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Showing content with the highest reputation on 09/25/2025 in Posts
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The 53 Avalon Gangster Crip (53AGC) street gang were formed in the mid-1980s. The father-set for all the Avalon Gangster Crips was founded by Darrell Peterson also known as "The Godfather of Crips" in the Avalon Gardens Projects. Darrell Peterson broke away from the Eastside Crips like many others after Raymond Washington was incarcerated. The influence of the 88 Avalon Garden Crips trickled down onto various other areas as time went by. The 53 Avalon Gangster Crips (53AGC) have seldomly been able to let their guard down and has instilled a militarized program to prevent any more deaths within the set. The program was originally conceptualized by the 88 Avalon Garden Crips, who at the time were in a heated on-going war with the 87 & 97 Gangster Crip. The idea behind it was pushed by The God Father, pretty much enacting martial law in his own neighborhood, giving woman and children a curfew at 6:30PM. They were also told to stay away from windows or their front doors because they feared their rivals would do a drive-by. This was passed down to the other Avalon sets who were in active wars.6 points
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This concept is based off of the real life 53 AGC and we intend on mirroring the bone image based off of the concept. We have a particular recruitment vetting process in which new members who wish to join will have to meet the faction's high standards as well as their OOC behavior will be closely evaluated before leadership invites new members into the faction script. Shoot me or @pshakh a message and we will get back to you in a timely manner. Any questions, concerns and/or suggestions relating faction matters can also be forwarded to us.4 points
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The Denver Lane Gangster Blood — Circa 2000's Denver Lane Gangster Bloods The Denver Lane Gangster Bloods — also known by their aliases DLB, DLBG, or simply “The Lanes” — are one of the most well-established and historically significant Blood sets operating in South Los Santos. The gang is predominantly African-American and is rooted in the neighborhoods situated near Imperial Highway and Figueroa Street, an area that has long been considered a central hub for activity in South Los Santos. The Denver Lanes trace their foundation back to the early 1970s, a period when Los Santos was experiencing rapid social change and when street gangs were beginning to formalize identities that would later dominate the city’s landscape. Initially, the group did not operate under the Bloods umbrella. Instead, they were known as the Denver Lane Boys and also carried the more community-minded name Dignity Loving Brothers. The gang’s earliest territory centered around 108th and 109th Streets, but their influence soon expanded southward to 120th Street and northward to 106th, securing several blocks of turf that would define their presence. During their early years, the Denver Lanes coexisted alongside other independent neighborhood crews, including the Figueroa Boys, a group founded by the Miles family. The relationship between these sets reflected the patchwork nature of South Los Santos gangs at the time — with crews forming around housing projects, schools, or family connections, before larger identities like “Blood” or “Crip” became standardized across the city. It wasn’t until the mid-1970s that the Denver Lane Boys transitioned into what became the Denver Lane Gangster Bloods, aligning themselves with the emerging Blood identity. A key figure tied to the Denver Lanes’ history was Peabody, a member of the coalition who went on to become instrumental in the creation of the United Blood Nation (UBN) during the mid-1980s inside the Los Santos County Jail system. Around 1984–85, Peabody and others helped formalize Blood identity and unity within the prison walls, a move that gave the Bloods long-lasting structure both behind bars and on the streets. This connection to UBN cemented the Denver Lanes as one of the cornerstone Blood gangs in Los Santos. In modern times, the Denver Lanes are also known under the banner of the Figueroa Rider Gang (FRG), a name that pays homage to their long stretch of territory running along Figueroa Street — a notorious corridor often referred to as “the blade” for its heavy street activity and hustling reputation. Their 109th clique serves as the main core, but their presence spans from 105th Street to 120th Street, giving them control over what is often described as the last active section of Figueroa before crossing the 105 Freeway. The DLGB have built a reputation for being a large and historically notorious Blood set, consistently involved in rivalries that shaped South Los Santos gang politics. Among their most infamous conflicts are their wars with the Hoover Criminal Gangs, a rivalry marked by decades of violence, as well as long-standing issues with the Madd Swan Bloods, Broadway Gangster Crips, and the 18th Street Gang, one of the city’s largest Latino street organizations. What sets the Denver Lanes apart from many other Blood factions is the nature of their rivalries. Unlike most Blood sets on the West Side, whose primary conflicts tend to focus on traditional rivalries with Neighborhood Crips, the DLGB have historically squared off against Gangster Crip sets and East Side East Coast Crips, which has shaped their unique position in Los Santos gang politics. As a result, the Denver Lanes have often stood apart from the modern “Suwoopin, Movin and Groovin” Blood unity politics, sometimes taking a neutral or even loosely aligned stance with certain Rollin’ Neighborhood Crip gangs that share enemies in common. Their reputation is also shaped by their internal Blood rivalries, which is relatively uncommon for most sets. The Denver Lanes had bitter and violent conflicts with other Blood gangs, including the Inglewood Family Gangster Bloods and the Madd Swan Family Bloods. These deadly beefs fractured traditional Blood unity and fueled cycles of retaliation for decades. However, in the early 2020s, efforts toward diplomacy led to a fragile truce between the sets, easing tensions that had kept South Los Santos locked in internal Blood-on-Blood warfare.3 points
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Liaison / Back to Business VI Liaison / Back to Business VII Liaison / Back to Business VIII3 points
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BIG SHOES TO FILL / NEXT UP / NEW GENERATION. PARC-CHILD / 4700VSP BOYS / LIL HAITI IN THE MAKING. GET IT OUT THE WAY / LILHAITI#2 / EMBRACING THE LIL HOMIE.3 points
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"Washed Up Ain't the Same as Washed Out." This is the character story of Earnell "Ice Pick Kells" Kelly, a small-time hustler and ex-con who's back running the streets alongside Ornell "Ice Man" Yards. Willowfield don’t change. It just rots slower. That’s what Earnell Kelly thought as the county bus dropped him off near the projects where he grew up — still cracked concrete, still tagged up, still home. He was 19 when he caught his first bid. Armed robbery. Caught on some dumb stick-up with a TEC-9 that jammed before he could even get nervous. Did 3 years on that. Got out, thought he’d be smarter. He wasn’t. By his late 20s, Earnell had become a ghost of his younger self — heavy on the pipe, light on the hustle. He used more than he moved. Got sloppy, got paranoid, burned bridges, and eventually got locked again — this time for possession with intent. Nobody even came to visit. Except Ornell Yards. While Earnell spiraled into addiction, Ornell kept climbing. Not legit, but higher up in the street game — methodical, calculated, respected. He’d send commissary when nobody else did. Wrote letters like it was the '90s. Out the Gates Now he's 35, fresh out, still not sober but hungry. Not just for money, but for relevance. The streets moved on. Young bucks with switches and IG pages, flexing paper they ain’t earned. But Earnell’s got that old game in him. That muscle memory.2 points
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This faction is an fictional version of the real life Denver Lane Gangster Blood gang. However we do intended to roleplay and portray their culture and incorporate their dialect and vernacular to maintain display a certain level of immersion and realism for our gang. This is a invite only if you want to join or have any questions about the faction shoot me @GoonDaKilla a private message and I will help you whenever possible.2 points
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It's been a rap feud between the two gangs (Bad Influence Crip & Verona Shoreline Crip) It ended up getting too crazy music wise to where a situation ended in a back & forth on Myface leading to a shootout.2 points
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Central Connect / Straight From the Source II Central Connect / Straight From the Source III2 points
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