@LuchaConMacho Be patient Oba will win the rumble, and he will get his moment at WrestleMania Saudi, I actually like they’re taking their time with him
@StrongFreeLovin@YtThumbnails She did her military obligations to The IDF and she left, she’s on record she didn’t like their behavior towards Palestinian’s
See, this is the core problem with a vocal segment of #AEW’s hardcore “sicko” fanbase and it’s likely a big reason why many wrestling fans still struggle to fully embrace AEW.
#AEWDON was a legitimately great show and has earned near-universal praise. But the moment some people try to frame it as some kind of “win” over #WWE, the conversation completely derails.
Comments like “even WWE fans loved it” expose the gatekeeping at play. It also directly contradicts the tired narrative that “WWE fans only watch WWE.” In reality, it proves the opposite: WWE fans are often more open to different styles of pro wrestling and sports entertainment than the AEW diehards who constantly claim otherwise.
Two things can be true at once. Even though, subjectively, I felt #AEWDON was a stronger show than #WrestleMania 42, they really don’t need to be measured against each other because WWE and AEW put out two fundamentally different types of products. AEW putting on a strong show doesn’t need to be framed as competition with WWE, especially when WWE also delivered excellent programming this weekend with #SNME and the #AAAenFox show.
It was simply a great weekend for pro wrestling overall.
I can confidently say that AEW Double or Nothing was the best AEW PPV of the year, and the best pro wrestling show of 2026 and by a wide margin. Just an excellent show from top to bottom #AEWDoN