RANCHO X3
Rancho X3, also known as Rancho 13, originated as a small tagging clique in the Rancho district of South Los Santos, founded by Hugo “Casper” Reyes. He earned the nickname “Casper” due to his pale appearance and his ability to move unnoticed through neighborhoods at night, leaving behind clean and recognizable graffiti across walls, alleyways, and abandoned buildings throughout Rancho. His markings quickly gained attention, and the name “RX3” began circulating among local youths. Raised in a struggling Mexican-American household, Hugo dropped out of school early and spent most of his time on the streets with a tight circle of neighborhood friends. What began as tagging and territorial pride gradually escalated into vandalism, street fights, and minor crime as the group sought recognition across the Southside. Their graffiti — marked with “RX3” and “Rancho XIII” — came to define their presence around the Rancho housing projects and surrounding blocks.
In its early years, Rancho X3 was deeply rooted in Mexican-American identity and neighborhood loyalty, often hostile toward outsiders entering Rancho territory. However, as South Los Santos demographics shifted, the clique slowly evolved. While still maintaining strong cultural roots and Southside affiliation, Rancho X3 became more reflective of the community it controlled, recruiting locals raised within Rancho regardless of background. Over time, the tagging crew transformed into a structured neighborhood gang, with Hugo “Casper” Ramirez recognized as its founding shot-caller and symbolic figurehead.
KRAZY KIDS KREW
One of the most recognized cliques offspring of Rancho X3 is Krazy Kids Krew, commonly referred to as KKK. Formed by younger Rancho-affiliated taggers inspired by the original RX3 bombing culture, the clique became widely known across South Central Los Santos for aggressive graffiti campaigns. Their tags appeared on walls, storefront shutters, abandoned houses, and alley corridors, often layered over rival markings to assert presence rather than territory ownership. At one point, Krazy Kids Krew nearly faded into obscurity as older members were arrested, moved away, or absorbed into Rancho X3 ranks. The clique’s resurgence began when KKK members heavily “bombed” the Jamestown Street area, saturating blocks with their symbols and lettering. This sudden visibility drew attention from neighboring street gangs operating around Jamestown, creating tension and territorial friction.
Despite the escalation, the situation was ultimately contained through Southside street politics and mediation by established Rancho X3 figures. The conflict concluded without bloodshed, reinforcing Krazy Kids Krew’s status as a recognized Rancho-aligned tagging clique rather than an independent gang. Since then, KKK has functioned as a youth pipeline and proving ground for Rancho X3 — a space where younger taggers build reputation, loyalty, and visibility before potential elevation into full Rancho X3 members.