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Professional wrestling match types
Professional wrestling match types
from Wikipedia

Many types of wrestling matches, sometimes called "gimmick matches" in the jargon of the business, are performed in professional wrestling. Some gimmick matches are more common than others and are often used to advance or conclude a storyline. Throughout professional wrestling's decades-long history, some gimmick matches have spawned many variations of the core concept.

Singles match

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The singles match is the most common of all professional wrestling matches, which involves only two competitors competing for one fall. A victory is obtained by pinfall, submission, knockout, countout, or disqualification. One of the most common variations on the singles match is to restrict the possible means for victory.

Blindfold match

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In a blindfold match, the two participants must wear a blindfold over their eyes for the entire duration of the match. A well-known example of this match is the WrestleMania VII match between Jake "The Snake" Roberts and Rick Martel.

No count-out match

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A no count-out match is a singles match in which both competitors can stay outside of the ring without being counted out. A well-known example is at Vengeance (2003) between Stephanie McMahon and Sable, which Sable won.[1]

Pure wrestling rules match

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A type of match contested in Ring of Honor Wrestling (ROH), usually for the ROH Pure Championship; each wrestler is allowed only three rope breaks; once they are all used, the wrestler cannot use the ropes to escape pins or submissions. Closed fists are illegal, and the first offense (if seen by the official) results in a warning. A second offense results in disqualification.[2]

Special challenge match

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A special challenge match was often used in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) to refer to a singles match in which the champion is not defending the title, so the title doesn't change hands if the champion loses the match. It can be announced by name, as a non-title match or as a singles match. It was also used in a tag team format. World TV Champion Arn Anderson vs. Paul Orndorff at Clash of the Champions XI was one example. Though Orndorff won the match, Anderson remained champion.

Champion vs Champion match

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A champion vs. champion match can also be referenced to a Winner Takes All match, but in some cases each superstars' title is not contested in the match or only one title is on the line. During WWE's second brand extension, this type of match was frequently used at Survivor Series, with both titles not defended, up until 2021, with the champion vs. champion matches being replaced by WarGames. This type of match has now been used at Crown Jewel since 2024, with both the men's and women's world title holders facing each other for a commemorative Crown Jewel Championship.

Bloodsport/Underground match

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This event consists of a unique ruleset compared to a traditional pro wrestling event, in that every match must end in either a knockout or submission. The traditional wrestling ring is replaced by a ring canvas with no ropes or turnbuckles.

GCW Bloodsport

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This event features worked shoot matches in a style that mimics the early days of MMA and catch wrestling. It is common for Bloodsport competitors to have some knowledge in other combat sports and/or MMA, as well as professional wrestling, as these one on one matches often appear stiff and have a feel of classic Shoot-style wrestling fights.[3]

Raw/NXT Underground

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In August 2020 (amid its shift to the ThunderDome studio due to the COVID-19 pandemic), Raw introduced a new segment in its third hour known as Raw Underground. Hosted by Shane McMahon, It was a Fight Club inspired concept taking place in the basement of the WWE Performance Center. The matches were held in a ring with no ropes and a black canvas, and were short work shoot style and could end by knockout, submission or McMahon's call. Raw Underground segments aired from August 3 to September 21, 2020, in 8 episodes of Raw.[4][5]

WWE's NXT brand then adopted the concept beginning on the July 4 episode of NXT between Eddy Thorpe and Damon Kemp. Unlike the Raw matches, these took place in the show's main studio, with the ring ropes being taken down and a black canvas covering the ring.[6] On the December 26, 2023 episode of NXT, Thorpe defeated Dijak in the second NXT Underground match.[7]

The first women's NXT Underground match took place on week 2 of NXT Spring Breakin' (2024), where Lola Vice defeated Natalya.[8]

On NXT Battleground (2024), Vice defeated Shayna Baszler in the second NXT Underground match.[9]

On NXT Deadline (2024), Vice defeated Jaida Parker in the third NXT Underground match.[10]

Battle royale-based variations

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The battle royale is a multi-competitor match type in which wrestlers are eliminated until only one is left. Typical battle royales begin with 20 or more participants all in the ring at the same time, who are then eliminated by being thrown over the top rope and having both feet touch the venue floor.

Battlebowl

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The Battlebowl is a two-ring variation on a battle royale. In these matches, the wrestlers start in one ring and try to throw wrestlers into the second ring, after which they can be eliminated by being thrown out of that ring. The last remaining wrestler in the first ring can rest until only one wrestler is left in the second ring, after which they fight in both rings until one is eliminated and a winner is declared, in similar fashion to a double elimination tournament. This was held by World Championship Wrestling at the 1991 Starrcade event, but future Battlebowl matches were contested under normal battle royale rules.

Battle Zone

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The battle zone features any number of men in a one-ring, over-the-top-rope elimination. A typical battle royale, except this one features tables covered with barbed wire, thumbtacks, and light bulbs on the outside of the ring, which may catch wrestlers as they are thrown out of the ring.

Bunkhouse Stampede

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The National Wrestling Alliance's (NWA) Bunkhouse Stampede involved wrestlers wearing what was described as "bunkhouse gear"—cowboy boots, jeans, T-shirts—instead of their normal wrestling tights and not only allowed but encouraged the bringing of weapons. In 1988 the NWA named a pay-per-view after the Bunkhouse Stampede, headlined by a Bunkhouse Stampede match held inside a cage.[11] Recently, the match has been revitalized by Ricky Morton of the Rock n' Roll Express at his wrestling academy in Chuckey, Tennessee.

Hardcore battle royale

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A battle royale with hardcore rules (no disqualifications and no count-outs) involving several competitors in the ring at the same time. The match could last for either 15 or 20 minutes. All participants are not eliminated by being thrown out of the ring and both feet touching the floor. Pinning or forcing to submit whoever was current Hardcore champion would result in the victorious participant becoming the interim champion. Whoever the person held the title at end of the time limit would be declared the winner of the match and the official champion. The most famous example is the Hardcore Title Battle Royal from WWF's WrestleMania 2000.

Last Blood battle royale

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A last blood battle royale is essentially a multi-competitor First Blood match. All competitors start at the same time and wrestlers are eliminated when they start bleeding. The winner is the last wrestler in the match not bleeding. This match was held in the Tri-State Wrestling Association, a predecessor to Extreme Championship Wrestling.[12]

Reverse battle royale

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Generally used in TNA/Impact Wrestling, a reverse battle royale begins with wrestlers surrounding the ring instead of inside it. At the start of the match they battle for half of them to get into the ring, at which point a standard last person standing wins the battle royale.

The Cage Reverse Battle Royale is another TNA variation of this match type. This actually has three stages; It begins the first stage as an inside-out battle royale with 15 or more wrestlers involved. The first seven to enter the ring over the top cage will advance to the second stage which is a gauntlet match. When it gets down to the final stage, only two wrestlers will battle in a singles match which is decided by pinfall or submission.[13]

Semi-final battle royale

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A semi-final battle royale consists of a battle royale where when a specific number of wrestlers are remaining, the match ends, and those that remain are placed in a standard wrestling match for the prize at stake. An example of this occurred on a January 2024 episode of NXT, where 20 women competed in a battle royal that became a Fatal 4-Way once there were four competitors remaining.

In All Elite Wrestling (AEW), it is known as a Dynamite Dozen Battle Royale, as twelve competitors compete until it is reduced to two, and there is a subsequent episode where the final two compete, in this case, "AEW Dynamite Diamond Ring".[14][15]

In New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW), the 2021 New Japan Rumble at Wrestle Kingdom 15 was conducted as a semi-final battle royale. Chase Owens, Bad Luck Fale, Tetsuya Bushi, and Toru Yano were the final four that competed in a championship match the next day.

Tag Team battle royale

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The tag team battle royale consist of designated tag teams of wrestlers with two members on the team. This match uses the normal battle royale rules, teams may be eliminated when either one or both partners are thrown over the top rope with both feet touching the floor. This match is conducted similarly to a battle royale but in these cases, both wrestlers are considered active at the same time and there are no tags using the tornado tag team stipulation.

This variation of the tag team battle royale was used during the 2011 WWE Draft on April 25, 2011; where the wrestler's team has to eliminate all members of the opposing team, much like an elimination tag team match where the losing wrestler of a team, who just got thrown over the ring ropes with both feet touching the floor, must return to their locker room. The team winner receives a #1 draft pick for their respective brand. Another notable version of this match was used at the WrestleMania XV as well.

World War 3

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Created by WCW in 1995, the World War 3 battle royale involved a three-ring setup and 60 competitors; 20 wrestlers started in each of the three rings, in which they would wrestle under regular battle royale rules. Once there were 30 competitors remaining (except in 1997, where the number was 20), all competitors would enter the center ring and continue under regular rules until only one wrestler was left standing.

Cinematic match

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A cinematic match is not technically a match type itself, but rather, it is a term used to refer to matches that are produced with various cinematic techniques. The rules vary from match to match, but generally have a basis in hardcore wrestling. Unlike a normal wrestling match, which is done in one take and typically in front of a live audience, cinematic matches are shot over several hours with various scenes filmed, similar to filmmaking, with higher-budget production involved. The final product (the complete match) generally lasts from 20 to 40 minutes and airs at a later time, typically for a pay-per-view event. They are also usually filmed on-location or at a custom built set.[16][17][18]

On October 4, 1987, Antonio Inoki defeated Masa Saito in a Ganryū-jima Island Death Match in a shoreside ring with no referee which lasted for two hours. Inoki billed the match to pay homage to the island's famous duel between Miyamoto Musashi and Sasaki Kojirō. The match was captured by a multi camera setup by a ground crew and from the air via helicopter. The action mostly took place in the ring and only occasionally spilling out to the area around it. As the match due on into the evening, touches were placed in order to illuminate the surrounding area. Inoki would defeat Saito with a sleeper hold. Despite the match title having "deathmatch" in the name, it was more of a submission based match. This match is considered to be the first ever cinematic match.[19]

While not considered a cinematic match at the time, the Hollywood Backlot Brawl between Roddy Piper and Goldust at WrestleMania XII in 1996 is considered an early cinematic match by the World Wrestling Federation (now WWE), as it used techniques now featured in cinematic matches. Unlike future cinematic matches (which typically air during one segment), the match aired during several segments in between matches inside the ring, and featured both pre-taped segments outside the Arrowhead Pond of the two fighting as well as Piper "chasing" Goldust's solid gold Cadillac in a white Ford Bronco in an obvious reference to the then-ongoing O. J. Simpson murder case. (Vince McMahon mentioned on commentary without completely breaking kayfabe that the "footage looked awfully familiar"; in reality, repurposed footage of Simpson's infamous Bronco chase was actually used as part of the match.) The match eventually ended in the ring live, when Piper stripped Goldust down to women's lingerie and kissed him as part of "making him a man".[20] WrestleMania XII featured a second cinematic match between "The Huckster" and "Nacho Man".

At SummerSlam 1996, The Undertaker faced Mankind in a "Boiler Room Brawl" that was largely pre-taped, incorporating props and unorthodox camera angles.

In 2016, Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA, now Impact Wrestling) held a match entitled the "Final Deletion" between brothers Matt Hardy and Jeff Hardy for the July 5 episode of Impact Wrestling, which was filmed at Matt Hardy's compound. It was a hardcore wrestling match with falls count anywhere.[21] The sequel was a brawl between The Broken Hardys and Decay titled "Delete or Decay".[22] The Broken Hardys and Decay continued their feud at Bound for Glory, where Decay lost their TNA World Tag Team Championship to The Hardys in "The Great War". The Hardys issued an open tag team invitational at their compound on the December 15 episode of Impact Wrestling, titled Total Nonstop Deletion. The main event was the "Tag Team Apocalypto" where The Hardys last defeated Decay.[23]

Although not contested as a match, WWE followed this up shortly after and filmed a cinematic-style brawl between The New Day (Big E, Kofi Kingston, and Xavier Woods) and The Wyatt Family (Bray Wyatt, Erick Rowan, and Braun Strowman) that was held at The Wyatt Family Compound and shown on the July 11, 2016 episode of WWE Raw.[24] WWE then taped their own cinematic match for their 2017 pay-per-view Payback, called a House of Horrors match between Randy Orton and Bray Wyatt. Similar to the "Final Deletion" match in TNA, this one was held at an abandoned house, but instead of falls count anywhere, this match had to end in the ring in the arena that the event was held in (the House of Horrors scenes were pre-taped, while the in-ring portion was live).[25] The next cinematic match would occur on the March 19, 2018 episode of Raw, which featured Matt Hardy, who had returned to WWE and became "Woken" Matt Hardy, against Bray Wyatt and was called the "Ultimate Deletion;" this was just like the "Final Deletion," including being held at Matt's compound.[26]

Cinematic matches became more frequent in 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic; the pandemic began affecting the professional wrestling industry in March that year, forcing promotions to hold events behind closed doors. WWE would hold several cinematic matches at their pay-per-views between March and August, being highly praised for the two that occurred at WrestleMania 36; a Boneyard match between The Undertaker and AJ Styles, which was a Buried Alive match held at a custom built cemetery set in the Orlando area,[27][16] and a Firefly Fun House match between John Cena and "The Fiend" Bray Wyatt. (Although the match ended with The Fiend pinning Cena in a ring, the match itself was a dream-like sequence of Cena's career, showing his perceived character flaws; the various segments were filmed at WWE's Titan Towers headquarters in Stamford, Connecticut).[28][29] Following this, cinematic matches occurred at Money in the Bank in May, which was the event's eponymous ladder matches that occurred at WWE's headquarters,[30] a Backlot Brawl between Adam Cole and Velveteen Dream in the parking lot of Full Sail University at NXT TakeOver: In Your House in June,[31] a cinematically produced singles match between Edge and Randy Orton at Backlash (billed as "The Greatest Wrestling Match Ever") also in June,[32] and a Wyatt Swamp Fight between Bray Wyatt and Braun Strowman at The Horror Show at Extreme Rules in July.[33] Following the introduction of the WWE ThunderDome and Capitol Wrestling Center (CWC) staging arenas in August and October, respectively, the use of cinematic matches was greatly reduced, as these new staging arenas allowed fans to attend the events virtually. To go with the Halloween-theme at NXT: Halloween Havoc in October, a Haunted House of Terrors match was held between Dexter Lumis and Cameron Grimes, which was similar to the House of Horrors match from Payback 2017.[34] Matches involving Randy Orton, "The Fiend" Bray Wyatt, and Alexa Bliss have also used cinematic techniques, such as the Firefly Inferno match between Orton and The Fiend at TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs in December, where Orton set The Fiend's entire body on fire,[35] and an intergender match between Orton and Bliss at Fastlane in March 2021, where Bliss used supernatural powers.[36] Since the resumption of live touring in July 2021, WWE ceased producing cinematic matches.

AEW also incorporated cinematic matches during pandemic restrictions in 2020 and 2021, most notably the Stadium Stampede match at Double or Nothing 2020, which was a 5v5 empty arena match in the TIAA Bank Field stadium.[37][17] During that period, AEW featured at least one cinematic match at each of their PPVs: a "Tooth and Nail match" at All Out 2020 between Dr. Britt Baker, D.M.D. and Big Swole at Baker's real-life dental office,[38] a match entitled "The Elite Deletion" at Full Gear 2020, featuring Matt Hardy against Sammy Guevara and similar to the other "Deletion" matches involving Hardy,[18] and a tag team street fight pitting Darby Allin and Sting against Team Taz (Brian Cage and Ricky Starks) at Revolution 2021, which was held at an abandoned warehouse somewhere in Atlanta, Georgia.[39] At Double or Nothing 2021 the Stadium Stampede match was a hybrid cinematic match with the first half recorded at TIAA Bank Field, then concluding live at the adjacent Daily's Place. The audience in attendance watched the first half of the match on video screens before the action spilled into the amphitheater. This would be AEW's final cinematic match produced before the company resumed live touring in July that year.

Impact Wrestling would also return to producing cinematic matches in 2021 when Ethan Page wrestled his alter ego "The Karate Man" at Hard to Kill in a Mortal Kombat-style cinematic match that saw The Karate Man "kill" Page in what would be Page's last appearance with Impact before leaving for AEW.

Container-based variations

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Some matches have a container stationed in or near the ring, with the object of the match being to trap the opposing wrestler in it. All of these matches are fought under hardcore rules, and many of these matches take the name of the container, such as Ambulance match and the Casket match. A similar type of match aims to restrain opposing wrestlers somehow, and the match often takes the name of the restraining device – for example, the Stretcher. None of these matches can end in a pinfall, submission, countout, or disqualification.

Common containers used for these matches are caskets (connected to The Undertaker's Deadman persona, either using a typical coffin or a double-deep, double-wide casket, sometimes specially designed for specific opponents The Undertaker takes on), ambulances, dumpsters, hearses (known as a "Last Ride match", also connected to The Undertaker gimmick), and stretchers.

Ambulance match

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An Ambulance match is fought under hardcore rules, no pinfalls, no submissions, no disqualifications, no countouts and the only way to win is for one wrestler to force their opponent into the back of an ambulance and close the door. The first ambulance match took place at Survivor Series 2003 where Kane defeated Shane McMahon. The second one took place at Elimination Chamber (2012) which also involved Kane as one of the competitors. His opponent was John Cena, who won the match, where an additional rule was added in that the ambulance has to leave to win. The third Ambulance match was part of Three Stages of Hell match at WWE Payback on June 16, 2013, in Rosemont, Illinois between John Cena and Ryback for the WWE Championship. The most recent was at NXT Halloween Havoc in October 2024, between Ridge Holland and Andre Chase. The famous 2017 Lucha Underground "Hell of War" bout between Dante Fox (A.R. Fox) and Killshot (Swerve Strickland) was that promotion's only ambulance match. Stretcher matches in All Elite Wrestling also involve ambulance match rules, where the objective is to place your opponent onto a stretcher, roll the stretcher into the back of an ambulance, and close both doors to gain the victory.

Buried alive match

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A buried alive match is one in which the object is for one wrestler to throw his opponent into a grave dug out of a large mound of soil placed outside the ring. Once in the grave, the wrestler must bury his opponent in dirt and soil to the referee's discretion.[40] Equipment ranging from shovels and wheelbarrows to bulldozers are often made available to completely bury the opponent. The Buried Alive match is one of three of The Undertaker's signature matches (the Casket and Last Ride matches being the others).

A cinematic Buried Alive match was held between The Undertaker and AJ Styles for WrestleMania 36, referred to as a "Boneyard match" . The match took place outdoors in a cemetery-like setting near an abandoned warehouse rather than in a traditional ring.[41][42]

Body Bag match

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A Body Bag match is a no-disqualification match where the objective is for a wrestler to put an opposing wrestler in a body bag situated in the middle of the ring for the victory. This was one of The Undertaker’s early gimmick matches; he had one of these matches in 1991 against The Ultimate Warrior at the Madison Square Garden.

Casket match

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The Undertaker in a casket match against CM Punk

The casket match (also known as the Coffin match) has a casket near the ring, with the objective of the match being to trap the opposing wrestler inside.[43] The casket match began its life as a one-off coffin match in the 1970s fought between Dusty Rhodes and Ivan Koloff.[44][45][46] The coffin match was revived as one of The Undertaker's signature matches and first appeared on television at the Survivor Series as the coffin match against Kamala. Prior to that, at a house show on July 14, 1991, the Ultimate Warrior defeated the Undertaker in a casket match in St. Louis, Missouri at Busch Stadium. There have been 17 casket matches, 11 of which have been won by The Undertaker. The 20th edition was held at Halloween Havoc and the first following the retirement of The Undertaker involving Grayson Waller vs. Apollo Crews in which Crews won. WWE held its first women's casket match on the October 29, 2024 episode of NXT involving Tatum Paxley and Wendy Choo in which Paxley won.[47]

In addition to WWE, the casket match has been adopted for use in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, All Elite Wrestling, and Lucha Underground, with Lucha Underground denominating it as the Grave Consequences (subsequently Graver Consequences) match. Another toned-down version of the Casket Match is when a victory is not obtained by placing the opponent in the coffin but by pinfall or submission. However, the defeated wrestler is then placed into the coffin.

