Limp Bizkit have delivered a surprise longtime fans weren’t expecting, bringing back one of the deepest cuts in their catalogue while continuing to fuel speculation that an Australian return could be closer than anyone thinks.
During Limp Bizkit‘s June 24 performance at Parkbühne Wuhlheide in Berlin, the nu-metal veterans launched into Stuck, the fan favourite track from their 1997 debut Three Dollar Bill, Y’all. It marked the first full performance of the song in more than a decade.
According to fan footage from the night, frontman Fred Durst briefly stopped the performance after joking with the crowd about whether the song might be too old to bring back (per The PRP). The audience reaction quickly answered that question, with the band restarting and delivering the track in full for the first time since 2014.
Limp Bizkit ‘Stuck’ Live in Berlin
Studio bound this August
The moment arrives as Limp Bizkit continue to ride what may be the strongest wave of popularity in their career, speaking recently to Gear4Music, guitarist Wes Borland revealed the band is preparing to head back into writing sessions this August, adding that he and Durst have been revisiting old riffs and uncovering ideas they’d forgotten existed.
“We’ve got some ammo to go in,” Borland said.
He also opened up on how the band’s songwriting still thrives on unpredictability, mixing prepared ideas with spontaneous jams in the studio, and reflected on the group’s current momentum.
“We’re the biggest we’ve ever been right now,” Borland said.
Good Things 2026
That timing has only added fuel to Australian fan theories.
Last week Blunt explored whether Limp Bizkit could be quietly lining up a return to Good Things Festival this year, after announcing their first ever headline show in Kuala Lumpur on December 9th, just three days after Good Things wraps in Brisbane.

Nothing has been announced by the festival, Destroy All Lines or the band, and there’s still no confirmation an Australian run is happening, but with no obvious scheduling conflicts, previous Good Things history and a routing that appears to fit, the possibility continues to look increasingly realistic.
For now, fans can settle for hearing Stuck live again, and perhaps start keeping December free.

