Would you like to write a diss track, but your creativity level is at zero? AI is there to help. You simply need to provide a name, context, and tone, and the generator generates verses with punchlines, rhyme schemes, and structure. Use these lyrics for rap battles, roasting friends, or maybe even getting something off your chest.
Writing diss track lyrics is harder than standard raps. A rapper needs to have punchlines that hit hard, rhyme schemes that flow, and bars specific enough to sting. Most of the time, people have the anger but not the structure. This generator gets you a starting point that you can sharpen.
Writing a diss track about the friend's birthday, group chat, or just for fun? Flick the AI their name and a few inside jokes. It works for your brother, your sister, your roommate — really, anyone you want to roast.
Got something to say? Put in the details, then let the generator turn them into bars. Better than a paragraph text.
Generate bars before a battle and build a pool of punchlines from which to draw. Run multiple takes to find the hardest lines.
Diss tracks blow up the fastest. If you're making content and need lyrics fast, this gets you from idea to bars in seconds.
Study what the AI generates to learn how punchlines are structured, how multisyllabic rhymes work, and how to set up a flip. Then write your own.
AI is there to suggest a starting point, after which you can put your essence in it.
"He's annoying" gives you nothing. "He talks shit online but won't say it in person, drives his mom's car, got dropped from his own group" gives the AI something to work with. Real details make real punchlines.
Don't settle for the first generation. Run it three or four times and pull the hardest bars from each. The best diss tracks are curated, not first-drafted.
AI can build the scheme, but it doesn't know how you talk. Swap in your slang, your cadence, your delivery style. The structure stays, the voice becomes yours.
The best diss track lines have a setup bar that sounds innocent, then a second bar that recontextualizes it. Look for places in the output where you can add that kind of misdirection.