Last Rites match

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The Last Rites match is a Total Nonstop Action Wrestling variation where a casket is lowered into the center of the ring, and the objective is to get your opponent into the casket, which is raised to the ceiling following the match. The first Last Rites match was done between Sting and Abyss. Vince Russo came up with this match; it was perceived to be a disaster because neither wrestler could work properly due to the placement of the casket in the center of the ring, which limited and obstructed their workspace. The match was such a failure that during the match, the enraged crowd screamed "Fire Russo!" so loudly that the commentators had to yell into their microphones to be heard.

In 2023, TNA Wrestling brought back the Last Rites match, but modified it to be more of a basic casket match.[48]

Dumpster match

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A dumpster match is a no-disqualification, no-submission, no-countout, no-fall hardcore match in which the only objective to win is by forcing your opponent into a dumpster and closing the lid. The first match occurred was at WrestleMania XIV, pitting The New Age Outlaws against Cactus Jack and Chainsaw Charlie.

The most recent Dumpster match taking place, was on the October 4th, 2024 episode of Smackdown, in which Michin powerbombed Chelsea Green through a table and into a Dumpster.

Last Ride match

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A Last Ride match is a hardcore match similar to an Ambulance match, in which the victory condition is for one wrestler to force their opponent into the back of a hearse, close the door, and drive it out of the arena. The first match of this type occurred at No Mercy when Undertaker challenged John "Bradshaw" Layfield for the WWE Championship, although a match was held previously with similar stipulations. The second match of this type occurred at Armageddon when The Undertaker challenged Mr. Kennedy and defeated him. A variation of this match was used at NXT Spring Breakin', called a Trunk match contested between Tony D'Angelo and Channing "Stacks" Lorenzo, who were the victors; and Pretty Deadly (Kit Wilson and Elton Prince).

Enclosure-based variations

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Some matches take place in specific enclosed environments. Although the majority of these enclosures are set up either in or around the ring, some of them are placed apart from it. In all cases, the structure itself is considered "in play" and most enclosure-based matches are decided by pinfall or submission unless specific other stipulations are made beforehand.

Steel cage match

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A steel cage match at a 2013 Impact Wrestling event

Steel cages are one of the oldest form of enclosures used in professional wrestling. The earliest known "steel cage matches" of any kind took place on January 9, 1936, in Caruthersville, Missouri, in a card that included two such "chicken wire fence" matches between Jez and Otto Ludwig, and Joe Dillman vs. Charles Sinkey.[49] These matches took place in a ring surrounded by chicken wire, to keep the athletes inside, and prevent any potential interference.[50] They have evolved a great deal over time, changing from chicken wire[51] to steel bars to chain-link fencing (the latter is now the standard, due to it being cheaper to manufacture, lighter to transport, and more flexible and thus safer for the wrestlers).

A steel cage match is a match fought within a cage formed by placing sheets of mesh metal around, in, or against the edges of the wrestling ring. The most common way of winning is by simply escaping the cage, either over the top of the cage wall and having both feet touch the arena floor, or by escaping through the cage door with both feet touching the arena floor. The other occasional ways to win a steel cage match are by pinfall or by submission.

It is also possible to have one wrestler attempting to escape over the top of the cage wall while another tries to escape through the cage door.[52] In Mexico, steel cage matches are won by just climbing to the top of the cage wall. In TNA, the matches were previously branded Six Sides of Steel as the cage surrounded their six-sided ring.

Bungee Match

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A Bungee Match is a type of match in which two competitors are enclosed in a steel cage with on side open, each are wearing a secure harness attached to a bungee cord and are suspended high into the air to have a wrestling match. The winner is the wrestler who throws their opponent out of the cage forcing the opponent to swing from the cord. The match was held in Global Wrestling Federation between Chaz Taylor and Steven Dane on August 14, 1992 which Dane was thrown out of the cage. This match type was never attempted again likely due to the low match quality (as both Dane and Taylor were enclosed in a small cage with little room to move), poor camera work with only camera inside the cage not functioning and taking place at night offering low visibility for the audience and camera crew below, and the overall danger of the match itself.

Weaponized Steel Cage Match

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While steel cage matches aren't normally accompanied by weapons for singles matches, a hardcore variation does allow for weapons to be used. In 2025, Blake Monroe and Jordynne Grace would have a weaponized steel cage match at No Mercy. Weapons are clipped around the cage and clearly seen, and it can only be decided by pinfall or submission, making the cage shorter than a normal cage.[53]

Asylum match

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The Asylum match is the name given to three different types of matches, involving a chain link cage in the shape of a circle placed in the middle of the ring.

The first type was a match created by Scott Steiner in WCW, held within a small chain link cage in the shape of a circle placed in the middle of the ring. Victory occurred only by submission.

On May 16, 2016, a second type was introduced and scheduled between Dean Ambrose and Chris Jericho at Extreme Rules, a variation to the steel cage match where weapons are suspended above the cage and escaping the cage is not a means of victory, leaving only pinfall or submission.

On August 10, 2019, a third type, which also included a barbed wire steel cage stipulation (a type of match where the steel cage door is locked with chains and a padlock), was introduced after Adam Cole and Johnny Gargano tied one to one after a normal match and a no holds barred match at NXT TakeOver: Toronto (2019) where weapons are connected to the steel cage and barbed wire on the top.

Barbed Wire Steel Cage match

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weaponA barbed wire steel cage match is a match that uses strands of barbed wire in a steel cage match in some capacity, usually around the top of the cage. Simply using barbed wire in an otherwise regular steel cage match does not make the match a barbed wire steel cage match; the barbed wire must be part of the cage's design. This type of match is one where escape from the cage is almost impossible, because in addition to the barbed wire preventing escape over the top of the cage, the cage's door is also locked with chains and a padlock, like a Hell in a Cell match. One particular example was John "Bradshaw" Layfield vs. Big Show at No Way Out 2005 where in addition to the barbed wire there was also razor wire wrapped around the top of the cage in a circular fashion; and another example was Adam Cole vs Johnny Gargano at NXT TakeOver: Toronto 2019 where in addition to the barbed wire and the chain-locked door, various weapons were made available at the top of the cage; this cage however did not have razor wire.[54]

Wire Steel Cage match

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Other variations are the razor wire steel cage match, a similar concept to that of the barbed wire cage match, however the barbed wire is replaced by larger and thicker razor wire and is wrapped around the top, corners, and walls of the cage, and barbed wire razor wire steel cage match is the same as the barbed wire cage match, however the top, corners, and walls of the cage are covered with barbed wire, then also further covered with razor wire. There are also boards in the ring that are covered in razor wire.

Cage of Death match

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The Cage of Death match is a type of steel cage match with various weapons littered in the cage, such as electrified cage walls, cacti, tables, light tubes, glass, thumbtacks, baseball bats, barbed wire and numerous other weapons and objects. This match always features as the main event of CZW's biggest show, Cage of Death. Some of these matches have been done under WarGames style rules with two rings being used.

Chamber match

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In TNA, a Chamber match starts off between two wrestlers (or up to six) fighting inside a chamber. Wrestlers who were not involved in the match surrounded the chamber. About five minutes into the match, the outside wrestlers throw weapons into the chamber. This match only ends when one wrestler knocks out his opponent.

Chamber of Extreme match

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In a Chamber of Extreme match, created by Extreme Canadian Championship Wrestling (ECCW), an 8-feet-high steel cage surrounds the ringside area with the top wrapped in barbed wire and "extreme" weapons scattered around the ring and ringside area. Disqualifications, count-outs and rope-breaks do not apply. The winner is decided by pinfall, submission or being unable to stand up at 10-count.

Chamber of Horrors match

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The Chamber of Horrors match was an enclosed steel cage match between two teams of four men. In the middle of the cage there was a smaller cage with an electric chair connected to a lever. The way to win this match is to put the opponent in the chair and switch the lever on (which was attached to the outer cage and six feet off the ground), so as, in kayfabe, the person is electrocuted. This match was used in WCW only once, with Abdullah the Butcher being electrocuted accidentally by his teammate Cactus Jack after being placed in the chair at the last second by Rick Steiner.

Dixieland match

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A Dixieland match (named for TNA President Dixie Carter, who "invented" the match) is a hybrid steel cage/ladder match. The wrestlers start the match in the ring enclosed in a steel cage. To win the match, a wrestler must first climb out of the cage, then go up the entrance ramp where a championship belt is hung from the ceiling, and finally climb a ladder to retrieve the belt. The first match of this type occurred during the Impact Wrestling: Final Resolution taping on December 3, 2013, as Magnus defeated Jeff Hardy to become TNA World Heavyweight Champion.[55]

Doomsday Cage match

[edit]

Also called a Tower of Doom, the Doomsday Cage is a three-story cage – the middle one split into two rooms – all of which house wrestlers. The object of the match is for a team of wrestlers to fight their way from the top cage to the bottom, where pinfalls and submissions come into play.[56][57] In the later days of WCW, it was referred to as a Triple Decker Cage match, a reference to the match type being used in the finale of the film Ready to Rumble. The most notable match of this type occurred at WCW's Uncensored event in 1996, when Hulk Hogan and Randy Savage fought Ric Flair, Arn Anderson, Meng, The Barbarian, Lex Luger, Kevin Sullivan, Z-Gangsta, and The Ultimate Solution.

Doomsday Chamber of Blood match

[edit]

The Doomsday Chamber of Blood match was created by Abyss. This match is a combination of the Barbed Wire Cage, Six Sides of Steel and Sadistic Madness match types, with the cage having a barbed wire roof on top. This match is won by making your opponent bleed first, then pinning your opponent for the victory. Matt Morgan and Abyss competed in one of these matches at TNA's Lockdown (2009) pay-per-view.

Electrified Cage match

[edit]

The Electrified Cage match is a variation of a steel cage match where the ring is surrounded by an electrified steel cage. The cage can be also used as a weapon. The only way to win is by pinfall or submission. The Lucha en Jaula Electrificada is another variation of the electrified cage match in which the only way to win is by escape. The cage is turned off in a time interval, allowing the participants a chance at escape before it turns back on. This match type is used by the AAA promotion in Mexico.

Elimination Chamber match

[edit]
The original Elimination Chamber structure

The Elimination Chamber (known as No Escape in Germany to avoid a potential brand blunder over references of gas chambers in The Holocaust), which was the result of an idea by Triple H and introduced by Eric Bischoff for WWE in 2002, is a steel cage with a grid-locked, chain-linked enclosure with support bars that surrounds the ring entirely, including creating a steel grated (later padded) floor area on the apron. Inside the cage, at each turnbuckle, is a clear pod in which competitors in the match wait to join the match. As the name implies, this is an elimination-style match, so wrestlers are eliminated one-by-one via pinfall or submission until only one remains.[58]

The original Chamber, used from 2002 to 2016, was cylindrical, and a re-designed chamber introduced in 2017 was cubic, but still used the same materials with the same 4 enclosures.

An Extreme Elimination Chamber took place at the 2006 December to Dismember pay-per-view, where each waiting wrestler was given a weapon. Since 2010, WWE has held an eponymous Elimination Chamber pay-per-view every February, with this match type as one of its marquee matches. At its 2018 edition, the first-ever women's Elimination Chamber match was held, as well as the first seven-man Elimination Chamber match.

Fight Pit match

[edit]

The Fight Pit match is a variation of a cage match where the ring is surrounded by a steel cage rather than ropes and turnbuckles, with a catwalk surrounding the top. The catwalk also has chain-linked fence surrounding the outer edge (originally railings), which the wrestlers can climb up to and jump from. The match also has a no-pinfall stipulation, which means it can only be won by submission or knockout either by making the opponent unable to stand up at a 10-count or via technical knockout, making the match somewhat of a hybrid of a professional wrestling match and a mixed martial arts fight- MMA fights can only be won in those ways. The inaugural fight pit match was held during the May 27, 2020 episode of NXT, between Matt Riddle and Timothy Thatcher (with Kurt Angle as a guest referee).[59] A modified version of the Pit with chain-linked fencing was used at the Extreme Rules premium live event where Matt Riddle and Seth Rollins continued their rivalry (with UFC Hall of Famer Daniel Cormier as a guest referee). The match between Riddle & Rollins was the first ever Fight Pit match in a WWE PPV.

Hell in a Cell match

[edit]
Shane McMahon and Kevin Owens on the outside of the Hell in a Cell structure, as seen in 2017.

The Hell in a Cell match is a specific kind of enclosure match run by WWE inside an enlarged 4-sided cuboid steel cage made from open-weave steel mesh chain-link fencing, which extends beyond the ring apron, leaving a gap between the edge of the ring and the Cell fence. As opposed to a conventional steel cage, the cell fencing continues across the top as a ceiling, hence the name 'Cell'. Unlike a standard cage match, there is no escape clause because after the combatants enter the Cell, the door of the Cell is locked with chains and a padlock from the outside by referees to prevent the combatants from escaping (although it has been fairly common for Hell in a Cell matches to spill out of the cell and even onto the roof of the cage). The match has a no disqualification "anything goes" stipulation, and can only be won via pinfall or submission inside the ring. One exception could be made is Hell in a Cell 2018 and 2019 where the WWE Universal Championship match ended via stoppage.

Because of the "anything goes" rule, this match developed an infamous reputation in its early years. This match usually takes place on pay-per-view shows (there have only been five exceptions: four Cell matches occurred on Raw: two in 1998, one in 2011 (as a dark match), and one in 2021, while the first-ever Cell Match on Smackdown happened on June 18, 2021). Many wrestlers were legitimately injured during these matches (most notably Mick Foley) thanks to the dangerous bumps involved and the chain-link fencing of the Cell. In kayfabe, it is regarded as the most dangerous match in the entire promotion. Jim Ross has referred to the cell itself as "a demonic structure" that is "custom built for injury". There have been 53 Hell in a Cell matches to date, with The Undertaker competing in 14 (with his last at WrestleMania 32), more than any other WWE performer. The first Hell in a Cell match was between The Undertaker and Shawn Michaels at Badd Blood: In Your House in St. Louis in October 1997.

Kennel from Hell match

[edit]

A Kennel from Hell match was held at WWF's Unforgiven pay-per-view in 1999, between Al Snow and The Big Boss Man for the WWF Hardcore Championship. The match was held within a steel cage, but with the Hell in a Cell cage also placed over the steel cage and the ring. The objective of the match was to escape through the door of the outer Hell in a Cell cage first, with the added obstacle of hostile attack dogs that would roam the apron between the two cages. This match was conceived by Vince Russo as part of Snow's short-lived feud with The Big Boss Man—in which he had kidnapped and killed his pet chihuahua Pepper.[60][61][62]

After being unable to obtain trained attack dogs, Russo sought dogs from local owners on short notice. The dogs were playful and friendly towards Russo, and during the match, they were seen urinating, defecating, and trying to mate with one another rather than making any attempt at attacking the wrestlers when they stepped outside the steel cage. The match was deemed by critics to be one of the worst gimmick matches, if not one of the worst matches in WWE history.[60][61][62]

Inferno match

[edit]

In an Inferno match (a type of no-disqualification, no-fall, no-submission, no-countout match), the ring is completely surrounded by flames once both contenders have entered the ring. The only way to win is to set your opponent on fire. Inferno matches usually end on the outside of the ring; this way, paramedics can assist the loser of the match. Due to the potentially graphic or dangerous nature of this type of match, it is very rarely seen in North America. As of December 2020, there have only been six inferno matches in WWE, with almost all of them involving Kane, this being his signature match.[63]

The first Inferno match took place in 1987 at the Juan Pachin Vicens coliseum in Ponce, Puerto Rico, where the ropes were simply soaked with gasoline and lit on fire. This kind of match was also done again in 1992 at FMW in Japan, and was called a Hellfire Deathmatch, which featured barbed wire as the ring ropes which were lit on fire. The match was a total disaster as wrestlers such as Sabu, his uncle The Original Sheik and Atsushi Onita, due to unbearably hot conditions, dashed out of the ring after just a minute. The Sheik was badly burned as a result and went into a coma.[64] The first WWF Inferno Match was between Kane and The Undertaker at Unforgiven (1998) pay-per-view in Greensboro, North Carolina, and it was a safer and much more professional affair where special effects and pyrotechnics experts were brought in from Hollywood to set up and control the fire around the ring. Kane had been thrown out of the ring and the Undertaker had no way of attacking him unless he too went out of the ring. The match ended in the Undertaker's victory. WCW also attempted an Inferno match, known as the Human Torch match, at The Great American Bash in 2000 between Sting and Vampiro.

Another version of the match known as the Firefly Inferno match was held at TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs in 2020, between "The Fiend" Bray Wyatt and Randy Orton; its title referenced Wyatt's "Firefly Fun House" gimmick. In addition to the ring being surrounded by fire, other objects that are placed around the ring are also set on fire.[65]

Another variation of the Inferno match, dubbed a Ring of Fire match, took place at SummerSlam in 2013, when Kane faced Bray Wyatt. While the ring is surrounded by flames just like in a standard Inferno match, the match is decided by pinfall or submission and not by burning your opponent. In addition, the flames prevent others from possibly interfering in the match, as was the case with Luke Harper and Erick Rowan of The Wyatt Family.

Lethal Lockdown match

[edit]

Similar to the WarGames match used in WCW, TNA/Impact Wrestling's Lethal Lockdown consists of a single ring enclosed by a steel cage with two teams facing off with each other. The staggered entry system is identical, but weapons are permitted and are even provided. When all competitors have entered the ring, a roof is lowered onto the top of the cage, with various weapons hanging from it. Victory can be attained by pinfall or submission. This match has become a staple of TNA's Lockdown pay-per-view event, but has also made appearances at other TNA pay-per-views.

Lion's Den match

[edit]

The Lion's Den match is a steel cage match where a wrestler must knock out their opponent unconscious or make them submit inside an octagonal cage. The rules are made to mimic mixed martial arts matches, with the octagonal cage meant to mimic the cage used by the Ultimate Fighting Championship. This was Ken Shamrock's specialty match; two examples were at the 1998 and 1999 editions of SummerSlam, where Shamrock respectively fought Owen Hart and Steve Blackman.

Punjabi Prison match

[edit]
The Punjabi Prison at No Mercy in 2007

The Punjabi Prison match, named after the Punjab state that The Great Khali (the match's founder) is billed from, consists of two large steel-reinforced bamboo cages. The first is four sided and stands 16 feet (4.8 m) tall, while the second has eight sides and stands 20 feet (6 m) and surrounds the first.[66]

The inner cage has a four-foot (1.2 m) by four-foot door on each of its sides, with a referee standing by to open them at a wrestler's request. Each door may only be opened once and is only allowed to remain open for sixty seconds, after which it is padlocked. Should all four doors end up locked before the wrestlers escape, they are forced to climb out over the top, where the bamboo is fashioned into spikes. Between the two cages are sometimes placed two tables, on which are weapons (both "medieval" and "bamboo" variations of standard wrestling weapons). There are also extended straps at the corners of the cage which can be used to choke the opponent. Once a wrestler has escaped the first cage, he must climb over and out of the second cage, with the first wrestler having both of their feet touch the arena floor becoming the winner of the match.[67][68]

The match was revived with modifications in 2017 as the main event of Battleground, which featured the Indian-Canadian Jinder Mahal facing Randy Orton for the WWE Championship; The Great Khali made a surprise run-in to assist Mahal.[69]

Rage in a Cage match

[edit]

The Rage in a Cage match is held in an oval-shaped steel cage. It is typically used as the arena for the blowoff match of a feud and can be used for a tag team or singles match. In this match, wins are usually by pinfall or submission. Alternatively, Rage in a Cage may refer to the match that held in a Florida independent organization such as NWA Florida in which 20 or more wrestlers take part in a battle royale inside the oval-shaped steel cage. Each wrestler is encouraged to bring different weapons to the match, and a wrestler is eliminated by being thrown through the cage door. The last man standing wins.

