With the help of AI, what a video game fight between Diomedes Díaz and Bad Bunny would be like was recreated: “Long live the crazy ones”

With the help of AI, what a video game fight between Diomedes Díaz and Bad Bunny would be like was recreated: “Long live the crazy ones”

An animated video presents a wrestling match in arcade format between the characters of Bad Bunny and Diomedes Díaz. ‘El Cacique’ is shown with an accordion and ‘El Conejo Malo’ executes an energy attack – credit Pumaro Vibes/Instagram

If anything has characterized social networks, it is the dissemination of humorous content.

From events far from reality to content with the inclusion of artificial intelligence, several Internet users have shared some scenes that have generated a space for recreation, in the midst of the situations that citizens face in their daily lives.

In the midst of the multiple contents that are published daily on digital platforms, a video has been revealed in which a simulation of a street fight between two music celebrities is carried out.

That was the case of the late Colombian singer Diomedes Díaz and the Puerto Rican artist Bad Bunny who, in the film released by the Instagram user Pumaro Vibes (@pumarovibes), are the protagonists of the physical fight, as if they were present in the renowned video game Street Fight.

In the video, both artists launch their best attacks to achieve victory. However, with the powers of the accordion, and including some phrases said by the Cacique of La Junta, the vallenato artist defeats the Bad Rabbit in two of the three rounds stipulated in the game.

The dissemination of the video generated different comments on the publication. While some were surprised by the capacity of artificial intelligence, by recreating impossible scenarios, others celebrated the victory of the ‘Papá de los Pollitos’ over the Puerto Rican reggaeton player currently considered one of the most recognized artists in the world.

“Long live the crazy people”; “Diomedes is more powerful”; “The chief never needed the sponsorship and marketing that they do to the bdbunni loK”; “Excellent diome with chairs and scarf could not be missing at their concerts”; “No rabbit can handle the chief. He gave him soup and dry food”; “He lacked the power up of blowing”; “Diomedes Seagal,” were some of the comments from Internet users.

It is not the first time that both artists have interacted with each other. At the end of January 2026, in his first concert of the “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS World Tour” tour that took place in Medellín, Bad Bunny broke all the usual patterns of his concerts by paying tribute to Diomedes Díaz.

The uniqueness of the tribute stood out from the preparation: The warning on giant screens that the next song would be “exclusive to Medellín and would not be repeated in any other city on the tour” generated expectations in the public.

Suddenly, the opening chords of the musical theme You are the queen were heard, one of the Colombian composer’s most emblematic singles.

Bad Bunny performs exclusive song by Diomedes Díaz during his first concert in Medellín – Instagram credit

“There may be more noble than you, there will be another with more honor than you, they may exist in this life, but you are The Queen”is one of the excerpts of the song written by Hernán Urbina Joiro.

The collective reaction was immediate. The Atanasio Girardot stadium in the capital of Antioquia exploded, with cheers, songs and a vallenato party atmosphere that momentarily displaced reggaeton.

After the fragment of the vallenato song, the Puerto Rican artist performed the song I don’t want to get married.

For many attendees, the tribute became the highlight of the evening, because for a few minutes, the reggaeton stopped and the Atanasio became a gigantic vallenato party, according to some users on social networks.

The presentation lasted more than two and a half hours, with the stadium full from start to finish. The organization and production of the event included cinematic visuals, large format screens and a set in which one of the most notable events took place when Bad Bunny appeared on the central “little house” performing several of his most popular songs in a celebratory atmosphere.

During the night, the Puerto Rican mixed reggaeton, trap, salsa and Latin pop, keeping the audience’s energy high and confirming his ability to draw crowds. The large-scale production, added to the choice of Medellín as the setting to offer exclusive moments, reinforces the role of the Colombian city within the contemporary international music circuit.