1416 STUBLOCK — TWO BLOODLINES, ONE BLOCK
The Rise of A Roy — A Traveling Vice Lord’s Vision for Money, Legacy & Expansion
“TWO BLOODLINES, ONE BLOCK.”
The Rise of A Roy — A Traveling Vice Lord’s Vision for Money, Legacy & Expansion
“TWO BLOODLINES, ONE BLOCK.”
OVERVIEW
Name: 1416 StuBlock
Alias: StuBlock, 1416, The Hash
Leader: Andrew “A Roy” Brissett — Traveling Vice Lord
Focus: Money, organization, and territory expansion
Territory: 14th–16th Street Corridor (14th & Morgan → 16th & Kildare)
Identity: Hybrid VL/BD structure — discipline meets aggression
Motto: “Two bloodlines, one block.”
HISTORY & ORIGIN
1416 StuBlock was born out of loss, loyalty, and ambition on Chicago’s West Side.
What began as 6775 Darkside / ScoBlock in the 2000s carried a heavy BD foundation — strong, aggressive, and feared.
When tragedy struck with the deaths of Stu and Nacho, the foundation crumbled. But instead of dying out, the survivors rebuilt.
Under the guidance of OG Ohso, an original Traveling Vice Lord, and led by Andrew “A Roy” Brissett — Stu’s close ally — the new generation merged BD aggression with VL order.
A Roy restructured the surviving members under the name **StuBlock**, paying homage to Stu while defining a new era.
Now, the block operates like a business: controlled, hierarchical, and motivated by profit.
Where once there was chaos, A Roy brought vision — money over madness.
TIMELINE — 2000s TO PRESENT
- 2000s: 6775 Darkside / ScoBlock dominates with BD roots and raw aggression.
- 2012–2014: Deaths of Stu & Nacho fracture the original crew — instability sets in.
- 2015: Surviving founders (FashShot, Nelly, Leal, Ash) regroup with OG Ohso; StuBlock name is born.
- 2018–2020: Baby Pluto rises — JumpOut becomes infamous for bold robberies and heavy risk.
- 2022: VL influence solidifies — hybrid BD/VL identity becomes official.
- 2023–2024: Task forces raid corners; paranoia and splits emerge.
- 2025: A Roy consolidates leadership, turning StuBlock into a coordinated illegal civilian organization focused on expansion and financial dominance.
LEADERSHIP & STRUCTURE
Andrew “A Roy” Brissett — Traveling Vice Lord (Leader)
“Organization before chaos. Money before fame.”
Andrew “A Roy” Brissett — Traveling Vice Lord (Leader)
“Organization before chaos. Money before fame.”
- Role: Oversees all operations, sets territory goals, manages alliances, and enforces discipline.
- Tactics: Centralized money control, trusted lieutenants, coded communication, community presence.
- Style: Calm, calculated, and ruthless when challenged.
Command Hierarchy
- Elders / OGs: Strategic direction, protection of code, financial oversight.
- Lieutenants: Handle corner operations, collections, and recruitment.
- Soldiers / Hustlers: Distribute product, enforce tax, maintain street pressure.
- Civilians / Associates: Handle fronts, stash management, and low-profile laundering.
THE CORNERS
1400 Splack Gang (14th & Morgan) — "The Watchtower"
- Youngest corner, heavily influenced by Traveling Vice Lords.
- Known for discipline, intel work, and community control.
- Manages graffiti, memorial tags, and stash houses.
- Acts as StuBlock’s information network and early-warning system.
1500 Hawknem (15th & California) — "The Middle Ground"
- Blend of BD aggression and VL order — constantly shifting loyalties.
- Handles mid-level distribution and border control.
- Known for internal disputes but essential for balance and supply.
1600 JumpOut (16th & Kildare) — "The Storm"
- Oldest BD-heavy faction, known for brash robberies and bold plays.
- High-stakes jobs, major narcotics, intimidation tactics.
- Their energy drives expansion — feared and respected citywide.
OPERATIONS & REVENUE STREAMS
- Street Sales: Controlled by Splack and Hawknem crews.
- Major Plays: JumpOut executes robberies and heists for fast cash.
- Stash Logistics: Rotating houses, coded drops, and layered runners.
- Protection & Tax: Charging security fees to small hustlers and shop owners.
- Front Businesses: Auto shops, barbers, and delivery fronts used to wash money.
- Recruitment: Pulling youth into structured roles with cash incentives.
EXPANSION STRATEGY
Short-Term Goals:
- Secure full control over 14th–16th Street corridor.
- Increase cash turnover and stash redundancy.
- Expand laundering operations through local fronts.
