The second and final chapter of “Mon école” has just been released. With the freestyle titled “Mon école #2”, the Marseille-based rapper and actor had already revealed a “tracklist” that lived up to his ambitions. A decidedly gritty installment, featuring some of the most iconic names in French rap: Rohff, Psy4 de la Rime, Alibi Montana, and of course Seth Gueko. Even rarer appearances come from heavyweight figures of the scene — including LIM, an artist seldom seen on collaborations — who step in to deliver their signature, razor-sharp flows.
Much like the first chapter of “Mon école”, the artist orchestrates a true intergenerational gathering, bringing together those who shaped his artistic identity. In this opening visual directed by Slown Prod, conceived as a symbolic circle dedicated to the 94 area, guest appearances follow one another with precision and intensity. The first to step into the spotlight is none other than a legend of French rap and a historic pillar of Val-de-Marne: Rohff.
Kofs and Rohff kick it like “Salahdine P.”!
The instrumental production is handled by Switsher, who previously collaborated with the rapper on “Algérien fâché 2”. With an international career, the producer works with Italian artists such as Nabi and Mocro Yakuza, as well as French rappers like Many Santana. Here, the formula is intentionally classic yet brutally effective: a hard-hitting beat built for pure bar-for-bar performances, powerful and stripped of any excess.
The instrumental carries the unmistakable DNA of Roh2F’s golden era, echoing the raw, militant aesthetic of “Le Code de l’horreur” — a period when the Vitry-sur-Seine rapper stood at the peak of his commercial success. A die-hard PSG supporter — famously responsible for the cult punchline “On supportera le PSG même relégué” — Rohff slips in a cleverly timed reference rooted in Parisian current events:
“They dropped me like Kyky, I won it all like Ousmane I reached the end of the tunnel, no tracks like Guzman”
Kofs, widely respected for the strength of his pen, holds his ground effortlessly. More restrained in delivery, he nonetheless maintains unwavering intensity and surgical precision in his writing:
“I didn’t need Narcos to know this hits hard Word of advice, young rapper, if you wanna sing at the Dome Don’t play gangster with us, you’ll fall before autumn”
The visual, once again directed by Slown Prod, marks Rohff’s first series of featured appearances entirely dedicated to the 94. The director is no stranger to Kofs’ universe, having previously shot the video for his collaboration with Intouchable, as well as his featuring with Ivory.