Scramble Cage match

[edit]

The Scramble Cage match was contested exclusively in Ring of Honor (ROH), in which the ring is surrounded by a steel cage with four wooden platforms at the corners of the cage to make the "high risk" wrestling moves. All participants are allowed to be inside and outside the cage at any time. The Scramble Cage Melee match is an elimination cage match held in a cage similar to the one used in the Scramble Cage match, with wooden platforms on the top corners. There are no pinfalls or submissions; wrestlers are eliminated only by aerial moves performed from the platforms. The first and only match took place at Ring of Honor (ROH) on August 24, 2004. The competitors in this match were Jack Evans, Trent Acid, H. C. Loc, Tony Devito, Dan Maff, B. J. Whitmer, Oman Turtuga, Diablo Santiago, Fast Eddie, Altar Boy Luke, Kevin Dunn and Kirby Marcos.

Thundercage

[edit]
AAA's Domo de la Muerte

WCW's Thundercage, based on the film Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, is a large domed structure of steel bars engulfing the ring. Although it does not have a top, the sides curve in to prevent escape.

Mexico's AAA promotion tweaked the concept with the Domo de la Muerte ("Dome of Death"), which uses a similar cage but only allows victory by escaping through a hole at the top center. This variation is also used in TNA, where it was called the TerrorDome, or more recently the Steel Asylum. In AAA it is typically used for multi-man "luchas de apuestas" (bet matches), with the last man standing in the cage losing his mask or hair.

The Thunderdome is a variation on the Thundercage, with the area near the top of the cage electrified. The only way for a wrestler to win the Thunderdome match is to have their opponents' "terminator" (usually a manager who stands outside of the ring) throw in the towel to stop the match. In another variation of this match, each pinned competitor in the match is handcuffed to the cage.[70] The last man left is given a key to unlock his teammates to attack the other team, who are still handcuffed.[70] Ironically, the ThunderDome name was used for WWE's bio-secure bubble during the pandemic between 2020 and 2021.

Triple Cage match

[edit]

Triple cage matches have been held by WCW and its predecessor, Jim Crockett Promotions, in which two smaller cages are stacked on top of the cage enclosing the ring.

At The Great American Bash in 1988, a "Tower of Doom" match was held, in which two teams attempted to make their way from the uppermost cage to the bottom, with victory achieved when all five members of a team escaped a door there. The cages were cut off from each other, with doors controlled from outside by referees, who only opened them for two-minute intervals.

At Uncensored in 1996, a "Doomsday Cage Match" was held where Hulk Hogan and Randy Savage faced off against the Alliance to End Hulkamania, which consisted of Ric Flair, Arn Anderson, Lex Luger, The Taskmaster, Meng, The Barbarian, The Ultimate Solution and Z-Gangsta. Hogan and Savage had to start at the top of the three tiered structure, and on each level there were members of the Alliance waiting for them. The structure featured scaffolding with steps on it to enable the wrestlers to traverse it, with the object being to make it to the bottom cage where the ring was and score a fall to win.

A triple cage match at Slamboree in 2000 was held between David Arquette, Diamond Dallas Page, and Jeff Jarrett; it was conducted similarly to a ladder match, with the objective being for the competitors to make their way to the roof of the third cage, and retrieve the championship belt. The roof of the first cage—which extended beyond the apron–had a trapdoor leading to the second cage, which contained weapons. The competitors then had to exit through a side door in the second cage, and climb the structure to reach the belt above the third cage. The third cage contained guitars, used for Jarrett's signature move.

The same year, WCW conducted another match using the same structure, "WarGames 2000: Russo's Revenge", on an episode of WCW Monday Nitro. Despite sharing its name with WCW's well-known WarGames match, its only similarity was its use of teams. A belt was placed inside the uppermost cage, with the first team to have a member escape from the bottom cage with the belt being declared the winner.

WarGames match

[edit]

Sometimes suffixed with the tagline "The Match Beyond," the WarGames match features two rings surrounded by an enclosed steel cage (usually with a roof), with two teams (or sometimes three) of four or five wrestlers facing one another. After a portion of the match fought one-on-one, members of the two teams begin to alternate entering the other ring at staggered intervals (with the order decided by a coin toss); once both teams' members have all entered the ring, the first team to score submission or surrender over a member of the opposing team is declared the winner. Depending on the rules used, a team may also win by scoring a knockout or pinfall.

This match was made famous by Jim Crockett Promotions' annual Great American Bash, and later WCW's Wrestle War, before becoming a tradition at their annual Fall Brawl pay-per-view event from 1993 to 1998. At Fall Brawl 1998, a three-team WarGames match was held, with pinfalls counting. An in name only revamp of WarGames, "WarGames 2000", was held on an episode of WCW Monday Nitro.

ECW held its own version of WarGames known as an "Ultimate Jeopardy steel cage match" (typically as part of an eponymous event), with weapons available, pinfalls counting, and the losing team receiving a stipulation as a penalty. In 2017, WWE's NXT brand began to hold a live event known as NXT TakeOver: WarGames, which feature a version of the WarGames match as their signature event. The NXT version of WarGames does not use a roofed cage, and pinfalls count.[71][72] In 2022, the match moved to WWE's main roster PPV Survivor Series.[73]

In 2021, AEW held a WarGames match between The Pinnacle and The Inner Circle as a "Blood and Guts match", during an eponymous special episode of its weekly series Dynamite. AEW adopted the WarGames rules that were used by WCW, with a roofed cage and no pinfalls.[71][72]

Xscape match

[edit]

The Xscape match has been held by TNA/Impact Wrestling as one of the signature matches of its Lockdown pay-per-view, which exclusively features cage matches. The match begins with four to eight competitors, who are eliminated by either pinfall or submission; eliminated wrestlers leave the cage through a door. When only two competitors remain, the first to escape the cage by climbing out and reaching the floor is declared the winner.

Flag match

[edit]

The flag match is essentially the professional wrestling version of capture the flag. For the match two flags are placed on opposite turnbuckles, each representing a specific wrestler or team of wrestlers and the objective of the match is to retrieve the opponent's flag and raise it while defending the flag in the wrestler's corner.[74] If the referee is knocked down and cannot acknowledge the win, the defender can put the flag back in its place, thus resetting the match.[75]

Anthem match

[edit]

An Anthem match is a variation of a flag match with the added stipulation that the national anthem of the winning wrestler's or team's home country will be played in the arena after the match, similarly to a medal ceremony. This can be used to promote patriotism for the face wrestler or heat for the heel wrestler.

Another variation of the Flag match can be a regular Interpromotion match between two wrestlers, each usually representing a different wrestling promotion, fighting for the right to raise the flag of their respected promotion. This variation was only used at ECW's November to Remember 1997 in a match between Rob Van Dam (representing WWE) vs. Tommy Dreamer (representing ECW) which ended in a no-contest.

Handicap match

[edit]

A handicap match is any match pitting one wrestler or team of wrestlers against a team of wrestlers with numerical superiority, such as two against one or three against two. Normally the babyfaces are outnumbered with the heels having more members on their team to provide an unfair advantage.[76] In some two-on-one handicap matches, the team with superior numbers act under tag team rules, with one person in the ring at a time. In others, such as tornado tag team handicap matches, all competitors are in the ring at the same time.[77] In the 1980s and 1990s, handicap matches were used in preliminary matches involving large star wrestlers (usually heels), such as King Kong Bundy, Big Van Vader or Yokozuna, who – as a way to get a monster heel persona/gimmick over with the crowd – would completely dominate their opponents despite the latter's superiority in numbers.

Hardcore-based variations

[edit]

Hardcore wrestling, the most violent and bloody type of professional wrestling, is a subset in which some or all of the traditional rules do not apply. Most often this simply means there are no-disqualifications, which itself eliminates countouts, sometimes allowing decisions to take place anywhere. Most hardcore matches or deathmatches often have a combination of match types within one, and elaborate titles are often used, particularly in Japanese wrestling promotions. (example: "Barbed Wire Rope, Exploding Barbed Wire Boards and Exploding Ring Time Bomb Deathmatch")

Some promotions, such as Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling, the International Wrestling Association of Japan, International Wrestling Syndicate, Extreme Championship Wrestling, Big Japan Pro Wrestling, and Combat Zone Wrestling, have specialized in hardcore matches, with "standard" non-hardcore matches being the exception.

Hardcore match

[edit]

A standard hardcore match, also known as a Devil's Playground match, a Belfast Brawl match or a Guerrilla Warfare match is a no-disqualification, no-countout, falls count anywhere, one-fall match where the only rule (unless specifically noted) is to achieve a fall by pinning the opponent for a 3-count or making them submit. Otherwise, anything goes: any weapon can be used, any amount of wrestlers who are not booked in the match can be involved, either wrestler booked in the match can be pinned anywhere and any move can be used (except moves banned by the promotion booking the match before-hand). Hardcore matches came to prominence in Japan in the 1970s, and then in the United States in the 1990s in promotions like ECW and later WWE. Blunt objects such as steel chairs, wooden event tables, ladders, wrestling ring stairs, kendo sticks, baseball bats, flour, metal cylindrical trashcans, trashcan lids and road signs are often featured in hardcore matches.

Other common euphemisms for hardcore matches are the No Holds Barred match (which suggests wrestlers are allowed to use any illegal moves), Street Fight (which suggests wrestlers are to dress in normal street clothes), and World Championship Wrestling used the term Raven's rules match for hardcore matches involving the wrestler Raven. They also created their own specific brand of hardcore match, for which bouts were to begin backstage rather than in the ring.[78]

Unsanctioned match

[edit]

A variant of a hardcore match is a non-sanctioned match or unsanctioned match. In kayfabe, the match is not officially "recognised" by the promotion, and is sometimes used when a wrestler is "injured" (at the hands of another wrestler) and wants revenge but cannot be "medically cleared", thus he agrees to a non-sanctioned match where "the promotion is not held liable" for any injuries incurred during the match. A lights out match is an intensified variant of the unsanctioned match, most notably utilised by All Elite Wrestling. In these cases, the match is placed at the end of a card, and in-storyline, the preceding match is instead treated as the "main event" and before the match starts, the house lights of the venue will momentarily flash to signify the "official" end of the show.

Deathmatch

[edit]

A more extreme version of a hardcore match, a deathmatch is even more violent and bloody. In addition to the blunt weapons and thumbtacks familiar to hardcore matches, deathmatches often include more dangerous elements, such as bricks, nails, staple guns, explosives, barbed wire, light tubes, glass shards, gardening tools (from trowels to weed whackers), and even fire produced from lighter fluid or gasoline. Other euphemisms for deathmatch include extreme rules match, ultraviolent rules match (hardcore rules matches exclusively in CZW), and HardKore X-Treme match.

Barbed Wire Ring Rope match

[edit]
Joey Kings (in white top, right) dropkicks Warhed into the barbed wire ropes

A barbed wire ring rope match or no rope barbed wire match is a hardcore match where the ring ropes are replaced with barbed wire. There are four known ways to prop up barbed wire in place of ring ropes: with three strands of barbed wire run from turnbuckle to turnbuckle; with five strands of wire tied to form an "X"; "spider net", where the ring ropes are not replaced and barbed wire is wrapped up and down the ropes to create a wall of barbed wire, and finally barbed wire wrapped in the "X" fashion- that has been electrified or rigged with explosives. These types of matches were made popular in the late 1970s and early 1980s by American territory wrestling promotions, as well as Japanese promotions during the 1990s. These types of matches often included other stipulations and weapons in them.[79]

Barbed Wire Massacre

[edit]

A Barbed Wire Massacre is a type of barbed wire rope match where the barbed wire ropes are set up in the "X" fashion and the use of additional items that have barbed wire attached to or wrapped around them are made available, such as plywood, baseball bats, steel folding chairs and other weapons. This match originated in TNA in 2005. Since then, there have been six such matches, the most recent in 2025. However, unlike the first three Barbed Wire Massacre matches, the fourth did not replace the ring ropes. The Japanese Barbed Wire Massacre is a variation in which there are wooden boards covered with barbed wire, and a small charge goes off when someone lands on one.

Bath House Deathmatch

[edit]

The Bath House Deathmatch was believed to have been started by IWA Japan in 1995. The wrestlers compete in the pool of a public bathhouse, with even naked or toweled women in this bath house during this match. Besides regular wrestling rules, if they leave the pool, they are disqualified. The pool is heated by a fire that is regularly fed more logs, making staying in it harder and harder.

Caribbean Barbed Wire Deathmatch

[edit]

The Caribbean Barbed Wire Deathmatch is a hardcore match where barbed wire is wrapped around the ring ropes in "spidernet" fashion on two sides, and on the other two sides are barricaded traps on ground level situated right next to the ring. These elaborate traps are wooden structures featuring multiple strands of barbed wire strung from short adjacent wooden poles covered by panes of glass, with a thick wooden board below as foundation for the entire trap. The wooden poles stand 18 inches high on one side, and two feet on the other side. This match was featured in the W*ING hardcore wrestling promotion in Japan and was first done in 1993.

Circus Deathmatch

[edit]

A Circus Deathmatch is a type of scaffold match where in the ring is a scaffold and under that scaffold, there is a type of spider net made of barbed wire six feet below. The first wrestler to fall off of the scaffold into the barbed wire spider net loses. The first match was between Mad Man Pondo and Ryuji Ito in Japan.[79]

Clockwork Orange House of Fun match

[edit]

The Clockwork Orange House of Fun match, known as "Raven's House of Fun" or simply "House of Fun", was created by professional wrestler Raven (legitimately, as Raven pitched the idea himself to TNA's creative team). It is a singles match for which poles attached to the ring posts measured about five to six feet above the turnbuckles, with single chains wrapped from and hanging on the poles to various points on the ring itself with many weapons hanging from and attached to steel chains above the ring, sometimes with sides of a steel cage attached to and erected on the ring.[80] In the first match the use of weapons is legal, and the only way to win was to put an opponent through two tables after throwing them off "Raven's perch" (a small scaffold),[80] but afterwards it was changed to falls-count-anywhere rules.[81]

Electric Pool match

[edit]

In an Electric Pool match, the ring is placed in a large pool of water, with no ropes on two sides of the ring, and exploding barbed wire on the other two sides of the ring. Wrestlers were transported to the ring via a dinghy, and the ring was put on a floating device, then it was surrounded by four metal barricades. There was a current running through these four barricades (which were essentially small sections of the pool enclosed off from the rest of the pool), enabling the water to "explode" when a wrestler was thrown into one of these barricaded areas. Considering the danger involved in allowing a current to run through water, this match was only used once in FMW in 1994, which was known for its extreme hardcore matches.

Explosion/Bomb Deathmatch

[edit]

The Explosion or Bomb Deathmatch is usually accompanied with barbed wire ropes, a large barbed wire wrapped explosion board is placed in the ring laced with a small amount of C-4. The match can be won by either a pinfall or a submission, or in other versions of the match, by blowing up the eventual loser. In some versions of the C-4 match is to finish the match before the timer runs out and detonates the ring (although this does not necessarily end the match) while in others the explosives are concentrated in a specific area, with the wrestlers struggling not to get pushed onto it. Almost all of these matches so far have been done in Japan in promotions with larger budgets.

Anus Explosion Deathmatch

[edit]

An Anus Explosion Deathmatch is a hardcore match where the only way to win is to stick a firecracker up an opponent's buttocks and light it. Once the firecracker goes off while lodged inside an incapacitated wrestler's buttocks, the match ends. This match was only done once, by Japanese hardcore wrestling promotion Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling in October 1999, where Mr. Gannosuke faced off against Hayabusa.[82]

Double Hell Deathmatch

[edit]

A Double Hell Deathmatch is a hardcore match where exploding (or non-exploding) barbed wire is put up at two sides of the ring in place of ropes, and the other two are left with nothing. However, at ringside on the empty sides, there are huge boards laden with barbed wire and landmines/explosives (and sometimes glass). This makes it a lot easier for a participant to fall out of the ring.

Exploding Barbed Wire Deathmatch

[edit]

AEW's variation is an Exploding Barbed Wire Deathmatch which is a combination of an Explosion Deathmatch, Barbed Wire Ring Rope match, Double Hell Deathmatch, and Time Bomb Deathmatch. There was three sides of barbed wire ring ropes with explosives triggered upon contact, three zones around the ringside floor wired to explosives (Triple Hell), and a 30-minute countdown timer until all explosives in and around the ring detonate.[83] The match was contested between Kenny Omega and Jon Moxley for the AEW World Championship at Revolution, which Omega won.

The concept was planned to be used in the WWE but according to Court Bauer in November 2022, Vince McMahon had once accepted an idea for an Exploding Barbed Wire Deathmatch. This stipulation did not appear at all but it would later appear in a form of a Punjabi Prison Match which debuted at The Great American Bash in 2006.[84]

Landmine Deathmatch

[edit]

A Landmine Deathmatch is a hardcore match where explosives are set up at ringside, usually laced with barbed wire. This match was first done with FMW in Japan in the mid-1990s.

Time Bomb Deathmatch

[edit]

A Time Bomb Deathmatch is a type of deathmatch where explosives or fireworks set up around the ring are set off after an allotted time. This match originated in Japan and was done various times in the 1990s. Mick Foley and Terry Funk participated in a "Barbed Wire Rope, Exploding Barbed Wire Boards and Exploding Ring Time Bomb Deathmatch" as the final match of the 1995 Kawasaki Dream King of the Deathmatch tournament, where there were multiple plywood boards with barbed wire and explosives attached to them strewn around the ring.[79]

Time Bomb Exploding Cage Deathmatch

[edit]

A Time Bomb Exploding Cage Deathmatch is a mixture of a Steel Cage match and a Time Bomb Deathmatch, where every square foot of a steel cage is wrapped in barbed wire and explosives set up around the ring go off after a set time, and five minutes before the explosion a loud siren is activated. The match, unlike a traditional steel cage match is a one-fall match and victory cannot be achieved via escaping the cage, which, if attempted would be very painful and difficult. This match also originated in Japan in the early 1990s.[79]

Eye for an Eye match

[edit]

An Eye for an Eye match is a hardcore match that could only be won when one competitor "extracts" an eyeball out of the socket of their opponent. This match only occurred once, between Rey Mysterio and Seth Rollins at The Horror Show at Extreme Rules. In it, Rollins shoved Mysterio's eye into the corner of the steel steps, causing the eyeball to pop out and giving Rollins the victory.

Falls Count Anywhere match

[edit]

A falls count anywhere match allows pinfalls to take place in any location, negating the standard rule that they must take place inside the ring and between the ropes, and these matches largely take place outside of the ring. Submissions may or may not also be covered by this rule. This also eliminates the usual "countout" rule. A variation of the rules states that once a pinfall takes place, the pinned wrestler loses the match if they are unable to return to the ring within a specific amount of time – usually a referee's count of 10 or 30. If the pinned wrestler makes it to the ring in this time, the match continues.[85] Occasionally, this stipulation is listed as having a specific territory in which falls count (e.g. the state, county, or general location the match is in).[86] As the match may take place in various parts of the arena,[87] the "falls count anywhere" provision is almost always accompanied with a "no-disqualification" stipulation to make the match a hardcore match, so as to allow wrestlers the convenience to use any objects they may find wherever they wrestle.[88]

First Blood match

[edit]

A First Blood match is a no-disqualification, no-submission, no-fall, no-countout match in which the first wrestler to bleed anywhere loses the match. Depending on the nuance of the stipulation, this might include bleeding noses. Although there are no-disqualifications, outside interference cannot be seen causing the participant to bleed. The first televised First Blood match was Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Kane at King of the Ring 1998. This type of match became rare in the WWE since 2008 in which blood is rarely shown in its programming to adhere with the TV-PG standards. The most recent first blood match in WWE was John Cena vs. JBL at One Night Stand in 2008. However, in TNA in 2010 they did a women's first blood match between Tara and Daffney.