Long-Term Goals:
- Establish presence on nearby blocks via alliances or pressure.
- Develop revenue hubs (auto repair, delivery, streetwear fronts).
- Transform from block set into structured illegal civilian enterprise.
LAW ENFORCEMENT PRESSURE (IC)
- Task Force Target: “1416 Organization” labeled as hybrid VL/BD network.
- Focus: Racketeering, robbery conspiracy, narcotics, and firearms.
- Recent Actions: Raids, indictments, and surveillance spikes.
- Effect: Internal paranoia, snitch accusations, stricter code enforcement by A Roy.
ROLEPLAY HOOKS
- Aftermath of a stash raid — internal mistrust, interrogation scenes.
- Recruitment scenes led by A Roy or lieutenants.
- Territory disputes with rival corners or sets.
- Street tribunal for betrayal or snitching.
- Public “legacy speech” at a memorial tag.
IN-CHARACTER RULES
- All plays approved by lieutenants or A Roy.
- No unsanctioned violence on allies or civilians.
- Stash and money routes are compartmentalized.
- Snitching = internal tribunal.
- Loyalty > Reputation — Stu’s name stays protected.
CHAPTER I — THE BROTHERS FROM THE BLOCK
Before the name StuBlock carried weight, there were two brothers — Andrew and Lawrence Brissett.
Known in the streets as A Roy and Big Law, they grew up on 15th and California watching older heads like Stu, Nacho, and Ohso run the neighborhood with money, structure, and fear.
To the Brissett brothers, Stu was more than a local legend — he was the blueprint.
They learned from the shadows — how to move quiet, how to flip small hustles into real motion, and how to keep loyalty above everything.
When Stu died, the block went cold. Some ran. Some folded. The rest scattered into rival corners.
But the Brissetts stayed.
CHAPTER II — THE WAIT AND THE WALLS
In 2016, Lawrence “Big Law” Brissett got hit with a heavy bid — conspiracy and armed distribution.
While he sat down, A Roy held the streets together, working small angles with the surviving members of Splack and Hawknem.
He wasn’t loud. He wasn’t reckless. He just moved.
He started using OG Ohso’s old VL structure — written codes, hierarchy, and chain of command — mixed with BD-style pressure.
He built something new from the ashes: organized like a crew, but moving like a company.
By the time Big Law touched down again in 2023, A Roy had already positioned himself as the quiet operator keeping the block alive.
The legend of Stu was fading — but A Roy made sure the name stayed painted on every corner wall.
CHAPTER III — BIG LAW RETURNS
When Big Law came home, the block stopped for a day.
Old heads pulled up. Young hustlers fell in line.
The Brissett brothers reunited, and for the first time in years, StuBlock had leadership that blended both worlds — experience and evolution.
Big Law had prison wisdom and old-school muscle.
A Roy had organization, front money, and business sense.
Together, they turned the scattered sets — Splack, Hawknem, and JumpOut — into a single motion.
No longer just a gang — StuBlock became a brand, a network, and a family.
The motto resurfaced: “Two bloodlines, one block.” CHAPTER IV — MONEY BEFORE MADNESS
Under A Roy and Big Law, StuBlock shifted from reckless plays to long-term investments.
The corners turned into pipelines — product in, cash out, and front businesses feeding clean money back in.
The block started to hum again — auto shops, delivery fronts, barbers, and warehouses all feeding the same machine.
Every move was calculated.
Every member had a purpose.
Every dollar had a destination.
“We don’t do chaos,” A Roy told the new generation. “We do motion.”
CHAPTER V — THE NEW GENERATION
2025 brought new faces — a generation raised on drill, clout, and coded loyalty.
Instead of trying to control them, A Roy and Big Law decided to mentor them.
They brought in the young leaders from Splack, Hawknem, and JumpOut — gave them roles, guidance, and responsibility.
Splack became the eyes and ears of the block.
Hawknem became the movers and distributors.
JumpOut stayed the storm, ready to handle high-stakes business when needed.
The Brissett brothers became symbols of balance — the OG discipline of the Vice Lords mixed with the relentless ambition of the BDs.
The StuBlock name now represents something more than survival — it represents evolution, motion, and legacy.
"Two bloodlines, one block — motion never dies."
OOC NOTES- This faction is fictional and for roleplay purposes only.
- Focus: Illegal civilian enterprise centered on business, loyalty, and growth.
- Members must follow server & faction rules (no real-life parallels).
- Use this thread for IC posts, recruitment, and development updates.
"Two bloodlines, one block — organized like a business, built on legacy."
STUBLOCK ORIGINS: BLOODLINE OF BRISSETT
"Legacy ain’t born — it’s earned block by block."