did you go to school nikka? his job was to kill the nikka
the nikka survived = he didn't do his job
it doesn't matter if he the average joe would've died if he used a nuke or whatever other method. he didn't do his job because the nikka SURVIVED. that negates the notion that his job was done.
he wasn't sent to fill up a nikka with bullets to a point were a random internet forum poster thinks it would be satisfactory to kill the average joe. he was sent to dead that man. he didn't do that.
Preme originally thought they did their job

nikkas laughing about how he was squirming and there was lots of blood
On May 24, 2000, Ragin — who’s in the Federal Witness Protection Program for reasons not related to the Gotti trial — said he received a call from McGriff, who said he had “hurt 50.” McGriff wanted to speak with Ragin, and a meeting was set up in a Brooklyn garage. Ragin told the court McGriff sounded “rushed” on the phone, and when he asked him “what was up,” McGriff told him, “We got him” — a reference to 50 Cent, Ragin later learned.
“He described how he caught him coming out of his grandma’s house,” said Ragin; 50 got in a car, “and they shot him many times at close range. They thought he was dead, because there was lots of blood.”
Ragin said McGriff wasn’t the gunman, but that one of his two underlings, who had ties to the Inc., was. The witness recalled seeing them in the garage during the meeting, scrubbing their hands with rubbing alcohol to remove any traces of gun powder. Ragin then said that, years later, the attempted murder of 50 Cent would serve as fodder for jokes around the Inc. offices.
“They’d joke about the way 50 was squirming [in pain] in his car and putting up his hands to stop the bullets” that kept coming, one after the other, he explained. The year before 50′s shooting, his track “How To Rob …” was a huge radio hit; the song was to appear on 50′s
Power of the Dollar, an album he recorded for Columbia that has never been released. The shooting occurred two months after 50 was stabbed at New York’s Hit Factory recording studio — also something the prosecution tried to show, via text messages they claim were exchanged between Irv Gotti and McGriff, was Inc.-related.
One message, which the prosecution said was authored by Irv, said “F— half a dollar. Me and my n—-s kill for fun. Got that? Murder for fun.”