Doomsday Chamber of Blood match

[edit]

A Doomsday Chamber of Blood match, created by Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, is a First Blood match that takes place inside of a barbed wire topped cage.[89]

Sadistic Madness match

[edit]

A Sadistic Madness match, created by Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, is another variation of the First Blood match, the main difference being that the opponent must be bleeding before a wrestler can legally pin them.[90]

Four Corners of Pain match

[edit]

A Four Corners of Pain match is a hardcore match where in each corner of the ring, there is a container that has a weapon or another type of harmful item. This match was first seen at the 1997 IWA Mid-South King of the Deathmatch Tournament,[91] with later appearances at the 2003 Combat Zone Wrestling Tournament of Death II, and at the 2006 IWA-MS Queen of the Deathmatch, Amy Lee took on Sexxxy Eddy in this match.[79]

Pools of Fuckery Deathmatch

[edit]

A Pools of Fuckery Deathmatch is similar to a Four Corners of Pain match, only the harmful items in each corner are in small plastic pools. This match originated in March 2021 in the independent wrestling promotion Asylum Wrestling Revolution (AMR), where Mickie Knuckles faced Akira.[92]

Good Old Fashioned Donnybrook match

[edit]

A Good Old Fashioned Donnybrook match is a hardcore stipulation created by Sheamus;[93] named after the former Dublin fair, it is a no disqualifications match where a bar, large wood barrels of brandy, and shillelaghs are made available at ringside.[94][95] It was first contested on the July 29, 2022 episode of WWE SmackDown between Sheamus and Drew McIntyre, with the winner becoming the number-one contender for the Undisputed WWE Championship at Clash at the Castle.[96] At Extreme Rules 2022, the stipulation was used for a six-man tag team match between Sheamus's The Brawling Brutes and Imperium.[95] The stipulation returned at Clash in Paris in 2025, contested between Sheamus and Rusev.[97]

Hard Ten match

[edit]

The Hard Ten match is a hardcore match that was created by TNA/Impact Wrestling. It is contested on a points system, in which the points are earned for the use of weapons. The first wrestler to earn ten points and be at least two points ahead is the winner. Regular strikes with a weapon are worth one point, while putting an opponent through a table is worth five points. This match type happened only once in TNA history.

Last Man/Woman Standing match

[edit]

A last man standing match (or last woman standing) is a hardcore-style match in which the only way to win is by count out via standing, and a wrestler can be counted out anywhere. A wrestler will lose the match if they are unable to answer a ten-count after being downed, similar to the knockout rules of a boxing match. To avoid losing, the downed wrestler must be on their feet by the count of 10, but they can not lose by leaving the ring for 10-count (ring out) if they are still on his feet while recovering.[98] Because of the hardcore nature of the match restraining a downed opponent is a permissible way to ensure that they do not respond to the ten-count, even if they would otherwise be able to.

Baseball Brawl match

[edit]

A Baseball Brawl match or Brawl Game match is variant of a Last Man Standing match where baseball bats are initially banned, but if a wrestler is counted out by 10, then baseball bats for the wrestler or team that got the count-out automatically become legal, and the match converts over to a standard hardcore match where victory is achieved by either pinfalls, submissions or count outs. This match was first done at ECW's Hardcore Heaven in August 1994, and was known as the signature match of The Public Enemy tag team.

Texas Deathmatch

[edit]
Ciclón Negro (left) and Dory Funk in a 1972 Texas deathmatch that lasted over an hour and included 27 total falls

A variant of the Last Man Standing match is the Texas Deathmatch (a.k.a. Mexican Deathmatch, or Armageddon Rules match), in which a wrestler must be pinned to a 3-count or made to submit/rendered unconscious before the referee will begin the ten-count. Some of these matches have been known to last for hours, including one that Dory Funk Jr. participated in that went on for more than four hours.[99] This match was often done by Dory and his brother Terry Funk in the 1960s in their father Dory Sr.'s promotion Western States Sports.[100][101] In All Elite Wrestling's variant of the Texas Death Match, the match can only be won by submission or knockout, and have become a trademark match of "Hangman" Adam Page.

Light Tube Deathmatch

[edit]

A light tube match is a hardcore match where hundreds (usually 200) of long, cylindrical, glass fluorescent light tubes are attached to the ring ropes (usually via tape), and mock shaped weapons and mock large objects made of light tubes are made available. These matches often end with most or all of the light tubes broken or shattered; these matches are some of the bloodiest, most gruesome and most dangerous types of wrestling matches because the glass in a light tube contains poisonous and carcinogenic chemicals, and when broken, the poisonous and carcinogenic dust from the shattered glass gets into the air and allows audience members, the referee and the wrestlers to breathe it in. Another hazard of this match is shards of broken glass still rife with dangerous chemicals laying around the ring mat and sticking in the wrestlers' bodies (when they are slammed onto the wrestling mat); in more organized wrestling promotions, attendants briefly enter the ring and quickly sweep the broken glass off the mat. This type of match originated in Japan in the late 1990s and early 2000s in Big Japan Pro Wrestling, and some independent promotions in the United States feature this type of match.

2/3 Light Tube Log cabins Deathmatch

[edit]

A 2/3 Light Tube Log Cabins Deathmatch is a hardcore match where the only way to win is to break two shaped light tube weapons over and/or on an opponent. Combat Zone Wrestling has used this match in their Tournament of Death series.[79]

Monster's Ball match

[edit]

A Monster's Ball match is a hardcore match that was invented and staged by TNA Wrestling. The key premise of the match was that all contenders are sequestered alone in a locked room without light, food or water for 24 hours before the match. This stipulation is intended to induce extreme feelings of aggression in the competitors. Once released, the wrestlers fight one another in a hardcore match, with the usage of weapons encouraged. Victory can be achieved by pinfall or submission, with the match ending as soon as one wrestler is pinned or submits.

The Monster's Ball match typically features numerous high spots. There have been 54 matches taking place under TNA, as well as several unaffiliated independent promotions hosting the match. The match has almost always featured Abyss in some capacity, wrestling in 48 and managing in one, as it is his signature match. There are various weapons frequently used in the match, including thumbtacks, "Janice" (a board filled with nails, Abyss's signature weapon), and a bed of barbed wire.[102]

No Disqualification match

[edit]

A No Disqualification match, also known as a No Holds Barred match,[103] or sometimes as an Anything Goes match, an Extreme Rules match (in WWE, since the establishment of the now-former ECW brand), Tribal Combat and Bloodline Rules (in WWE, for wrestlers in the Anoaʻi family) or a No Ropes Catch Wrestling match (in MLW), is a match in which neither wrestler can be disqualified, allowing for weapons and outside interference. However, unlike a hardcore match pinfalls and submissions must be made inside the ring.[104]

No-disqualification matches may be used in feuds in which a challenger may have won matches against the champion, but did not claim the championship because the champion was disqualified (championships usually only change hands via pinfall or submission). Unless stipulated, a no-disqualification match can end in a countout. Those that cannot are no-disqualification, no-countout matches, therefore they're called no holds barred matches.

Piranha Deathmatch

[edit]

A Piranha Deathmatch or Amazon River Piranha Deathmatch, similar to a Desert Deathmatch is a type of highly dangerous match where a fish tank containing dangerous and flesh-eating Piranha fish is placed in the center of the ring, and the first wrestler who gets put into the tank for 10 seconds loses. There was only one match ever done, and it was at Big Japan Pro Wrestling's Summer Night Dream event in Yokohama, Japan in September 1996, where in the main event Kendo Nagasaki put Mitsuhiro Matsunaga in the tank, defeating him.[79]

Pitch Black match

[edit]

A Pitch Black match is a hardcore-based match during which the arena lights are turned off or extremely dimmed, with most of the action visible due to the competitors wearing clothes or body paint that glows in the dark. The only known Pitch Black match, sponsored by Mountain Dew, happened at the 2023 Royal Rumble, with Bray Wyatt defeating LA Knight.[105]

Razor Deathmatch

[edit]

A Razor Deathmatch is an often extremely bloody match where boards full of razor blades are made available as weapons. This match is a trademark of Japanese hardcore wrestler Jun Kasai who has participated in five such contests.[106]

Spike Nail Deathmatch

[edit]

A Spike Nail Deathmatch is a hardcore match where a large bed of six-inch spiked nails sticking out of a rectangular piece of plywood is made available. The most famous example of this kind of match was at the IWA Kawasaki Dream King of the Deathmatch, where Cactus Jack faced Shoji Nakamaki in August 1995. Another type of Spike Nail match was rather than achieving a fall to win, the first wrestler to take a bump on the huge planks of wood infested with six-inch nails at ringside loses.[79]

Nail Hell Deathmatch

[edit]

A Nail Hell Deathmatch is a hardcore match where some boards with nails were hung on the ring ropes all the way across, and onto opposing sides of the ring there was a board, on one side there was nails and on the other side was barbed wire. Only one match like this was done, in December 1994 by IWA Japan.[79]

Street fight

[edit]

A street fight is a type of hardcore match with no disqualifications, in which falls count anywhere, and weapons are legal. The main difference between a hardcore match and a street fight is that while wrestlers wear their normal wrestling gear in hardcore matches, wrestlers (particularly in modern times) almost always wear their own street clothes in street fights, and weapons typically used in street fights are items typically found on or are often used on city streets, such as trash cans, road signs, broomsticks, dumpsters and sometimes vehicles and shopping carts filled with those items, among other things. Sometimes street fights have the name of the host arena's city in the name, such as "Chicago Street Fight" or "New York Street Fight".

Bunkhouse match

[edit]

A Bunkhouse match is a type of street fight where wrestlers compete with each other dressed in cowboy clothes or wearing items cowboys wear, such as cowboy boots, leather belts, jeans and ten-gallon cowboy hats. This is named a "Bunkhouse match" because bunkhouses were barracks-like buildings that historically were used to house working cowboys on ranches.

Miracle on 34th Street Fight

[edit]

A Miracle on 34th Street Fight is a Christmas-themed variant of a Street Fight, named after the movie Miracle on 34th Street, involving Christmas-themed weapons including fire extinguishers, pumpkin pies, presents, Christmas trees, Christmas wreaths, candy cane themed kendo sticks, bowling balls, and teddy bears, plus common wrestling weapons such as tables and chairs. One specific match of its kind is between Alberto Del Rio and John Cena way back in 2012, where Cena won.

Trick or Street Fight

[edit]

A Trick or Street Fight is a Halloween-themed variant of a Street Fight, named after the Halloween tradition "trick or treating", involving Halloween-themed weapons including pumpkins, buckets of candy, bowls full of water and apples, skeletons, witches' brooms, gravestones, candy corn themed kendo sticks, plus common wrestling weapons such as tables and chairs.

Taipei Deathmatch

[edit]

A Taipei Deathmatch, (also known as an Ancient Way Deathmatch) is a very bloody and violent hardcore match where the wrestlers' fists are taped and dipped into glue or honey, and then into broken and crushed glass, allowing shards to stick to their fists. Win by pinfall or submission. It is unknown why this match is named after the capital city of Taiwan; the first time this match was ever held was at ECW's Hardcore Heaven in July 1995 where the Rotten brothers, Axl and Ian, faced off in this match, and it was held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, not in Taipei.[54][107]

Thumbtack Deathmatch

[edit]

A Thumbtack Deathmatch is a hardcore match where one or more trays containing thousands (usually 10,000) of thumbtacks is/are made available and usually placed in either the center or apron of the ring. The most well-known version of this match was at the IWA Kawasaki Dream King of the Deathmatch, where Terry Gordy faced Cactus Jack in August 1995.[79] Variants of the thumbtack deathmatch staged by TNA/Impact Wrestling have been done where the objective is modified to simply slam an opponent into the pile of thumbtacks on the mat. A variation of this match is a cross between a Ladder Match and 10,000 Thumbtacks Match called a Thumbtacks Ladder match in which a ladder is placed in the ring with a reward at the top. Thumbtacks are also spread out across the ring. A variant of the 10,000 thumbtacks deathmatch is the East Coast Thumbtack match, this match has 177,000 thumbtacks placed in the ring. The first match was introduced between Ian Rotten and The Messiah.[108]

Barefoot Thumbtack match

[edit]

A Barefoot Thumbtack match is a hardcore match where both wrestlers have bare feet, and there is a large container containing thousands of thumbtacks in the middle of the ring that are legal to use it. Originated in Big Japan Pro Wrestling.

Thumbtack Balloons match

[edit]

Big Japan Pro Wrestling staged a 'Thumbtacks In Balloons' match on 5/22/96. The match, which saw Axl Rotten and Shoji Nakamaki lock up with Kendo Nagasaki and Seiji Yamakawa, had six black balloons suspended above the ring. At a certain point in the match, the balloons exploded and released 30,000 thumbtacks onto the ring.

Unlucky 13 Deathmatch

[edit]

An Unlucky 13 Deathmatch is a hardcore match invented by Ian Rotten. In order to win the match, a wrestler must staple seven out of thirteen one dollar bills to their opponent's mouth.

Location-based variations

[edit]

Though most matches take place in and around the ring, some are designed specifically for more exotic locales. The majority of these matches take on the name of their setting, often appending "brawl" to the end, and all of them are hardcore by definition. The following is a list of locale-based variations that supplant or replace the standard rules.

Bar Room Brawl

[edit]

A Bar Room Brawl is a multi-competitor no disqualification match held in a bar. During the match wrestlers are encouraged to drink while fighting, and the "last man standing" is declared winner. Wrestlers can be eliminated from the match both by the standard pinfall, submission, or by simply becoming too (kayfabe) drunk to continue the match. A known example of this match is the APA Invitational Bar Room Brawl at Vengeance 2003 which Bradshaw won after knocking down Brother Love. Another example, a Bar Fight was done in 2020, with Jeff Hardy facing off against Sheamus.[109]

Boiler Room Brawl

[edit]

A Boiler Room Brawl or Boiler Room match starts in a boiler room, with the winner being the first wrestler to successfully get out. This match is a no-disqualification, no-falls, no-countout match, so anything goes, so long as someone escapes first. The rather hazardous environment of this match featured some of the arena's internal infrastructure, such as all sorts of large, exposed metal piping with large bolts, concrete flooring and solid electrical equipment everywhere, among other features. Mick Foley participated in all of the WWF-run Boiler Room Brawls under his persona Mankind, because this persona dwelled in boiler rooms, hence this being Mankind's signature match. The first Boiler Room Brawl happened at SummerSlam 1996 with Mankind vs. The Undertaker, where in addition to escaping the boiler room the combatant had to make his way to the ring and grab Paul Bearer's urn; but when the next Boiler Room Brawl was contested at Backlash 1999 with Mankind against The Big Show, the objective was simplified to just escaping the boiler room first.[110] World Championship Wrestling used a match with similar rules, naming their match and its location the Block.[111]

Body of Water match

[edit]

A Body of Water match is a hardcore match where the sole objective is to get your opponent into a large body of water. This match was only done once, where CM Punk faced Chavo Guerrero during an ECW show in Corpus Christi, Texas (which is located right on the Gulf of Mexico, the body of water used) in February 2008.[112]

Dungeon match

[edit]

A Dungeon match is a hardcore match that took place in the legendary Hart Family Dungeon in Calgary, where Owen Hart challenged Ken Shamrock to come to the Dungeon (referred to as Hart's "basement") for a fight. The match can only be won by submission.

Empty Arena match

[edit]

An empty arena match is a hardcore (no disqualification, falls count anywhere) "anything goes" match between two or more wrestlers that takes place in an arena or stadium that although is fully set up for a wrestling event, is devoid of fans. The only people present are the competitors, referee, commentators, and cameramen. The match is broadcast or videotaped and played later. An example of this is the WWF championship match between The Rock and Mankind that took place in Tucson, Arizona, at the Tucson Convention Center, which aired as part of a special Halftime Heat edition of Sunday Night Heat aired against the Super Bowl halftime show of Super Bowl XXXIII in 1999. One of the earliest and best-known empty arena matches occurred in 1981 in Memphis, Tennessee, at the Mid-South Coliseum between Jerry Lawler and Terry Funk.[113]

A lack of audience that is a legitimate aspect of the production and not a kayfabe stipulation of the match (i.e. the match is conducted normally, except a live audience is not present) is not necessarily considered an empty arena match. For example, audiences were barred from attending televised AEW, and later WWE, shows in 2020 during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.[114]

Parking Lot Brawl

[edit]

A Parking Lot Brawl is a Falls Count Anywhere match that is usually fought in an interior location or in an outside parking lot around a tightly parked circle of cars. The first wrestler to score a pinfall, submission, or knockout in a Parking Lot Brawl is the winner. Both wrestlers are allowed to use everything around them as weapons, including the cars. The first Parking Lot Brawl was between Jerry Lawler and Eddie Gilbert in Memphis, Tennessee in 1988, which was fought all over the arena and its outside parking lot. More well-known examples of a Parking Lot Brawl both involved John Cena, where he faced Eddie Guerrero in 2003 and JBL in 2008.[115]

Hollywood Backlot Brawl

[edit]

A Hollywood Backlot Brawl was a no-disqualification match that started in a Hollywood studio backlot, and it was fought between Goldust and Roddy Piper. This match also involved the two performers actually driving cars for a long period of time, and then ended with the two arriving in the Honda Center in Anaheim 30 miles away to finish their match in the ring.[116]

Iron Circle match

[edit]

An Iron Circle match is a type of Parking Lot Brawl that is fought specifically in a parking garage around a rowdy live audience sitting on the cars encircling the competitors. An Iron Circle match was a falls count anywhere match where Ken Shamrock fought Steve Blackman at WWF Fully Loaded 1999.

Train match

[edit]

A Train match is a Falls Count Anywhere match fought in a moving train. All weapons are legal, and there is no disqualification (except for damage to the train). This happened in 2023 by CyberFight's DDT Pro Wrestling promotion, where Sanshiro Takagi competed against Minoru Suzuki on the Shinkansen TGV from Tokyo to Nagoya, with speeds exceeding 170 MPH on the train.

Tooth and Nail match

[edit]

A Tooth and Nail match is a Falls Count Anywhere-stipulation match that is fought in and around a dental office, and any weapon is legal. This is Britt Baker's specialty match, based on her role as a dentist in both kayfabe and off-screen reality, and the objective of this match is to achieve a pinfall or submission.[117]

Lumberjack match

[edit]
In keeping with the theme, the wrestlers outside the ring may wear flannel shirts during lumberjack matches; an example of this is the 1–2–3 Kid in 1995

A lumberjack match is a standard match with the exception that the ring is surrounded by a group of wrestlers not directly involved in it.[118] These wrestlers, known collectively as lumberjacks (female wrestlers serving in this manner are sometimes called lumberjills; lumberjack matches between female wrestlers are called lumberjill matches, a play on the famous Nursery Rhyme, "Jack and Jill"), are there to prevent the wrestlers in the match from getting out of the ring.[118] The groups of lumberjacks are typically split up into groups of faces and heels who occupy opposing sides around the ring. Usually, the "opposing" lumberjacks (that is, face lumberjacks if the wrestler is a heel, and vice versa) swarm the wrestlers if they leave the ring and force them back in it. Occasional interference from the lumberjacks is common, as is an all-out brawl on the outside involving most of the lumberjacks. Early lumberjack matches even featured the lumberjacks wearing stereotypical lumberjack clothing in keeping with the lumberjack theme, though this is generally no longer done. A common theme is for the lumberjacks to consist entirely of heel wrestlers to stack the odds against the face competitor. The Lumberjill Snowbunny match is another variation of the Lumberjill match with female lumberjacks, held in a pit of snow.

