Roxy is one half of the rap duo Real Dimez in Grand Theft Auto VI, alongside her lifelong friend and creative partner Bae-Luxe. Officially unveiled in the second trailer and accompanying promotional materials released by Rockstar Games on 6 May 2025, Roxy embodies the satirical commentary on social-media-era music culture that pervades the game's portrayal of Vice City (Rockstar Games, 2025; GTA Wiki, 2026a). Together with Bae-Luxe, she represents a new archetype of Rockstar's musical NPC: the do-it-yourself, viral-first hip-hop artist whose hustle blurs the line between street economy and entertainment industry. Roxy is depicted as a Vice-City-based rapper signed to Only Raw Records (the in-game label co-run by Boobie Ike and Dre'Quan Priest), and she appears in multiple official screenshots, the December 2023 reveal trailer, and the May 2025 second trailer, where she is seen dancing on top of a Vapid sedan with Bae-Luxe (Wikipedia, 2026; GTA Wiki, 2026b).
Real Dimez is explicitly framed by Rockstar as a duo formed of equals: "Bae-Luxe and Roxy aka Real Dimez have been friends since high school โ girls with the savvy to turn their time shaking down local dealers into cold, hard cash via spicy rap tracks and a relentless social media presence" (Rockstar Games, 2025, cited in GTA Wiki, 2026a). Where Bae-Luxe is positioned in promotional materials as the more visually forward member (typically rendered on the right of the official portrait), Roxy is consistently shown on the left, suggesting a symmetrical partnership rather than a lead-and-feature dynamic (GTA Wiki, 2026a). The narrative arc credited to the duo โ a viral early single with local Vice City rapper DWNPLY, five years of struggle, and a current second-chance deal with Only Raw Records โ applies equally to both members, and Roxy's biographical entry on the GTA Wiki simply redirects much of her backstory to the shared Real Dimez profile (GTA Wiki, 2026b).
Roxy's individual identity, while inseparable from the duo, carries distinct signifiers. Her in-game property is listed as a purple Obey saloon โ a styling cue that codes her aesthetic toward flashy, candy-coloured Vice City iconography consistent with the game's neon-Miami visual palette (GTA Wiki, 2026b). Her full name, date of birth, and voice actor remain unannounced as of Rockstar's pre-release disclosures, which is typical for secondary characters in the pre-launch window (GTA Wiki, 2026b). Roxy's appearance in the original December 2023 reveal trailer โ twerking atop a parked sedan in broad daylight while a crowd records on phones โ became one of the most discussed images from the trailer and a key indicator that Rockstar intended to satirise contemporary "thot audit" / influencer rap discourse (Wikipedia, 2026; GTA Wiki, 2026b).
Industry commentary and the GTA Wiki itself draw direct parallels between Real Dimez โ and by extension Roxy โ and the real-world Miami hip-hop duo City Girls (JT and Yung Miami), who similarly rose via social media virality and a breakout feature on a major rapper's hit ("In My Feelings" by Drake, 2018) (GTA Wiki, 2026a). Roxy's role in this analogy mirrors that of one half of such a duo: a Black female rapper whose persona is built simultaneously on lyrical bravado, sexual confidence, and entrepreneurial savvy. The framing of the Real Dimez backstory โ leveraging "shaking down local dealers" into content โ is consistent with Rockstar's tradition of taking real subcultural tropes and pushing them slightly past parody, a pattern Schreier (2022) noted as central to the studio's evolving but still satirical voice in GTA VI.
Although Roxy is not a playable protagonist โ that role belongs exclusively to Lucia Caminos and Jason Duval โ her placement within the Only Raw Records orbit ties Real Dimez to the broader Vice City criminal-entertainment ecosystem orbiting Boobie Ike and Dre'Quan Priest (Wikipedia, 2026). This positions Roxy as part of a likely mission, side-content, or radio-station presence rather than as a major story antagonist or ally, similar to how Rockstar handled in-universe musical acts such as Madd Dogg in San Andreas. Her duo's tagline lyric โ "All my dimes in this club. Meet my twin, make it a dub." โ featured on Rockstar's promotional site reinforces that the pair is intended to function as a single brand within the fiction, with Roxy as the "twin" half of that brand (Rockstar Games, 2025, in GTA Wiki, 2026a).
As one of the few named Black female characters revealed pre-launch for GTA VI, Roxy carries representational weight beyond her relatively small confirmed footprint. She is part of Rockstar's stated effort to depict 2020s American culture โ particularly social media and influencer economies โ with sharper, more grounded characterisation than previous entries (Schreier, 2022; Wikipedia, 2026). Whether Roxy will receive distinct dialogue, a unique voice performance, and individuated story beats separate from Bae-Luxe remains one of the open questions awaiting the game's 19 November 2026 release.
GTA Wiki (2026a) Real Dimez. Available at: https://gta.fandom.com/wiki/Real_Dimez (Accessed: 14 May 2026).
GTA Wiki (2026b) Roxy. Available at: https://gta.fandom.com/wiki/Roxy (Accessed: 14 May 2026).
Rockstar Games (2025) Real Dimez โ Grand Theft Auto VI Official Website. Available at: https://www.rockstargames.com/VI/dimez (Accessed: 14 May 2026).
Schreier, J. (2022) 'Grand Theft Auto 6 Will Have Playable Female Protagonist for the First Time', Bloomberg, 28 July. Available at: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-07-28/grand-theft-auto-6-to-include-female-playable-character (Accessed: 14 May 2026).
Wikipedia (2026) Grand Theft Auto VI. Available at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Theft_Auto_VI (Accessed: 14 May 2026).