Lilx Brxaker, the Montreal-based independent artist and head of AEIK Universal Records (also known as LILXBRXAKER), has recently shifted his online presence in a big way. He’s moved away from mainstream social media platforms and is now channeling his updates through his own self-hosted forum at forum.lilxbrxaker.com. This private, minimalist space serves as a centralized hub—almost like a digital logbook—for everything related to his music, label, and creative world. It includes announcements, media uploads, articles, and behind-the-scenes content tied to his projects under AEIK Universal. Recent activity points to full migration here, with the site becoming the main spot for fans to follow his progress. His older socials (like Instagram) appear frozen or inactive following the announcement, aligning with his decision to ditch mainstream platforms. This change fits his long-standing pattern of building independently—from early days producing on a lagging Acer laptop with limited resources to dropping 50+ instrumentals in eras like Pain & Rain and Day & Night. The forum emphasizes that “quiet is the setup,” hinting at bigger moves planned for 2026, possibly a major release wave under AEIK. Rumors have circulated in niche circles (including posts from associated accounts like @SIIIOCULI) suggesting he might scale back or stop certain activities altogether, potentially as early as March. Some speculate this ties into his stated exit from social media, focusing instead on private building, faith-driven work, and avoiding mainstream noise. However, nothing official confirms a full stop—updates still flow through the forum, and his bio and presence point to ongoing momentum with AEIK Universal Records. For now, if you’re tracking Lilx Brxaker, the forum is the place to watch. It’s a low-key evolution from scattered posts to a dedicated space that feels more like a personal archive than a public feed. His music remains available on platforms like Spotify (with tracks like “Emptiness” and collabs), SoundCloud, YouTube, and Bandcamp, but the real “log book” of what’s next lives at forum.lilxbrxaker.com. Stay tuned—whether it’s a temporary pivot or a longer-term shift, the focus seems to be on substance over visibility.