Canadian Lumberjack match

[edit]

In a "Canadian" lumberjack match, the lumberjacks are equipped with leather straps. TNA's "fan's revenge" match was their own version of a Canadian lumberjack match, where fans equipped with straps act as lumberjacks and were encouraged to whip wrestlers.[119] A similar "fans' revenge" variation was used in Lucha Underground where it was called a Believers' Backlash match ("Believers" was the nickname for fans of the series).

Extreme Lumberjack match

[edit]

The Extreme Lumberjack match is a lumberjack match competed under hardcore rules, where there are no disqualifications, no countouts, and falls count anywhere.[120]

Multi-competitor-based variations

[edit]

On some occasions, a match may be held between more than two individual wrestlers or teams. Multi-competitor matches are often broken down to eliminations and non-eliminations.

Basic non-elimination matches

[edit]

Non-elimination matches with three competitors

[edit]

The most common example of a non-elimination match is the Three-Way match (also known as a Triple Threat match in WWE, Triangle match in WCW and Three-Way Dance in ECW), in which three wrestlers compete under standard rules with the first competitor to achieve a pinfall or submission being declared the winner. Triple Threat matches are fought under no-disqualification and no-countout stipulations. Triangle matches are often contested like a tag match where only two can be in the match at one time while the third waits on the ring apron and the only elimination factor is if a competitor is disqualified.

Non-elimination matches with four or more competitors

[edit]

In many promotions, there are typically no distinctions between the two terms. Non-elimination variations are the Four-Way match (known as a Fatal Four-Way in WWE, Four Corners match in WCW and Four-Way Dance in ECW), the Five-Way match (known as a Fatal Five-Way in WWE) or the Six-Way match (known as the Six-Pack Challenge in WWE), involving four, five, or six wrestlers, respectively. [121] American independent promotion USA Xtreme Wrestling hosted a match involving 8–12 competitors known as the 8 Ball Challenge. These types of matches can be used in certain situations to take a title off a wrestler without weakening him in the process.

On some occasions, multi-competitor matches are contested under similar rules as a tag team match. Two competitors start the match in the ring while the other wrestler(s) wait outside the ring for a tag from another wrestler, often achieved by touching an unsuspecting competitor in the ring. Variations of this include a Four Corners Survival match or Six-Man Mayhem match in Ring of Honor. Competitors are permitted to leave their position and attack wrestlers outside of the ring, such as when one or both wrestlers have been thrown over the top rope.

Basic elimination matches

[edit]

Matches involving a larger number of competitors are typically elimination matches. These matches may begin with all of the competitors in the ring at the same time. The standard match rules apply as wrestlers may leave the position and attack other wrestlers outside the ring with a twist that the wrestler be pinned or forced to submit is eliminated from the match.

Elimination matches with three competitors

[edit]

The most common example of an elimination match is the Three-Way Dance, where the first fall would eliminate one wrestler, reducing the match to a standard one-fall singles match. The Three-Way Dance was a specialty of Extreme Championship Wrestling.

Elimination matches with four or more competitors

[edit]

A Four-Way Dance is similar except it involves four wrestlers in Extreme Championship Wrestling and some promotions use a tag format for the match instead of having all the wrestlers in the ring at the same time. Elimination variations are the Four-Way match (known as a Fatal Four-Way in WWE), the Five-Way match (known as a Fatal Five-Way in WWE) or the Six-Way match (known as the Six-Pack Challenge in WWE), involving four, five, or six wrestlers inside the ring, respectively.

The Deadly Draw match is a TNA variation where four competitors wrestle. The match begins with two competitors in the ring. After five minutes pass, the third competitor enters the ring, then after another five minutes pass, the fourth competitor enters the ring. Any wrestler who gets pinned or force to submit is eliminated, and any wrestler in the ring not involved in the fall is also eliminated. The last man standing wins.

Beat the Clock Challenge

[edit]

A Beat the Clock challenge is a multi-competitor match in which wrestlers must defeat their opponent in a singles match before the clock runs out. Additionally, the next wrestler must beat the winner's set time by defeating their opponent to advance, otherwise that wrestler is eliminated. In doing so, the victorious wrestler usually gets some type of reward in return, such as inclusion in a title match, for instance. In a variation on the November 20, 2013 episode of NXT, two wrestlers completed a match, with the match duration being used as the marker for two other wrestlers to complete their match. The first ever Divas Beat the Clock challenge occurred in the August 2015 episode of Raw when Paige, Becky Lynch and Charlotte Flair faced a different competitor to earn a WWE Divas Championship match against Nikki Bella at Night of Champions.

Championship Scramble

[edit]

WWE features a match called the Championship Scramble in which none of the wrestlers are eliminated. Two wrestlers start the match and every five minutes another wrestler enters until all five participants are present. After the last wrestler enters, there is a predetermined time limit. Each time a wrestler scores a pinfall or submission, he becomes the interim champion. Such reigns are not recorded as title reigns. The winner is the wrestler who scores the last pinfall or submission before the time limit expires. The Unforgiven pay-per view of 2008 is arguably the most prominent showcase of this match type, as all three world titles were contested under a Championship Scramble match.

Elimination Chase

[edit]

The Elimination Chase, first used in WWE's version of ECW brand in 2007, is a series of multi-competitor, one fall matches, with the loser of the fall being eliminated from future matches until one competitor remains.[122]

Iron Survivor Challenge

[edit]

WWE's NXT brand features a match called the Iron Survivor Challenge at its annual December event Deadline, in which none of the wrestlers are eliminated. There is one each for the men and women. The rules are as follows:

  • Five wrestlers compete in the match, which lasts 25 minutes.
  • Two wrestlers start the match, which begins the timer, and every five minutes, another wrestler enters with the fifth and final participant entering at the 15-minute mark.
  • Each time a wrestler scores a pinfall, submission, or being the victim of a disqualification, they gain a point. Points can be gained even before other participants have entered.
  • A wrestler who is pinned, submitted, or is disqualified goes into a penalty box for 90 seconds, after which they can re-enter the match.
  • The winner of the match, dubbed the Iron Survivor, is the wrestler who scores the most points at the end of the 25-minute time limit. In the result of a tie, those who are tied enter sudden death overtime.
  • The winners of the men's and women's matches earn a future match for the NXT Championship and NXT Women's Championship, respectively.[123]

The Iron Survivor Challenge combines elements of the Championship Scramble, Iron Man, and TNA Wrestling's King of the Mountain matches. It was used for the first time at Deadline in 2022.

Special Guest Referee

[edit]

The Special Guest Referee is any match in which the usual referee is replaced with a "guest" filling in as the official. Celebrities (such as Muhammad Ali in the main event of WrestleMania I), managers and other wrestlers can "guest" as the special referee. In some cases, a special referee is put into a match which is already a different match type or stipulation. The special referee will often be biased towards or against one of the competitors or will be assigned as the Special Referee to ensure the match is called down the line. Special Outside Referee also known as Special Enforcer or Special Guest Enforcer is same as the Special Referee but the guest referee stays on the outside enforcing what the normal referee doesn't see. These guests are sometimes known as "enforcers", the most famous of which was Mike Tyson, who served as the Special Guest Enforcer for the WWF title match between Steve Austin and Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania XIV, and Chuck Norris who served as Special Guest Enforcer at Survivor Series 1994 in a match between The Undertaker and Yokozuna. Another example of this is Triple H vs. The Undertaker in a Hell in a Cell match at WrestleMania 28 with Shawn Michaels being the Special Guest Referee.

Non-wrestling matches

[edit]

Occasionally, a match would take place under the rules of a different type of contest. Like professional wrestling matches, the matches would be worked, with the participants not being in the perceived danger and the winner being predetermined.

Arm Wrestling match

[edit]

An arm wrestling match, in the context of professional wrestling, is a basic arm wrestling contest. It can be contested between two females, two males or between one male and one female. Often the male in the latter will be a manager going against the wrestler of a competitor.[124]

Boxing match

[edit]

The professional wrestling version of a boxing match has standard boxing rules applied to it. Wrestlers wear boxing gloves and the match is contested in rounds with fouls given out, though the matches are generally worked and end with one wrestler cheating and using wrestling maneuvers.[125]

Mixed Martial Arts match

[edit]

The professional wrestling version of a mixed martial arts (MMA) match under standard MMA. As in MMA, pinfalls are not a valid method of victory. Matches can typically only be won by knockout, submission, disqualification, forfeit or by going to a referee's decision.

Sumo match

[edit]

For a sumo match, the ropes are removed from the ring and standard sumo rules apply. The first person to step outside of the ring or touch the mat with any part of the body except the soles of the feet is the loser. The most infamous match of this kind in WWE happened at WrestleMania 21 between The Big Show and Sumo legend, Akebono.[126]

Sumo Monster Truck match

[edit]

A Sumo Monster Truck match is a regular tug-o-war contest where two wrestlers are driving monster trucks, pushing and shoving each other. An example of this match type is at the Halloween Havoc (1995) pay-per-view between Hulk Hogan and The Giant.

Rumble rules-based variations

[edit]

In this version – unlike traditional battle royales where all the wrestlers begin the match in the ring – the competitors (after numbers 1 and 2 begin the match) enter at timed intervals in accordance with the number that they have drawn until the entire field has entered.

Aztec Warfare

[edit]

Aztec Warfare is the Lucha Underground version of the "Rumble Rules" battle royale. Upwards to 20 participants enter every 90 seconds and elimination occurs by either pinfall or submission and has to take place inside the ring. There are no count-outs and no disqualifications. As of April 2019, four Aztec Warfare matches have occurred—one in each season of Lucha Underground.

Battle Riot

[edit]

The Battle Riot is Major League Wrestling's "Rumble" style battle royale. This match isn't that much different from other Pin, Submission & Over the top rope elimination rumble rules, however is different from the WWE Royal Rumble, of which you can only get eliminated via going over the top rope with both feet hitting the floor.[127]

Casino Battle Royale

[edit]

The Casino Battle Royale is used by All Elite Wrestling (AEW). It is a modified rumble rules battle royale that features 21 entrants. It begins with a group of five wrestlers, and every three minutes, another group of five wrestlers enter, while the 21st and final entrant enters alone. The wrestlers are grouped based on the suit they drew from a deck of cards – spades, diamonds, clubs, or hearts – and the order of when each group enters is based on a random draw of the cards. The 21st and final entrant is the wrestler who drew the joker. The winner receives a world championship match of their respective gender's division—either the AEW World Championship or the AEW Women's World Championship.

The first Casino Battle Royale occurred during the pre-show of AEW's inaugural event, Double or Nothing in 2019, and was a men's match. The winner of the inaugural match was entered into the match to determine the inaugural AEW World Champion at All Out that year.[128] The second Casino Battle Royale was an all-female version and was held during the pre-show of the aforementioned All Out event. Like the first, the winner of this second iteration was entered into the match to determine the inaugural AEW Women's World Champion on the debut episode of AEW's weekly television show, Dynamite.[129] The third Casino Battle Royale—a men's match—took place at All Out in 2020 and the winner received a future AEW World Championship match.

Honor Rumble

[edit]

Ring of Honor (ROH) also periodically features the "Rumble" style of battle royale on their shows, billing it as the Honor Rumble. This battle royal differs from a standard version of the match in that the contestants do not all begin in the ring at the same time, but instead enter the match at timed intervals in order of their assigned entry numbers (comparable in style to WWE's Royal Rumble match). Numbers are usually drawn through a lottery that is typically staged right before the event begins, although participants can also win desirable spots via a number of other means, the most common being winning a match.

New Japan Rumble

[edit]

New Japan Pro-Wrestling's annual "Rumble" battle royale, takes place on the pre-show of Wrestle Kingdom on January 4. Participants enter at one minute intervals and are eliminated via pinfall, submission or by being thrown over the top rope.[130] Typically leaning towards light comedy, the match includes past stars as surprise entrants.[131]

Royal Rampage

[edit]

Used by All Elite Wrestling (AEW) on its program Rampage. The Royal Rampage is a two ring rumble rules battle royale. It features 20 wrestlers between the two rings (10 in each). It begins with two wrestlers in each ring, with two new wrestlers entering at timed intervals - one in the red ring and one in the blue ring (as differentiated by the color of the ropes). After all 20 wrestlers have entered, and once the field narrows to the last four participants, they will then consolidate into a single ring and fight until there is a winner, who then receives a championship match at a later date.

Royal Rumble

[edit]
2010 Royal Rumble match

WWE's Royal Rumble is the original battle royale to use this format. It begins with two wrestlers in the ring, with the remaining participants introduced one by one at a set time period, usually 90 seconds or two minutes. Elimination occurs in the normal way with the last person standing as the winner, after all participants (traditionally 30 or 40 in Royal Rumble 2011 and 20 in Royal Rumble 1988) have entered the ring eliminated by being thrown over the top rope and having both feet touch the venue floor. (referred to as the "Shawn Michaels rule" in Royal Rumble 1995 in which he was thrown over the top rope, hung on to the top rope and only had one foot land on the floor). There is both a men's and women's Royal Rumble match, although WWE's first official women's Royal Rumble match debuted in 2018 used the same rules as the men's version, with the winners getting a world championship match (in their respective divisions) at that year's WrestleMania, which is WWE's biggest annual show. At the Greatest Royal Rumble in 2018, 50 participants entered the match. Stone Cold Steve Austin is the only 3-time Royal Rumble winner.

Royal Sambo

[edit]

Dragon Gate's version takes place exclusively at touring shows at the Kobe Sambo Hall venue, as the promotion's home location is Kobe, Japan. Royal Sambo matches typically consist of 10-16 participants entering two at a time at 60 second intervals, with both wrestlers' entrance themes crossfading back and forth over the speakers. If an odd number of wrestlers are booked in the match, the final participant enters solo. Participants can be eliminated via over-the-top rope elimination, pinfall, or submission, and multiple wrestlers may pin or submit someone simultaneously. Typically booked as a comedy match, or with one high-profile wrestler as the obvious winner among others with much lower status on the roster.

Square Go!

[edit]

Square Go! is Insane Championship Wrestling's (ICW) very own hybrid of WWE's Royal Rumble and Money in the Bank matches, and named for the Glaswegian term for a street fight. The competitors will compete in a 30-man over-the-top-rope "rumble rules" battle royale, the Square Go!, with the winner earning the Square Go Briefcase. It has mostly the same rules apply as Royal Rumble, two competitors who draw the numbers 1 and 2. The remaining participants which will enter the ring one-by-one at every two-minute intervals.

Five people have drawn entry numbers that allow them to carry a weapon of their choice into the ring. Participants were eliminated when thrown over the top ropes with both feet landing on the floor. The winner will win a briefcase that will entitle him to a match for the ICW World Championship at any time and anywhere of their choosing for one year (similar to Money in the Bank).

Series-based variations

[edit]

Series matches may involve the same match throughout, or may use different matches for some or all of the series. The most common form of a series match is extending the one-fall concept to a series of falls.

Best of Series match

[edit]

A "Best of Series" match is similar to a two out of three falls match but an extended series to five or seven; Even though it takes place over several nights to continue a feud rather than settle it in one night.

One variation is a Best of Five Series where a wrestler must win three matches to win the series. John Cena defeated Booker T 3–2 to win the WWE United States Championship at No Mercy (2004).

The Best of Seven Series is another variation, where a wrestler must win four matches to win the series. Chris Benoit and Booker T fought in such a series to determine the #1 contender for the WCW World Television Championship in 1998. The two resumed their Best of Seven series in 2006 for the WWE United States Championship. Sheamus and Cesaro ended in a 3–3 draw when their seventh match at Clash of Champions (2016) ended in a no-contest. Death Triangle (Pac, Penta El Zero Miedo, and Rey Fénix) wrestled The Elite (Kenny Omega and The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson)) in a series for the AEW World Trios Championship in 2022.

Gauntlet match

[edit]

A Gauntlet match, also referred to as a Turmoil match, is a quick series of one-fall one-on-one matches. Two wrestlers begin the match and are replaced whenever one is eliminated (by pinfall or submission). After a predetermined number of wrestlers have competed in the match, the last person standing is named the winner. A Gauntlet match may also be played out in multiple "parts" as part of a storyline (in which a face wrestler must face a series of a heel wrestler's underlings before facing the heel himself, for instance) this was common in World Championship Wrestling in the early 1990s. A participant involved in a Gauntlet match may be said to be "running the gauntlet" but in most cases this designation being reserved for those who are involved for most of the match. Sometimes, it could also be (one-on-three) or (one-on-four) handicap match. Unlike tag matches, the three/four-man team will challenge the person handicapped individually until he is knocked out, at which time the match is over.

One example of this was on September 23, 1999, edition of WWE SmackDown where Triple H, being punished by Vince McMahon for his actions against him and his family, was booked in five gimmick matches in one night: a Chokeslam Challenge match (a match where the first to Chokeslam their opponent wins) against The Big Show, a Handicap Casket match against Viscera and Mideon, an Inferno match against Kane, a Boiler Room Brawl against Mankind, and a Brahma Bullrope match against The Rock.

Gauntlet Eliminator

[edit]

The Gauntlet Eliminator is a modified gauntlet match in which two wrestlers start in the ring and every four minutes, another wrestler enters until all the entire field has entered. Eliminations can occur only by pinfall or submission. The last wrestler remaining wins. An example of this match was on the first night of 2021's NXT TakeOver: Stand & Deliver between Leon Ruff, Isaiah "Swerve" Scott, Bronson Reed, Dexter Lumis and L. A. Knight.

Casino Gauntlet

[edit]

The Casino Gauntlet match is a modified version of the Gauntlet Eliminator promoted by All Elite Wrestling (AEW). Two wrestlers begin the match, with new entrants coming in at randomly timed intervals, with a maximum number of 21 entrants. It is a one fall match that can end at any time via pinfall or submission inside the ring, even before the entire field has entered. The prize for winning the Casino Gauntlet is a championship match at a later date.

Gauntlet for the Gold

[edit]

TNA Wrestling uses the "Gauntlet for the Gold" format, which is named similarly to the Gauntlet match but is actually very different. The wrestlers enter at regular intervals, and elimination occurs when thrown over the top rope with both feet hitting the floor (as in a Royal Rumble match). This continues until only two wrestlers remain, after which the final winner is decided by pinfall or submission. This match type was first featured on the first ever NWA-TNA PPV, with Ken Shamrock defeating Malice in the final two.[132]

Iron Man/Woman match

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An Iron Man (or Iron Woman for female matches) match is a multiple-fall match with a set time limit (usually 30 or 60 minutes). The match is won by the wrestler who wins the most falls within the time limit by either pinfall, submission, disqualification, or countout. If there is ever a tie, the match goes to sudden death overtime in which the wrestler who scores one fall on their opponent will immediately be declared the winner. An example of an Iron Man Match is Dolph Ziggler vs. Seth Rollins at 2018 Extreme Rules for the Intercontinental Championship. Other examples are MJF vs. Bryan Danielson at AEW Revolution in 2023 for the AEW World Championship, and Bret Hart vs. Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania XII for the WWE Championship. The first Iron Woman match was between Team JWP (Cutie Suzuki, Dynamite Kansai, Hikari Fukuoka and Mayumi Ozaki) and Team AJW (Aja Kong, Kyoko Inoue, Sakie Hasegawa and Takako Inoue) at Thunder Queen Battle in Yokohama in 1993.

