Fans have been expressing excitement over BLACKPINK's upcoming world tour following the release of their second full-length album, "Born Pink." As Lisa has already dropped her solo album, one follower wants to know if the members will perform their solo hits individually.

So, will it happen? By the looks of it, Lisa hints at the possibility of performing her solo hit songs on the upcoming BLACKPINK world tour.

The success of Lisa's solo stint can't be denied. She won the Best K-Pop for "LALISA" at the recent VMA award. Her music video also broke two Guinness World Records and became the most-viewed YouTube music video by a solo artist in 23 hours and the most viewed YouTube music video by a solo K-Pop artist in 24 hours.

With that said, fans wonder if she will be performing her hits "LALISA" and "Money" during their upcoming world tour. In a tweet via Koreaboo, a fan asked Lisa which of her solo songs she would perform, to which she responded she didn't know.

However, the fan couldn't believe her words and said, "lies," to which Lisa admitted it was a lie. Later, she revealed she would probably do both and looked forward to performing "Money" and "LALISA."

In other news, TWICE's Dahyun's claimed that Lisa's song, "LALISA," played as an ad on YouTube during her live broadcast on the Bubble fan chat, per AllKpop. At the time, the track played from her phone.

As she was moving to the beat, she said it was a "YouTube ad" and waited for the skip button to appear to stop the alleged ad. It resulted in a heated discussion between the TWICE fans, ONCE, and BLINKS.

ONCEs used this circumstance to oppose Lisa's achievements as a solo artist, claiming she's using YouTube ads to gain views. As expected, BLINKs came to her defense, stressing the video seen on Dahyun's phone wasn't an ad but an original clip being played as the TWICE member had probably heard it from her channel before.

However, ONCEs continued to attack Lisa, creating false news about her success as a solo artist. The hate comments even grew and spread online, resulting in false slanders. A hashtag that made Dahyun look like the victim, leaving Lisa in a bad light, even trended.

As this also affected YouTube's image, the company broke its silence about it and shared an official statement to defend Lisa and clear its name.

In a tweet on one of its Twitter pages, YouTube explained that only account owners and managers could control ads on their channels. It also clarified that it didn't "allow anything that artificially increases metrics or serve vids to unsuspecting viewers."