and If Looks Could Kill eras, grails, and how to stream it all.
If you fell down the Destroy Lonely rabbit hole through the NO STYLIST tape or the released version of If Looks Could Kill, you already know the feeling: the official discography is only the tip of the iceberg. Behind every project Lonely has put out is a mountain of scrapped versions, alternate mixes, and never-officially-released cuts that circulate among fans. This guide maps out that vault — the eras, the standout unreleased tracks, and how to actually hear it all in one place. When you want to skip straight to the music, you can stream Destroy Lonely's unreleased catalog in a single player.
Who Is Destroy Lonely?
Destroy Lonely (Bobby Sandimanie III) is an Atlanta rapper who broke through as one of the flagship signees of Playboi Carti's Opium label. His sound — hazy, melodic, autotune-drenched, and built for late-night drives — helped define the wave that also carries artists like Ken Carson. His released catalog includes the NO STYLIST mixtape, the If Looks Could Kill album, and the ongoing Lonely-branded run of projects, but his real cult following comes from how much unreleased material lives outside those official tracklists.
Why the Destroy Lonely Vault Runs So Deep
Lonely is famously prolific. He records constantly, reworks projects endlessly, and leaves behind multiple numbered versions of the same tape as songs get added, swapped, or scrapped before the official release. That workflow is exactly why his unreleased footprint is so large. On unreleased.world, Destroy Lonely has roughly 819 unreleased tracks spread across about 26 eras and mixtape versions — a genuinely staggering amount for an artist still early in his career.
The NO STYLIST Era
NO STYLIST is one of the cornerstones of Lonely's catalog, and the unreleased side of it is enormous. The NO STYLIST V2 compilation alone holds 236 tracks — one of the deepest single eras in his entire vault. This is where you find the raw, pre-final versions of the era: alternate takes, cut songs, and the melodic deep cuts that give the tape its atmosphere.
Standout NO STYLIST-era grails
- "show stopper" — a fan-favorite that stayed in the vault
- "vamped" — moody, autotuned, quintessential Lonely
- "no control" — one of the more chased cuts of the era
- "IM STUNTIN" — hard-hitting and endlessly replayable
- "actin different" — a melodic standout
You can dig into every version of this era when you stream the full NO STYLIST vault and hear how the tape evolved across its numbered versions.
If Looks Could Kill 0.5
The released If Looks Could Kill was Lonely's biggest official moment, but the unreleased era around it is just as important to collectors. If Looks Could Kill 0.5 is the pre-album snapshot, and on the platform it holds 159 tracks — a huge window into what the project could have been before the official cut was finalized. If you searched if looks could kill destroy lonely looking for the songs that never made the record, this is the era.
Tracks worth hearing from the 0.5 era
- "The Date" — one of the most talked-about unreleased Lonely songs, period
- "sipped too much" — hazy and hypnotic
- "freeze to death" — a colder, atmospheric cut
- "i'm that" — confident and streamable
- "IM ROLLIN" — an energetic fan pick
LOVE LASTS FOREVER and the Later Eras
Beyond the two flagship eras, Lonely's vault keeps branching. The LOVE LASTS FOREVER V2 (25 tracks) and LOVE LASTS FOREVER V3 (29 tracks) compilations capture a more recent, refined chapter of his sound, showing how the project mutated across versions. Smaller eras like PAIN PASSION (6 tracks) and the loose collection simply labeled hey (5 tracks) round out the newer material with tight, focused batches of songs.
Later-era cuts to start with
- "DRUG PARTY" — one of the most requested newer leaks
- "took my" — a melodic standout
- "hit the floor" — energetic and replayable
- "miss me" — a softer, emotional cut
- "i hope i never crashout" — a fan-favorite title
- "exorcist" — darker and atmospheric
LQ vs CDQ: A Note on Audio Quality
As you go through the vault you'll notice tags on some tracks. A title like "paranormal (LQ)" means the circulating version is low quality — often a phone recording, a snippet rip, or a compressed leak rather than a clean studio file. CDQ means CD quality, i.e. the clean, full-length version. Some grails only exist in LQ form until (or unless) a CDQ file surfaces, which is a normal part of how leaked music circulates.
How to Stream the Whole Destroy Lonely Vault
The hard part with any unreleased catalog is that the songs are scattered — across servers, threads, and file hosts, in inconsistent quality, with no easy way to just listen. unreleased.world solves that by organizing all ~819 of Lonely's unreleased tracks by era, so you can move from NO STYLIST V2 to If Looks Could Kill 0.5 to LOVE LASTS FOREVER without leaving the player. You can stream every Destroy Lonely leak and unreleased song in one place, for free.
If you want more context on how these platforms work, our explainer on what an unreleased music hub is covers how eras, trackers, and communities fit together — and the broader guide to where to listen to unreleased music is a great starting point if Lonely is just the first artist you're diving into.
Where to Go Next
Destroy Lonely doesn't exist in a vacuum — his whole wave is built on the same collecting culture. If you came for Lonely, you'll almost certainly want the Playboi Carti unreleased guide (Opium's founder and one of the deepest vaults in rap) and the Ken Carson unreleased guide to complete the trio. When you're ready to just press play, head back to the unreleased.world homepage and start with any era above.
Hear it for yourself
Stream the unreleased tracks, leaks, and full discographies in this guide — free, in one fast player.
Open unreleased.world