Anything Goes Iron Man match

[edit]

An Anything Goes Iron Man match is the hardcore variation of an Iron Man match: there are no disqualifications, no countouts and falls count anywhere. John Cena faced Randy Orton in an Anything Goes Iron Man match at Bragging Rights 2009 for 60 minutes.

Iron Survivor Challenge

[edit]

Thunder Queen battle

[edit]

The Thunder Queen battle is a hybrid match, a variation of Tag Team and Iron Woman match types. This stipulation was used in All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling. The match starts off with two teams of four members wrestle each other for 60 minutes. Individual members will have a 5-minute Singles Iron Woman match (20 minutes total each), followed by a 40-minute Tag Team Iron Woman match. The team with the highest total number of points within the time limit wins.

Total Count match

[edit]

The Total Count match is a variation of an Iron Man match where the winner is not decided by the number of falls scored, but by the cumulative seconds of pinfalls counted by the referee (a one-count pinfall scores one point, a two-count pinfall scores two points, etc.). Depending on the specific rules of each match, the match can be won by the wrestler who has the largest score at the end of the allotted time, or by the first to reach a certain score. This stipulation has been used in DDT Pro-Wrestling. Shiori Asahi and Akito had a Total Count match for the DDT Extreme Championship at Judgement 2015 for 10 minutes plus one minute and 32 seconds of tie-breaking overtime;[133] Shunma Katsumata and Mao had a hardcore version of the match billed as a "Kids Room Deathmatch 37 (Sauna) Count Edition" at Into The Fight 2021, in which the goal was to reach a score of 37.[134]

Ultimate Submission match

[edit]

An Ultimate Submission match is a variation of an Iron Man match where the only way to score a fall within the allotted time limit is to make your opponent submit. Chris Benoit and Kurt Angle had an Ultimate Submission match at Backlash 2001 for 30 minutes plus one minute and 33 seconds of tie-breaking overtime.

Three Strikes match

[edit]

The Three Strikes match (often shortened to Three Strikes' You're Out) is a multiple-fall match where wrestlers must achieve three victories of a specific nature in a specific order before the other. The name of the match is taken from baseball, referring to the notion that having three strikes would entail losing the match. The most common arrangement for the three strikes are pinfall, submission and knockout with the entire match being fought under no disqualification and no countout rules. Diamante faced Big Swole in a Three Strikes match on AEW Dark on September 7, 2021.

Two out of Three falls match

[edit]

In a Two out of Three falls match, a wrestler or tag team must beat their opponent(s) twice to win. This can be achieved by pinfall, submission, disqualification or count-out. Examples of this match type include the 2012 Extreme Rules match between Daniel Bryan and Sheamus, as well as the 2000 SummerSlam match between Chris Benoit and Chris Jericho. A tag team version of this match occurred at the 2015 Payback pay-per-view event between The New Day and Cesaro & Tyson Kidd for the WWE Raw Tag Team Championship.

This stipulation is considered the norm in lucha libre.

Gate of Heaven match

[edit]

A Gate of Heaven match is a multiple-fall match that is applied to tag team matches. Started in Dragon Gate, with the first match being a strict tag team match with two referees to make sure tags actually happen. The second match being the Dragon Gate rules. The third match, if necessary; tables, ladders and chairs are now legal. The first team to gain two victories before the other is the winner.

Three Stages of Hell match

[edit]

A Three Stages of Hell match is a multiple-fall match in which two wrestlers must wrestle three special types of matches. A wrestler must achieve two victories before the other. There have only been six occasions in which this match has been contested in WWE history. The first Three Stages of Hell match occurred in 2001 between Triple H and Steve Austin at 2001 No Way Out, which Triple H won 2–1. Another match of this type took place at 2002 Armageddon between Shawn Michaels and Triple H for the World Heavyweight Championship. The most recent example was at NXT TakeOver 36, when Adam Cole faced Kyle O'Reilly.

Three Degrees of Pain match

[edit]

The Three Degrees of Pain match is a hybrid match, a variation of Two out of Three Falls and Steel Cage match types where a wrestler must achieve a victory in the specific order before the other. The first victory is a pinfall, the second victory is a submission and if necessary, the third victory is to escape from the steel cage. There have only been two of these matches occurred in TNA history and both were feud-enders.

Stipulation-based variations

[edit]

As professional wrestling seeks to also tell a story, some matches are made solely for the purposes of advancing the plot. This typically involves the loser of a match being penalized in some way.

Clock Strikes Midnight match

[edit]

The Clock Strikes Midnight match is a singles match where a match is contested under different stipulations, and stipulations of the match keep changing after random intervals. This match was contested between Alexxis Falcon and Nina Samuels at the 2023 Super Strong Style 16. The stipulations changed from time to time from a singles match to different stipulations such as Tables match, First Blood match, Submission match, Last Man Standing match, and Deathmatch.

Crybaby match

[edit]

A Crybaby match is a singles match with the exception that the loser would have to dress as a baby by wearing a nappy and sucking from a bottle. This match only occurred once between 1-2-3 Kid and Razor Ramon at the In Your House 6 pay-per-view.

Jailhouse match

[edit]

A Jailhouse match is a singles match with the exception that the loser would have to spend the night in a New York City jail cell. This match featured heavy brawling by both competitors The Mountie and Big Bossman at SummerSlam 1991. At one point the Mountie tried to use his cattle prod, but missed. Bossman got the pin following a double leg slam and NYC police officers came down to handcuff the Mountie and take him to jail.

A variant of this match, entitled "Jailhouse Street Fight" is a hardcore match where the winner throws an opponent into a cage. This concept was introduced at NXT Roadblock 2023 where Tony D'Angelo defeated Dijak.

Kiss My Foot match

[edit]

A Kiss My Foot match is a singles match with the exception that the loser must kiss the winner's bare foot. Such matches included Bret Hart vs. Jerry Lawler during the 1995 King of the Ring, Jerry Lawler vs. Michael Cole during the 2011 Over the Limit pay-per-view. A version of this match was used as a No Holds Barred kiss my foot match at Major League Wrestling's 2023 Fury Road event between Matt Cardona and Mance Warner.

Kiss My Ass match

[edit]

A Kiss My Ass match is a singles match in which the loser has to kiss the winner's bare buttocks, in front of the crowd; it became prominent during WWE's Attitude Era. A notable example is The Rock vs. Billy Gunn at SummerSlam 1999, which The Rock won. The match type made a reappearance for Sheamus vs. Dolph Ziggler at Extreme Rules 2015, where it was branded a Kiss Me Arse match in reference to Sheamus' Irish accent. Ziggler won, but Sheamus attacked him and forced Ziggler's unconscious self to kiss Sheamus' behind.

Last Chance match

[edit]

A last chance match, also called a do or die match, is a championship match where, if the challenger does not win the title, they are banned from challenging for it again as long as the winner of the same match holds it.[135] Rarely, the loser may even be barred from challenging for that title for as long as he remains employed at the company. For example, at Slammiversary XI's main event, Sting was defeated by defending champion Bully Ray in a No Holds Barred variant of this match; as per the pre-match stipulation, he was barred from challenging for the TNA World Heavyweight Championship ever again no matter who holds it. A similar situation occurred at All Elite Wrestling's 2019 Full Gear event, in which Cody Rhodes lost to AEW World Champion Chris Jericho and could never challenge for the title again as long as he was employed by AEW. Tyson Kidd lost a last chance match against Adrian Neville for the NXT Championship in 2014. As a result, Tyson Kidd would never get another chance at the NXT Championship as long as he remained employed with WWE.

These matches are usually a way to finish a feud between the champion and a certain challenger. It can also be used as a way of keeping the same challenger a title feud with a multiple champions; someone who had previously lost a last chance match may issue a challenge to a new champion as soon as the previous champion - who won a last chance match - loses their title. An example of this would be Drew McIntyre, who lost a last chance match for Bobby Lashley's WWE Championship but immediately challenged new champion Big E when the latter won the belt from Lashley. A ban may also not be lifted in some other way, such as when Sting was able to challenge Magnus for the TNA World Heavyweight Championship in a No Disqualification Title vs. Career match at Genesis (2014), though Sting lost.

AEW introduced a variation on the Last Chance match called a "Championship" Eliminator. In this variation, if the challenger defeats the champion, they get a future match for the title, but if they lose, then they can no longer challenge that champion for as long as the champion holds the title.

Loser Leaves Town match

[edit]

"Loser leaves town" is a generic term for any match in which the loser has to leave the current promotion or sub-division.[136] These matches were most often held during the "territorial days", when wrestlers frequently jumped from company to company. It has been held with greater frequency in WWE during the brand split; the losing wrestler typically leaves the brand (usually either Raw or SmackDown), only to go to the other brand. It is also used as a way to write a wrestler off TV to give them some time off.

Loser Wears A Chicken Suit match

[edit]

Loser Wears a Chicken Suit match is a singles match where the loser must wear a chicken suit either following the match or at another event soon after. Col. Robert Parker had to wear a chicken suit on the January 29, 1994 episode of WCW Saturday Night following his loss to Flyin' Brian Pillman at Clash of the Champions XXVI.

Loser Wears Dress match

[edit]

Loser Wears Dress match is a singles match where the loser must wear a woman's dress temporarily after the match occurred. The match is won by pinfall or submission. An example of this type of match is at Souled Out (1999) between Chris Jericho and Perry Saturn which Jericho won.

Luchas de apuestas

[edit]

Luchas de apuestas (in English meaning "gambling fights") are matches in which both wrestlers wager something specific (the mask or hair) on the outcome. The loser of the match then loses the item, being forced to take off their mask or be shaved bald. It is also possible for a wrestler to put someone else's item on the line, with the same stipulation applying in the event of a loss.[137] These matches have a storied history in Mexico.[138] Upon unmasking, it is not unheard of for a wrestler's real name and information to be published. As a form of further humiliation, the loser can be forced to physically hand the mask they just lost to the winner.[138]

The most popular types of wager are the mask of a masked wrestler or the hair of a non-masked wrestler, most commonly put against each other in mask vs. mask (in Spanish: máscara contra máscara), mask vs. hair (máscara contra cabellera), or hair vs. hair (cabellera contra cabellera) matches. Throughout Mexico, when masked wrestlers lose their masks, they are not allowed to compete under a mask with that same gimmick.[138] In addition to masks and hair, championships,[139] or careers[140] — as a form of retirement match — can be put up as the wager in any combination.

Bounty match

[edit]

Similarly the mask can be used in a bounty match, which can be a single match or series of matches where a third party will reward whoever can unmask the targeted competitor. The match can also be used to defeat a targeted individual or take them out of action with a reward. Sometimes the reward is disclosed and sometimes not. An example of the mask bounty match was Flyin' Brian Pillman having a bounty by Barry Windham after making appearances as The Yellow Dog in order to continue wrestling after losing a loser leaves match.

Move match

[edit]

The Move match has the objective of performing a specific move first. Usually a signature move or finisher of the wrestlers is selected, although on occasion it will be a generic move that is notoriously hard to perform on both wrestlers. The match usually takes the name of the target move if both wrestlers are trying to perform their finisher for the win. The best known of these was Yokozuna's Bodyslam Challenge, which Lex Luger won. Another famous move match was the $15,000 Body Slam Challenge between Andre The Giant and Big John Studd at the first WrestleMania. Another move match was the Masterlock Challenge which was created by Chris Masters. A Chokeslam Challenge match was also done between The Big Show and Triple H on WWE Smackdown in September 1999. A Stink Face Challenge match is another move match where whoever delivers the Stink Face to their opponent first wins.[141]

Banned Move match

[edit]

The Banned Move match is a singles match when one or both of the competitors is not allowed to use their finishing move or else they will be disqualified. One of the competitors cannot be disqualified if that wrestler uses the move to give an unfair disadvantage. Sometimes this stipulation is used in a feud with wrestlers whose finishers are the same or similar, in these cases it is common to see the stipulation added that the losing wrestler is no longer allowed to use that move anymore. This type of match often forces the banned wrestler to get more creative and use moves they don't normally use in an attempt to win. An example of this match took place at Extreme Rules in 2015 between Seth Rollins and Randy Orton, where, in addition to the match taking place in a Steel Cage, Orton's finisher, the RKO, was banned. Another example was at the 2020 edition of AEW's All Out event, where AEW Champion Jon Moxley defended his title successfully against MJF. In that match, Moxley's finisher, the Paradigm Shift (a variation of a DDT), was banned, although he did use it when the referee had his back turned.

Retirement match

[edit]

The retirement stipulation can be applied to just one wrestler[142] or both wrestlers in a match can be wrestling for their careers (though in practice some wrestlers career may resume their career later either inside or outside the promotion the match occurs in despite being "retired" per the stipulation of the match)[143]. Some examples of this stipulation of match are Shawn Michaels vs. Ric Flair at WrestleMania XXIV and Shawn Michaels vs. The Undertaker at WrestleMania XXVI.[144] More loosely, the term can refer to the last match of a (usually "legendary") wrestler's career. Such a match is designed to be a last hurrah, showcasing the wrestler's talent one last time for their fans. An example of this type includes Sting's retirement match at Revolution 2024 and Ric Flair's Last Match in 2022.

Spin the Wheel, Make the Deal

[edit]

The Spin the Wheel, Make the Deal concept was introduced in WCW at the 1992 Halloween Havoc to determine the stipulation for the match pitting Sting versus Jake Roberts. While not a match type in and of itself, Spin the Wheel, Make the deal involves a wheel of fortune featuring a number of match types. When the wheel is spun, the stipulation it lands on is the one used for the match. The concept was later used in TNA as the "Wheel of Dixie" and in WWE as "Raw Roulette". Since 2020, WWE has revived Spin the Wheel, Make the Deal for Halloween Havoc, which was itself revived as an event for the NXT brand.[145][146]

Strip matches

[edit]

In two kinds of matches, a wrestler does not win by pinfall or submission, but only by stripping their opponent of their clothing.[147] Historically, these types of matches were contested between managers or valets, due to their supposed lack of wrestling ability. In the Attitude Era, however, full-time female wrestlers (known formerly as Divas in WWE) began engaging in strip matches for the purpose of titillation.

Bra and Panties match

[edit]

A bra and panties match is usually contested by two or more female wrestlers where the only objective to win this match is to strip her opponent down to her bra and panties.

Evening Gown match

[edit]

An evening gown match is usually contested by two female competitors in evening gowns. The only objective to win this match is the wrestler must remove the evening gown from her opponent.[148][149][150]

Tuxedo match

[edit]

A tuxedo match is usually contested by two male competitors in tuxedos. The only objective to win this match is the wrestler must remove his opponent's tuxedo.[151]

Submission match

[edit]

A submission match is typically a variation of a singles match in which pinfalls, count-outs, and disqualifications are not legal and the match could only end by making an opponent tap out to a submission hold.

Throw in the Towel match

[edit]

A Throw in the Towel match, also known as a No Surrender Rules match in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, is a singles match where there are one or more cornermen for each participant, and victory is obtained when an opponent's cornerman throws a towel into the ring to signal surrender on behalf of their wrestler. An example of this type of match is between Bob Backlund with Owen Hart as his cornermen and Bret Hart with The British Bulldog as his cornermen at the 1994 Survivor Series.

Catch-as-Catch Can match

[edit]

A Catch-as-Catch Can match is a singles match where any submission hold are allowed that is not intended to inflict injury, which contained mostly submission amateur-style wrestling. This match is altered to stipulate that a wrestler may lose by going to or being forced to the arena floor, like in a battle royale. An example of this type of match is the infamous match between Dean Malenko and Billy Kidman during WCW's Souled Out (2000), where Malenko lost in two minutes by forgetting the rules and escaping to the floor after a barrage of attacks from Kidman.

"I quit" match

[edit]

An "I quit" match is a singles match where a wrestler must force the other wrestler to submit in the form of saying the words "I quit" into a microphone to win. This match is run under hardcore rules - no disqualifications, no countouts and the submission can happen anywhere. The referee follows the action with a microphone in hand during the event.

"I respect you" match

[edit]

An "I respect you" match is a singles match also similar to an "I quit" match, that means: anything goes. In order to win, a wrestler must hurt his opponent brutally that it leaves the other wrestler no other choice but force to say, "I respect you" into the microphone. This match type took place at WCW's SuperBrawl VI in 1996 which marked Brian Pillman's final match in WCW in his "I respect you" Strap Match against The Taskmaster, before Pillman shouted "I respect you, booker man!", breaking kayfabe, before leaving the ring.

Submission Count Anywhere match

[edit]

The Submission Count Anywhere match is a variation of a Submission and Falls Count Anywhere match, and was debuted at Breaking Point 2009 between D-Generation X and The Legacy. This is a tag-team stipulation where a wrestler can be submitted anywhere to win, and there are no pinfalls, no disqualifications and no countouts. This match occurred only once in WWE history.

Substance match

[edit]

The match is contested in a large container filled with various substances, typically between two female individuals who may or may not have experience with wrestling. Substances can include anything from mud to chocolate milk. Sometimes, specialty substances are used for certain occasions like gravy for Thanksgiving and eggnog for Christmas.

A notable example of this match type was the Mimosa Mayhem match, which was contested between Chris Jericho and Orange Cassidy at All Elite Wrestling's All Out pay-per-view in September 2020, where the only ways to gain victory were by pinfall, submission or by knocking the opponent into a large vat of mimosa. Unlike the traditional reasoning, the theme fit with both parties' gimmicks: Jericho was promoting his own line of champagne, and Cassidy is billed as "Freshly Squeezed" as part of his gimmick (in the independent circuit Cassidy would often spit orange juice into his opponent's eyes).

Another example of this match was the Chocolate Pudding match when Candice Michelle defeated Melina in one of these matches.

Blood Bath match

[edit]

A Blood Bath match is a no-disqualification match where the first to be covered in a vat of blood dispensed from a bucket loses. The Brood members Edge and Gangrel had a Blood Bath match on WWE Raw in August 1999.

Mud match

[edit]

Perhaps the most notable substance match was a mud match, where wrestlers would wrestle in an area or container full of mud, usually away from the ring. Usually women would participate in these matches with some occasional male involvement.

Hog Pen match

[edit]

A variation of a Mud Match is the Hog Pen match, which is a Mud Match held in a pig pen on a farm, often filled with mud and pig excrement. Triple H and Henry O. Godwinn participated in a Hog Pen match at WWE's In Your House 5 in December 1995. The only objective to win is to be the first wrestler to throw his opponent into a pig pen.

Team matches

[edit]

Matches are often contested between two or more teams, most often consisting of two members each. Tag team matches can range from two teams of two fighting, to multiple man teams challenging each other.

Tag Team match

[edit]

On most occasions, one member of the team competes in the ring with one or more of his or her teammates standing behind the ropes. Wrestlers switch positions by "tagging" one another, usually similar to a high five and, as a result, these teams are referred to as tag teams. This can create tension during the match as an injured wrestler in the middle of the ring attempts to reach his or her teammates, often with the heel team preventing them from doing so. In typical tag team matches, standard wrestling rules apply with a match ending by pinfall, submission, countout, or disqualification. Tag team matches have also been seen in mixed martial arts and boxing.

Promotions usually have a tag team championship for a team of two wrestlers, and on rare occasion allies of the reigning tag team will be allowed to defend the title in the place of one of the reigning wrestlers under the Freebird rule. Though common in Mexican lucha libre, at one point, World Championship Wrestling (WCW) had a championship for teams of three. WWE also can have three (triple threat) or four (fatal four-way) tag teams going against each other as well. The Tag Team Triple Threat match (known as Tag Team Triangle match in WCW) involves three teams where a member of two teams are in the ring and can tag their partner or a member of the third team. The first team with an active competitor to win by pinfall or submission wins the match for the team.[152]

The Tag Team Four Corners match (also known as Tag Team Fatal Four-Way match) is another variation that starts off with four teams positioned as in a tag team match and two wrestlers active in the ring. The two wrestlers in the ring can tag their partner or members of a team not already represented in the match. It is an advantage to have a team member tagged into the match as you can only win by being a legal competitor in the match and the one who scores the fall wins the match for the team. One example was a four team match for the WWE Women's Tag Team Championship at Starrcade (2019).

