I Used To Have Hoop Dreams Until I Found Out There Were Other Ways To Score
Also known as: Hoop Dreams · Hoop Dreams (Shidd)
"I Used To Have Hoop Dreams Until I Found Out There Were Other Ways To Score" is a viral rap snippet by rapper glizzyfr that took over TikTok and Instagram in mid-2025. Originally posted as an unreleased song clip on March 21, 2025, the bar's blunt delivery and quotable lyrics turned it into a massive TikTok sound trend, spawning lip dubs, animation memes, cosplay videos, and copypasta across social media.
TL;DR
"I Used To Have Hoop Dreams Until I Found Out There Were Other Ways To Score" is a viral rap snippet by rapper glizzyfr that took over TikTok and Instagram in mid-2025.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The "Hoop Dreams" sound works in several common formats:
- Lip dub: Film yourself mouthing the lyrics with confidence. The flat, serious delivery is part of the joke. Bonus points for doing it in an unexpected location or outfit. - Cosplay/outfit reveal: Start the video in normal clothes, then cut or transition into a costume (Naruto, Sonic characters, etc.) right as the "hoop dreams" bar drops. - POV skit: Set up a scenario where someone needs to "spit bars" under pressure, then use the Hoop Dreams audio as the performance. - Character edit: Take footage of a fictional character (anime, video game, cartoon) and sync their movements to the audio. The Doctor Eggman format was the biggest example of this. - Copypasta: The lyrics themselves get copy-pasted into comment sections and group chats, typically delivered deadpan as if it's genuine romantic advice.
The key to most versions is the contrast between the serious, declarative tone of the lyrics and whatever absurd visual context the creator wraps around them.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The original Instagram Reel's caption was promoting a diamond pendant, not the song itself. The music was almost secondary to the jewelry flex.
The song's title on Genius is listed as "hoopdreams(shidd)," with the parenthetical "shidd" never explained.
The biggest single video using the sound (the Doctor Eggman edit) had nothing to do with hip-hop or basketball. It featured a cartoon villain from a hedgehog video game franchise.
Glizzyfr's own TikTok lip dub on a basketball court got significantly fewer likes than several fan-made edits, a common pattern where meme creators outperform the original artist.
The TikTok sound hit 34,500 posts in roughly six weeks from the first viral edit.
Derivatives & Variations
Corecore edits:
The original viral format, started by @_xipho_, pairing the audio with atmospheric or emotionally charged visual montages[3].
Cosplay reveal videos:
Creators changing into character costumes mid-bar, popularized by @pilloffdaperc's Naruto transformation[3].
Character animation edits:
Fictional characters lip-syncing or performing the bar, with the Doctor Eggman version by @chadamsp5 being the most successful[3].
POV skits:
Scenario-based comedy using the sound, like @flynndrixx's burglar-forces-you-to-rap premise[3].
Wrestling edits:
The trend crossed into wrestling fan communities, with MJF image macros on Twitter/X[3].
Soundboard clips:
The audio was uploaded to platforms like Voicemod Tuna for use in Discord calls and livestreams[2].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (4)
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- 3
- 4List of Internet phenomenaencyclopedia