Between 2003 and 2008, 50 Cent was the king of the mixtape circuit. He released dozens of DJ-hosted projects (G-Unit Radio, Guess Who’s Back?, etc.) that often repurposed famous beats from other artists. Unscrupulous file-sharers and bootleg CD vendors took advantage of the success of The Massacre by creating fan-made compilations and branding them as Massacre Volume 2 or The New Massacre.

When users search for a "50 Cent Massacre Album Download," they are likely looking for one of three things:

To complicate the search further, users often confuse rapper Lloyd Banks (G-Unit’s lyricist) with 50 Cent. Banks actually had a mixtape titled V6: The G-Unit Massacre. Because 50 Cent appears on that tape heavily, search engines confuse the metadata. If you download the "G-Unit Massacre," you are downloading a Lloyd Banks project from 2010—not a 50 Cent solo album.

This version includes the bonus track "I Don't Need 'Em" and the remix of "Outta Control" produced by Dr. Dre.

Since the album you want doesn't exist as a single file, you can create the definitive "Massacre Experience" legally. Here is the tracklist that bootleggers wished they could compile:

In 2005, 50 Cent was arguably the biggest rapper on the planet. After surviving nine gunshot wounds (hence “Massacre” themes), his debut Get Rich or Die Tryin’ sold 12 million copies worldwide. The Massacre was meant to solidify his reign, despite growing tensions with fellow G-Unit member The Game.