Another variation of the four-way tag team match is to have a member of each of the four teams in competition while their partners are on the apron and the active member who scores a pinfall or submission wins the match for the team. One example of this variation was contested for the SmackDown Tag Team Championship at Clash of Champions (2017).

Sometimes a team will have members of three, four or five in non-elimination tag matches. They are often named based on the number of participants and gender involved. Six-Man (Six-Woman) Tag Team match (known as Trios match in AEW) is one variation. The Wyatt Family defeated The Shield at Elimination Chamber (2014) in a six-man tag team match.

Tornado Tag Team match

[edit]

The tornado tag team match (Originally known as the Texas Tornado) is a hardcore-rules match where all wrestlers involved are allowed to be in and wrestle in the ring and elsewhere at the same time, and thus all wrestlers are vulnerable to having a fall scored against them. Whether or not it is truly a tag team match is debatable, as it involves no tagging, but it is contested between tag teams. The first match of this kind was held on October 2, 1937, in Houston between Milo Steinborn and Whiskers Savage against Tiger Daula and Fazul Mohammed. It was the brainchild of promoter Morris Sigel. Another well-known example of this match is when The Shield (Roman Reigns & Seth Rollins) challenged Team Hell No (Daniel Bryan & Kane) for the WWE Tag Team Championship at Extreme Rules (2013).

Elimination Tag Team match

[edit]

Tag team matches are occasionally held under elimination rules; that is, the losing wrestler is eliminated from the match, but their team is allowed to continue with their remaining members until all members of one team are eliminated. WWE and other promotions also has three or four tag teams going against each other as well. Anyone can be tagged in by anyone else and can be subject to immediate disqualification for failure to accept a tag. When a wrestler is pinned or force to submit, the entire team is eliminated and the last team remaining wins.

In WWE, these matches are primarily featured during its Survivor Series pay-per-views, where they are billed as a "Survivor Series match". Teams of four or five, though on some occasions as many as seven, compete under elimination rules. All other standard rules apply, and team members may tag in and out in any order. While some teams are already established stables, others may need to recruit members for their team. In lucha libre promotions, a torneo cibernetico is a similar type of match between teams of up to eight wrestlers who enter in a predetermined order.

Captain's Fall match

[edit]

A captain's fall match is a tag team elimination match where the two teams of four competitors to compete and captains are assigned to both teams. The purpose of the match is to score a fall over the captain to get the win. Eliminations may occur until the captain is pinned or force to submit; the team loses if the captain is eliminated. Although common in Mexican promotions, as well as certain Japanese promotions to an extent, the only time this match type occurred in WWE was at the August 20, 2019, edition of WWE 205 Live, between Team Drew Gulak vs. Team Lorcan.

Tag Team Turmoil

[edit]

A tag team turmoil is another version of an elimination tag team match. The match has a team in each of the four corners to start the match, but as each team is eliminated another team takes its place, similar to a gauntlet match. There are five pay-per-view matches of the tag team turmoil took place at SummerSlam in 1999, Armageddon in 2003, Night of Champions in 2010, Night of Champions Kickoff Show in 2013 and Elimination Chamber in 2017. Two teams start, when one is eliminated a new team comes to the ring until all teams have competed, the remaining team is the winner. This was used on the May 31, 2011 episode of NXT, with a team consisting of a WWE pro and an NXT rookie. The winning team earned three redemption points for the rookie in this version. This was also used on the May 8, 2017 episode of Raw, where the winning team earned a number one contender's spot for Matt and Jeff Hardy's WWE Raw Tag Team Championship.

Ultimate Endurance match

[edit]

Primarily associated with Ring of Honor (ROH), An Ultimate Endurance match is a tag team elimination match that typically includes three to four tag teams with the members of two. The match starts off with a particular set of special stipulations, with the stipulation changing every time a team is eliminated. These stipulations are predetermined and are not limited to any specific type.

Mixed Tag Team match

[edit]

A mixed tag team match features mixed-gender teams that only wrestlers of the same gender may be in the ring at the same time will wrestle each other under the standard rules. For example, if a female wrestler tags her male partner, both women leave the ring and both men enter the ring, the roles is also reversed as well. The Mixed Match Challenge tournament was debuted on January 16, 2018, which both team winners The Miz and Asuka won season one while R-Truth and Carmella won season two, earning themselves the #30 spots in the 2019 Royal Rumble matches and an all-expenses-paid vacation.

Intergender Tag Team match

[edit]

A intergender tag team match features mixed-gender teams but it differs from the "Mixed Tag Team match" in which that both men and women can be in the ring at the same time to wrestle each other under the tornado tag team rules. This concept was used and popularized in the early 2000s by Team Xtreme during the Attitude Era.

Stadium Stampede / Anarchy in the Arena match

[edit]

A Stadium Stampede match is a type of hybrid tag team, location and cinematic match that originated in All Elite Wrestling. It has been run twice at their Double or Nothing pay-per-view event under this name and four times under the Anarchy in the Arena name, as well as once at their 2023 All In pay-per-view event for a total of seven times (when conducted indoors, it is called an Anarchy in the Arena match). This match typically involves 10 wrestlers in a 5 vs 5 match, and all five wrestlers of the two teams are each part of an established faction in AEW. This often violent and brutal match is contested under hardcore rules, and it starts in a ring in the middle of the stadium or arena and progresses through various environments, such as bars, cargo loading areas and offices. The 2020 edition of this match stayed within the empty TIAA Bank Field and featured the teams brawling around the stadium, while the 2021 edition of this match had the combatants exit the empty stadium and then finally end up in the audience-present central event space at the adjacent Daily's Place outdoor amphitheatre, where the match was finished in the Daily's Place ring. The first indoor edition took place under the name Anarchy in the Arena at Double or Nothing 2022. The third match under the Stadium Stampede name was held at All In inside London's Wembley Stadium in 2023. However, unlike the previous stadium editions, the entire match took place live in front of a crowd, instead of it being a cinematic match.[153][154]

List of Stadium Stampede matches

[edit]
# Match Event Date Venue Location Ref
1 The Elite (Kenny Omega, "Hangman" Adam Page and The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson)) and Matt Hardy vs. The Inner Circle (Chris Jericho, Jake Hager, Sammy Guevara, Santana and Ortiz) Double or Nothing (2020) May 23, 2020 TIAA Bank Field Jacksonville, Florida
2 The Inner Circle (Chris Jericho, Jake Hager, Sammy Guevara, Santana and Ortiz) vs. The Pinnacle (MJF, Wardlow, Shawn Spears, and FTR (Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler)) Double or Nothing (2021) May 30, 2021 TIAA Bank Field
Daily's Place
3 Blackpool Combat Club (Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli and Wheeler Yuta), Mike Santana and Ortiz vs. Eddie Kingston, Orange Cassidy, Penta El Zero Miedo and Best Friends (Trent Beretta and Chuck Taylor) All In (2023) August 27, 2023 Wembley Stadium London, England

List of Anarchy in the Arena matches

[edit]
# Match Type Event Date Venue Location Ref
1 Blackpool Combat Club (Jon Moxley and Bryan Danielson), Eddie Kingston, Mike Santana and Ortiz vs. The Jericho Appreciation Society (Chris Jericho, Daniel Garcia, Jake Hager, Angelo Parker, and Matt Menard) 5 on 5 Double or Nothing (2022) May 29, 2022 T-Mobile Arena Paradise, Nevada
2 Blackpool Combat Club (Jon Moxley, Bryan Danielson, Claudio Castagnoli and Wheeler Yuta) vs. The Elite (Kenny Omega, The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson) and "Hangman" Adam Page) 4 on 4 Double or Nothing (2023) May 28, 2023
3 The Elite (The Young Bucks (Matthew Jackson and Nicholas Jackson), Kazuchika Okada and Jack Perry) vs. Team AEW (Bryan Danielson, Darby Allin and FTR (Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler)) Double or Nothing (2024) May 26, 2024 MGM Grand Garden Arena
4 Kenny Omega, Swerve Strickland, Willow Nightingale and The Opps (Samoa Joe, Katsuyori Shibata and Powerhouse Hobbs) vs. Death Riders (Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli, Marina Shafir and Wheeler Yuta) and The Young Bucks (Matthew Jackson and Nicholas Jackson) 6 on 6 Double or Nothing (2025) May 25, 2025 Desert Diamond Arena Glendale, Arizona

Strange Bedfellows match

[edit]

A Strange Bedfellows match is a standard tag team match where a member of one tag team has to team up with a member of another tag team they are feuding with. One example of this was when Matt Hardy had to team up with Christian against his brother/tag team partner Jeff Hardy and Christian's tag team partner Edge.

Weapon-based variations

[edit]

Through the use of foreign objects, the matches generally take the name of the weapon being used ("Singapore cane match", "Chairs match"). In the following list of weapon-based matches, additional rules have supplanted or replaced the standard rules.

Arcade Anarchy match

[edit]

An Arcade Anarchy match is a tag-team hardcore match that originated in AEW where various items found in arcades like air hockey tables, mallet hammers (for Mogura Taiji (Whac-a-Mole)), various video game stalls, a claw crane, and even Teddy bears filled with Lego bricks are made available and placed around the ring. There is also a "prize wall" made available with traditional hardcore professional wrestling weapons hanging on this wall. This match was first done on AEW Dynamite on March 31, 2021.[155]

Beach Brawl

[edit]

A Beach Brawl is a hardcore match where objects that are found at a beach, like surfboards, wooden benches, wooden tables, beach balls, sports balls and a kiddle pool filled with plastic balls are made available. The match is no-disqualification, so other weapons are also legal. The first Beach Brawl was between Sol Ruca and Blair Davenport in WWE NXT's Spring Breakin' in April 2024.

Bricks match

[edit]

A Bricks match is a hardcore match where concrete bricks are made available as weapons. Bricks were often integrated into no-rope barbed wire deathmatches, and bricks first made their appearance in Japanese deathmatches in 1993.

Chairs match

[edit]

A Chairs match is a standard weapons match with any number of steel chairs being the only legal weapon to be used. This match can be won by pinfall or submission. The first Chairs match was introduced at TLC 2009 between Batista vs. The Undertaker, which Undertaker won by pinfall.

Country Whipping match

[edit]

A Country Whipping match is a hardcore match where all competitors are armed with leather belts, which is the only legal weapon in the match. This was known to be The Godwinns speciality match. Also called a Corporal Punishment match and a Badstreet deathmatch.

Crazy 8 match

[edit]

The Crazy 8 match, used mostly in the defunct Pro Wrestling Unplugged promotion, involves placing a championship belt at the top of a scaffold with the first wrestler to retrieve it being declared the winner. Placed in and around the ring for the wrestlers to use during the match are one side of a steel cage, two trampolines, and four rope swings.[156]

Fans Bring the Weapons match

[edit]

A Fans Bring the Weapons match is a type of dangerous hardcore match where the competing wrestlers take random blunt objects from audience members and use them in the match. This match was first pioneered in Extreme Championship Wrestling in the mid-1990s.

Good Housekeeping match

[edit]

A Good Housekeeping match is a hardcore match where various items usually found in private homes such as trashcans, kitchen sinks, ironing boards, pans, tables, brooms, utensils and various raw food ingredients are made available as weapons and these are the only legal weapons. This match is fought under no-disqualification and no-countout rules. Jeff Jarrett fought Chyna in a Good Housekeeping match at WWF's No Mercy 1999.

Handcuff match

[edit]

A Handcuff match is a hardcore match when the only way to win is a wrestler must retrieve a pair of handcuffs then handcuff the opposing wrestler to a ring fixture, sometimes so that the opposing wrestler is unable to make use of their hands.

Hangman's Horror match

[edit]

The Hangman's Horror match was created by Raven to end his feud with Vampiro w/James Mitchell at TNA's IMPACT Wrestling on October 29, 2003. The objective in this match is to wrap your opponent's neck with a steel chain and then proceed in hanging him over the ring ropes. Once he is declared unconscious by the referee, the person in charge of the horrific hanging will gain the victory.

Kendo Stick match

[edit]
Johnny Devine (left) uses a kendo stick on Buck Gunderson during a match

A kendo stick match (also known as a Singapore cane match or Dueling canes match) is a standard weapons match with a kendo stick being the only legal weapon. Often, the ring will be lined with many kendo sticks for the wrestlers to use. Hardcore wrestling promotion Combat Zone Wrestling has used this match with fluorescent light tubes instead of kendo sticks.

Ladder match

[edit]

A ladder match is a no-disqualification style match in which a specific object (usually a title belt, a contract or a briefcase) is placed above the ring—out of the reach of the competitors—with the winner being the first person to climb a ladder and retrieve it. This is often used in WWE with their Money in the Bank matches.[157] The ladder may be used as a weapon.

Casino Ladder match

[edit]

The Casino Ladder match was created by All Elite Wrestling as a variation of its Casino Battle Royale mixed with a traditional ladder match. A poker chip is hung above the ring beneath a ladder, which can be used as a weapon. The match starts with two wrestlers, with a new participant entering every 2 minutes. The first wrestler to grab the poker chip wins the match, and with it a future AEW World Championship match at a time and place of the wrestler's choosing. Notably, the match can be won before all of the intended participants have entered.

Full Metal Mayhem match

[edit]

A Full Metal Mayhem match is a variation of a TLC match (see below), where in addition to tables and chairs being present, steel chains are also made available, and any other weapon that is metallic (trashcans, thumbtacks) often make appearances. This match originated in TNA/Impact Wrestling and this promotion has had at least one of these matches every year since 2005.

King of the Mountain match

[edit]

The King of the Mountain match is described as a "reverse ladder match". Instead of retrieving an object hanging above the ring, the winner is the first person to use a ladder to hang a championship belt above the ring—after having scored a pinfall or submission (pinfalls count anywhere) to earn the right to try. A wrestler who has been pinned or forced to submit must spend two minutes in a penalty box. At Slammiversary (2022), the first-ever Queen of the Mountain match took place, with Jordynne Grace defeating champion Tasha Steelz, along with Chelsea Green, Deonna Purrazzo and Mia Yim to win the Impact Knockouts Championship. Four-time Knockouts World Champion Mickie James was the match's enforcer.[158]

Stairway to Hell match

[edit]

Used in ECW, a Stairway to Hell match is a ladder match with a weapon hanging over the ring. Rather than winning the match by retrieving it, the first wrestler to climb a ladder and retrieve the weapon is allowed to use it in the match. The match is won by standard pinfall or submission.

TLC match

[edit]

A tables, ladders and chairs match, often abbreviated as TLC match, is an extension of a ladder match with chairs and tables also being present as legal weapons.[159] This match was introduced because each of the three teams specialized in one of these weapons: Edge and Christian were known for their frequent use of steel folding chairs and the tandem "con-chair-to" move; the Dudley Boyz were known for their pioneering, hard-hitting use of slamming their opponents through wooden event tables; and the Hardy Boyz were known for their high-flying acrobatics off of twin-step ladders. There had been a similar type of match at WrestleMania 2000 called the Triangle Ladder match which also involved tables and chairs. But the first ever official TLC match took place between Edge and Christian, The Dudley Boyz and The Hardy Boyz at the WWF event SummerSlam 2000; and another at Wrestlemania X-Seven.

Due to the destructive, dangerous, violent, frenetic and physically demanding nature of these matches, every subsequent TLC match after the third one held a month after X-Seven was toned down to reduce the physical demands and risks this type of match poses. From 2009 to 2020, WWE has held a pay-per-view in December named TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs, which features this stipulation in its main event. The match has two variations: one is competed as a ladder match, which the person/people must retrieve an object suspended above the ring, and the other is a traditional style match won by pinfall or submission. In WWE, Edge has competed in the most TLC matches (7) including the first three, and has often used this match to gain an advantage in a storyline, with some referring to it as his specialty match.

This match has also been run and contested under hardcore match rules where a wrestler can win via pinfall or submission, and tables, ladders and chairs are heavily featured as weapons. Two examples were the “WeeLC” match in 2014 and the Tables, Ladders and Scares (a renamed TLC match) between Tony D’Angelo and Oba Femi in 2024.

Ultimate X match

[edit]

The Ultimate X match is a "ladder match without the ladders" where two cables are strung metal structures rising from the four corners of the ring, crossing above the middle of the ring, forming an "X" pattern. The objective to win this match is to climb the turnbuckles and then climb hand-over-hand across the cables to claim the prize of the match, usually a championship belt. A signature match of Impact Wrestling's X Division, the match is contested by three or more wrestlers.

Nigerian Drum Fight

[edit]

A Nigerian Drum Fight is a no-disqualification stipulation weapons match where various musical percussion instruments used in traditional Nigerian music, such as bongos and a gong are made available at ringside, as are tables and kendo sticks. Big E faced Apollo Crews at WrestleMania 37 in a Nigerian Drum Fight.

Object on a Pole match

[edit]

The Object on a Pole match, whose name is usually derived from the object being hung, i.e. "Brass knuckles on a Pole", "Steel chair on a Pole", "Singapore cane on a Pole", "Paddle on a Pole", "Viagra on a Pole", "Contract on a pole", "Mistletoe on a Pole" or "Judy Bagwell on a Forklift", is the spiritual forebear of the ladder match. In this case, an object is placed on a pole that extends from one of the four turnbuckles on the ring with the wrestlers battling to reach it first.[160] Unlike the ladder match, however, reaching the object doesn't usually end the match; it simply allows that wrestler to use it as a weapon.[161] This is not a no-disqualification match; the weapon on the pole is merely an exception to the disqualification rule. However, this is sometimes a no-disqualification match in which any weapon, plus the one on the pole, can be used. This match is referred to by many wrestling critics as a "Russo Special", due to the propensity of WCW booker Vince Russo's use of Pole Matches during his tenure at the company. Another World Championship Wrestling specialty is the San Francisco 49ers match, where four boxes are placed in the four corners of the ring, one with the championship belt and the other three with weapons. You must find the box with the belt to win the match and the championship. To date, this match is only known to have happened in a major wrestling federation once, with Booker T defeating Jeff Jarrett to become the WCW World Heavyweight champion on October 2, 2000.

Multiple variations of the "Pole match" exist. In some cases the match is closer to the ladder match, in that reaching the object does end the match.[162] In others there will be objects above all of the turnbuckles.[163] Further still, there can be a mixture of the two, with an object placed at (though not above) each turnbuckle, one to end the match, the rest to be used as weapons.[164] Total Nonstop Action Wrestling used a "Pole match" as a setup to another match, placing objects at four of their six turnbuckles with the promise that the first wrestler to reach each object would be allowed to use them weeks later at an already scheduled cage match.[165] In a Feast or Fired match each case contains a contract to fight for a TNA World Heavyweight Championship, TNA Tag Team Championship or TNA X-Division Championship, with the final case contains a pink slip, mean the holder of that case would be fired immediately, but if the person holding the X-Division title shot briefcase went on to win that title, it cannot be cashed in right away for the World Heavyweight Championship (Option C). The Coal Miner's Glove match is a variation of the typical "Object on a Pole match" in which the object in question is a coal miner's glove, which can be used on one's opponent upon retrieval.

Biker Chain match

[edit]

A Biker Chain match is a hardcore match where a chain is attached to a pole and is the only legal weapon, but the objective of this match is to pin your opponent. Brock Lesnar and The Undertaker did a Biker Chain match at WWE's No Mercy 2003.

Pillow Fight

[edit]

A pillow fight is a weapons match with only pillows and a bed are placed in the ring.[149] The pillows may be used as weapons, but other than that, standard wrestling rules apply. Notably, Torrie Wilson once picked up the bed with Candice Michelle on it and threw it. Another variation, the Lingerie Pillow Fight, requires the participants to wear lingerie. Another variation, the Pajama Pillow Fight, requires the participants to wear pajamas.[149][166]

Straitjacket match

[edit]

In a straitjacket match, a wrestler must put their opponent into a straitjacket, usually after knocking the opponent out or by rendering them unconscious by submission holds. It made its televised debut on TNA when Samuel Shaw beat Mr. Anderson by first rendering him unconscious with a chokehold and then putting him into the straitjacket.[167] On WWF Raw in June 1999, Ken Shamrock, who was the only participant confined to the straitjacket, still won his match with Jeff Jarrett after forcing him to submit to a headscissors submission hold.

Strap match

[edit]

A strap match, known by many names and done with many slight variations, is any match in which the competitors are placed on the opposite ends of a restraint to keep them in close physical proximity. By definition, the strap and anything tied to it are considered legal and in play weapons. The most common rule for victory is to achieve a pinfall, but there is a common variation where one wrestler must circle the ring and touch all four corners in quick order, without interruption.[168] Because of the strap's legality, and subsequent use as a choking device, submissions are generally not allowed.[169][170]

The traditional strap match involves two wrestlers tied together via a leather strap, with the strap match being one of the most varied forms of professional wrestling match type, both in name and implements used. The name used for the match generally comes from the implement used and one or both of the participants. Common restraints include a belt, bullrope (length of rope with a cowbell the center), steel chains, one to two-foot "leash", or leather strap, where the wrestlers are tied together at one wrist. This match type is often named Caribbean Strap match when a wrestler from Puerto Rico (such as Savio Vega) is participating on the match or the match is being held on a Puerto Rican promotion like the International Wrestling Association.

Barbed Wire Chain Deathmatch

[edit]

A Barbed Wire Chain Deathmatch is a strap match where instead of two wrestlers being bound together with a leather strap at the wrists, they are bound together with barbed wire at the wrists. This match was done a few times in 1995 in the IWA promotion in Japan with Shoji Nakamaki, Hiroshi Ono and Cactus Jack.

Dog collar match

[edit]

A Dog Collar match is a type of strap match where instead of a leather strap at a wrist, the competing wrestlers are bound together by the neck via dog collars and chains. Made famous by the match between Roddy Piper and Greg Valentine at Starrcade '83: A Flare for the Gold, AEW has brought the match back in recent times, with Brodie Lee vs. Cody following the stipulation in 2020 (the last match of the former's career before his death later that year), and CM Punk vs. MJF at Revolution being highly regarded for their violence. Punk himself competed in another famously violent dog collar match against Raven at ROH Death Before Dishonour 2003.

Four Corners Strap match

[edit]

The Four Corners Strap match is when the first wrestler to touch all four turnbuckle pads in succession without any form of interruption from his opponent or anyone else wins. If at any point a wrestler starts touching pads but is taken down before the wrestler can finish touching them all, they must start over again. There are no pinfalls, no submissions, no countouts, or no disqualifications in this match. At WCW's Uncensored 1995, Hulk Hogan actually dragged non-participant (Ric Flair) to all four corners to win his strap match against Big Van Vader. This match was renamed a Samoan Strap match for WWE's Extreme Rules 2009 pay-per-view with Umaga facing off against CM Punk. WCW has their own variation strap match as well named the Yapapi Indian Strap match between Hulk Hogan vs. Ric Flair at the 2000 Uncensored pay-per-view. A No Surrender Dog Collar Strap match is a strap match with the "No Surrender" stipulation added, meaning that neither competitor would be permitted to submit in the match. TNA had a main event at the TNA No Surrender 2005 pay-per-view for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship between Raven and Abyss, which Raven won. All Elite Wrestling (AEW) also has its own variation of the Four Corners Strap match, dubbed the South Beach Strap match, which has been used once in a match between Cody Rhodes and Q. T. Marshall at the Road Rager event in July 2021. It was named as such due to the event taking place in Downtown Miami, close to the neighbourhood of South Beach.

Russian chain match

[edit]

A Russian Chain match is a type of strap match where instead of an elastic strap, a thick, 15-foot steel chain is used to bound the wrestlers, and this chain is often used as a weapon. This match has come under many names, including a Texas Chain match and a Tennessee Chain match. A Biker Chain match is a variation of an Object on a Pole match. The Russian Chain match was the speciality of Ivan Koloff and Boris Malenko.

Texas Bullrope match

[edit]

A Texas Bullrope match is a type of strap match where the wrestlers are bound together by a thick cattle rope with a cowbell attached; the objective of this match is to achieve a single pinfall, or in another variation, victory is achieved by touching all four turnbuckles successively similar to a standard Strap Match (as in the case of JBL vs. Eddie Guerrero in The Great American Bash (2004)). The Rock had his own signature match, the Brahma Bullrope match which was a renamed Texas Bullrope match.

Stretcher match

[edit]
A stretcher at ringside prior to a stretcher match

A Stretcher match is a hardcore match where a wrestler must incapacitate their opponent to such an extent that they are able to get them onto a stretcher and roll them to the finish line for the victory; usually past a line at the top of the entrance ramp. The stretcher can also be used as a weapon. Stretcher matches contested in All Elite Wrestling are a combination of a stretcher match and an ambulance match, where the objective is to place your opponent onto a stretcher, roll the stretcher into the back of an ambulance, and close both doors to gain the victory.

Steel Stairs match

[edit]

A Steel Stairs match is a hardcore match where the only legal weapon are any number of steel stairs typically situated on the opposite sides of the ring that can be used to enter the ring. The Big Show faced Erick Rowan in a Steel Stairs match at the TLC 2014 WWE pay-per view.[171]

Symphony of Destruction match

[edit]

A Symphony of Destruction match is a hardcore match where various musical instruments are available at ringside as weapons. This is Elias's speciality match and debuted in 2018 when Elias faced Braun Strowman.[172]

Tables match

[edit]
Chris Jericho (left) and Shawn Michaels on a table at a 2008 house show in Puerto Rico

A Tables match is a hardcore match in which, to win, one's opponent must be driven through a table. It can only be won with an offensive maneuver.[173]

Tables matches can be contested with tag teams, under both elimination[174] and one fall rules. The first tables match was contested at ECW's 1995 Double Tables event between The Public Enemy and The Tazmaniac & Sabu for the ECW World Tag Team Championship, whilst the first in the WWE was a tag-team Tables match with The Hardy Boyz versus The Dudley Boyz at the 2000 Royal Rumble. The objective of both of these matches was to drive all opposing team members through tables with offensive moves, but subsequent WWE Tables matches have only required one member to be driven through a table. It is common for tables matches to also include a "no-disqualification" clause, turning them into hardcore matches (although this variation may also be known as a Hardcore Tables match). In some tag matches, a person can save his teammate by breaking the table with his own body. Apparently this does not count against the team.[175]

Flaming Tables match

[edit]

A Flaming Tables match is an Extreme Championship Wrestling specialty match where the tables are set on fire and the only way to win is to put opponents through the flaming tables.[176]

Thanksgiving Leftovers Throwdown

[edit]

The Thanksgiving Leftovers Throwdown is a specialty match based on the Thanksgiving holiday. It debuted on the November 26, 2021 Black Friday edition of SmackDown between Rick Boogs and Angel Garza. It is a standard wrestling match with a table by ringside covered with leftover foods. No competitor was thrown into the table although Humberto Carrillo, who distracted Boogs, was thrown into the table by Shinsuke Nakamura.[177]

Two out of Three Tables match

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A Two out of Three Tables match is a hardcore match where it can only be won when a wrestler or tag team puts their opponent or opponent's team through two tables, but it does not have to be at the same time. Performing a move on double tables does not count as a victory. It is also a variation of a two out of three falls match.

Taped fist match

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For a taped fist match, the wrestlers are allowed to tape and/or wrap their hands to allow them to punch harder without damaging their hands. The wrestlers must compete with their fists taped, the idea being that this would make it harder to grab each other while at the same time protecting their hands while punching, encouraging the athletes to "fight" instead of wrestle.[178] In one variation, the Taipei Deathmatch, the taped fists are dipped in super glue, then broken glass.[179]

Viking Rules match

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The Viking Rules match is a viking-themed hardcore match with the ring decorated in a style of a viking ship. This match was introduced by The Viking Raiders on the September 2, 2022, edition of SmackDown (taped on August 26, 2022) against The New Day.[180]

Water Fight

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A water fight is a weapons match which the ring is surrounded with buckets of water, water guns and water balloons to use as weapons. Other than that, standard wrestling rules apply. Notably, Jillian Hall once smacked Mickie James over the head with a water gun during this match.

Weapon Rumble match

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The Weapon Rumble match is a hardcore match invented in DDT Pro-Wrestling in which, similarly to a Rumble rules match, with every time interval a new weapon is introduced in the match. The weapons are chosen by the participants beforehand and can widely vary due to the loose interpretation of the definition of a "weapon" that's used by the company in a comedic manner.[181]

Weapons Wild match

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A Weapons Wild match is a hardcore match where various blunt weapons are made available along the padded barriers at ringside, and are all legal. Wrestlers are armed with at least one weapon when they start the match. This match originated in WWE's NXT promotion.

Winner Takes All match

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Two scenarios constitute a Winner Takes All match; a title-versus-title match is a match in which both wrestlers (or teams if a tag team match) are champions going into the match, and the winner receives the championship of the loser, thus "taking all".[182][183] This differs from a championship unification match, where one championship is absorbed into the other and retired/deactivated. In a Winner Take All scenario, both titles are still active and defended as separate entities. Winner Takes All matches may also take the form of tag team matches, in which two separate titles are fought for in the same match; such as when Seth Rollins and Becky Lynch defended the Universal Championship and Raw Women's Championship respectively against Baron Corbin and Lacey Evans at 2019's Extreme Rules event.

References

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Sources

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Professional wrestling match types encompass the varied formats of scripted athletic contests in , where performers execute predetermined storylines through physical maneuvers, with victory conditions altered by stipulations such as pinfalls, submissions, or eliminations to advance narratives and heighten dramatic tension. These matches deviate from standard rules by incorporating elements like weapons, enclosed cages, or multi-participant structures, serving primarily to differentiate events, escalate rivalries, and engage spectators beyond conventional one-on-one bouts. Among the most prevalent types are the singles match, contested between two individuals typically won by pinfall or submission, and the tag team match, involving teams of two who alternate via tags while adhering to in-ring occupancy limits. Specialized stipulations include no disqualification matches, permitting interference and weaponry without penalty, and steel cage matches, enclosing the ring to prevent escapes and focus confrontations internally. Iconic multi-competitor variants like the , where entrants arrive at intervals and eliminations occur over the top rope, exemplify how these formats culminate major story arcs and determine championship contenders. Over decades, match types have evolved from basic athletic exhibitions in the early to elaborate gimmicks pioneered by promotions, with innovations like the steel cage tracing to the 1930s and later spectacles such as emerging to exploit wrestler personas and event spectacle. This progression reflects causal drivers of audience retention through novelty, though some stipulations have drawn scrutiny for elevating injury risks inherent to the high-impact choreography.

History and Evolution

Origins in Carnival and Catch Wrestling

, the foundational style for professional wrestling, emerged in 19th-century , , as a folk art practiced by working-class miners and laborers, emphasizing improvised holds, submissions, and ground control without restrictions on technique. This style, known for its "catch" any available hold approach, prioritized finishing moves like joint locks and chokes over upright wrestling, distinguishing it from continental freestyle variants. Introduced to the around via British naval personnel, it gained traction in athletic clubs and tournaments by the late 1800s. In the post-Civil War era of the late 1860s and 1870s, catch wrestlers integrated into American traveling s and county fairs as part of "athletic shows," where they issued open challenges to local audience members for cash prizes, drawing crowds through the spectacle of purportedly legitimate contests. These matches typically followed catch rules, allowing pins, submissions, or tap-outs for victory, with no disqualifications, fostering a raw, unpredictable format that emphasized individual skill and endurance. To protect carnival revenue—dependent on the house wrestler's undefeated streak—and minimize injury risks from unskilled challengers, promoters increasingly scripted outcomes by the early , marking the causal shift from competitive bouts to predetermined performances while retaining the challenge match structure as a core type. This carnival model standardized early professional match types, including singles exhibitions and timed challenges, with wrestlers like those in 1910s athletic shows using props minimally but focusing on holds derived from catch techniques, such as the "hook" submissions that influenced later pro maneuvers. By 1905, the establishment of the World Heavyweight Wrestling Championship under catch-as-catch-can rules formalized the style's prestige, bridging legitimate contests—like Frank Gotch's 1911 defenses—toward the entertainment-oriented formats that dominated by the 1920s. The carnival challenge's emphasis on storytelling through feigned struggle and crowd interaction laid the groundwork for professional wrestling's narrative-driven match types, distinct from pure sport by prioritizing spectacle over unscripted outcomes.

Territorial and National Expansion

In the post-World War II era, professional wrestling transitioned from carnival circuits to structured regional territories under the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), formed in 1948 as a cooperative of independent promoters controlling specific geographic areas across the United States and parts of Canada. This system, encompassing over 20 territories by the 1950s, fostered localized innovation in match types as promoters tailored stipulations to regional tastes and audience demands, such as incorporating weapons or environmental hazards to heighten drama in response to competitive bookings. Wrestlers and bookers frequently rotated between territories via sanctioned talent exchanges, enabling the cross-pollination of successful gimmicks; for example, chain matches and strap matches, emphasizing personal grudges, proliferated through touring champions who adapted them to different crowds, gradually embedding them into the NWA's shared repertoire. Television's introduction in the early 1940s, with the first taped wrestling show in 1942 and widespread local broadcasts by the 1950s, accelerated the territorial spread of match formats by exposing audiences in one region to stipulations popularized elsewhere, such as enclosed cage variants used to prevent interference in high-stakes title defenses. NWA bylaws prohibited cross-territory invasions without permission, preserving autonomy but allowing collaborative events like joint cards that showcased unified rules for multi-promotion bouts, thereby standardizing core mechanics like pinfall victories within gimmick frameworks across the network. This era's emphasis on kayfabe and regional flavor limited radical divergences, yet it solidified foundational types—singles with no-disqualification clauses, tag team partnerships, and battle royals—as portable elements that promoters could license or emulate without direct infringement. The territorial model's decline accelerated in the early 1980s with the World Wrestling Federation's (WWF) aggressive national push under , who withdrew from NWA affiliations in 1983 and launched syndicated programming on cable networks, reaching an estimated 20 million households by mid-decade through shows like . This expansion, fueled by pay-per-view events starting with in 1985, nationalized match types by broadcasting polished versions of territorial staples—such as steel cage escapes and handicap eliminators—to non-traditional markets, eroding regional exclusivity and compelling surviving territories to adopt WWF-influenced formats for competitiveness. The 1984 acquisition of Georgia Championship Wrestling's prime-time TBS slot, despite backlash from southern promoters, exemplified this shift, airing WWF's streamlined gimmicks to a syndicated audience and prompting a homogenization where innovative local variants gave way to nationally marketable spectacles. Nationally, this era marked the genesis of pay-per-view-exclusive stipulations designed for broad appeal, like the body-slam challenges at WrestleMania I on March 31, 1985, which repackaged territorial grudge matches into event-defining moments viewable coast-to-coast. While territories like Mid-South and World Class Championship Wrestling persisted into the mid-1980s with hardcore-leaning types such as Texas Death Matches—requiring a ten-count after knockouts—they increasingly incorporated national trends to retain talent poached by WWF's higher salaries and exposure, culminating in the system's collapse by 1987 as cable saturation favored centralized promotions. Internationally, U.S. territorial exports influenced early adopters in Japan and Mexico during the 1970s-1980s, where promotions like New Japan Pro-Wrestling integrated tag team and cage elements into puroresu strong style, though adaptations prioritized cultural preferences over direct replication.

Attitude Era and Modern Innovations

The Attitude Era, spanning approximately from November 1997 to May 2002, marked a period of heightened intensity and boundary-pushing in World Wrestling Federation (WWF) programming, leading to the popularization and introduction of several extreme match stipulations designed to escalate rivalries and captivate audiences amid competition from World Championship Wrestling (WCW). One pivotal innovation was the Hell in a Cell match, debuting on October 5, 1997, at Badd Blood: In Your House, where The Undertaker faced Shawn Michaels inside a 20-foot-high steel cage topped with a roof to prevent interference or escape. This format amplified the spectacle of enclosed brawls, incorporating weapons and high-risk maneuvers while maintaining pinfall or submission victories, and became a staple for marquee feuds. Hardcore-style matches also proliferated during this era, reflecting a shift toward no-disqualification rules and environmental usage, exemplified by the introduction of the WWF Hardcore Championship on November 2, 1998, which enforced a "24/7" rule allowing title changes anytime and anywhere starting May 10, 1999. Variants like First Blood matches, where victory required drawing opponent blood, and Inferno matches, demanding sustained fire on the opponent, underscored the era's embrace of violence, though these drew criticism for health risks and were phased out post-2002 amid regulatory pressures. The Tables, Ladders, and Chairs (TLC) match emerged at SummerSlam on August 27, 2000, pitting The Hardy Boyz against The Dudley Boyz and Edge & Christian in a multi-team ladder bout emphasizing destructive props for a suspended belt retrieval, setting a benchmark for chaotic, weapon-integrated multi-competitor contests. Transitioning into the early 2000s, the match was unveiled on November 17, 2002, at , featuring a chain-linked enclosure with four pods releasing entrants sequentially for an elimination-based World Heavyweight Championship defense by against , Booker T, , Kane, and . This structure, weighing 10 tons and spanning two miles of chain, innovated multi-man dynamics by staggering participation, influencing subsequent formats. Post-Attitude Era developments in WWE emphasized strategic and thematic stipulations, with the Money in the Bank ladder match debuting at WrestleMania 21 on April 3, 2005, as a multi-ladder scramble for a contract briefcase granting a future championship shot within one year, conceptualized by Chris Jericho to inject unpredictability into title pursuits. This format evolved into annual events and brand-specific variants, rewarding athleticism and opportunism. Other modern additions included the Punjabi Prison match on September 16, 2007, at No Mercy, utilizing bamboo cages for cultural flair in The Great Khali versus The Undertaker, though limited by logistical complexity. These innovations reflected WWE's adaptation to post-WCW monopoly, prioritizing production value and narrative payoff over pure brutality, while independent promotions experimented with hybrid rules like cinematic matches during the 2020 pandemic restrictions.

Core Mechanics and Standard Formats

Singles and Basic Victory Conditions

A singles match constitutes the foundational format in professional wrestling, featuring two competitors contesting one-on-one within the ring boundaries. This setup emphasizes individual skill, strategy, and endurance, with matches typically adhering to standard rules unless modified by stipulations. Victory in a standard singles match is achieved through one of several mechanisms, primarily pinfall or submission, though count-out and disqualification also apply under conventional guidelines. Pinfall remains the most prevalent basic victory condition, requiring one wrestler to secure both shoulders of the opponent against the mat for a referee's audible count of three seconds. This method derives from amateur wrestling traditions where pinning denotes control and incapacitation, adapted in professional contexts to a three-count standard for dramatic effect and consistency across promotions. Referees enforce the pin by dropping their hand to the mat in sequence, signaling progression, with breaks occurring if the pinned wrestler elevates a shoulder or the referee detects interference. Techniques facilitating pinfalls include high-impact maneuvers like suplexes or clotheslines, often culminating sequences scripted to build tension toward the three-count. Submission victories compel the opponent to concede defeat by physically tapping the mat or verbally signaling surrender while trapped in a hold, such as an armbar or . This condition tests resilience and joint manipulation, with referees monitoring for verbal cues like "I submit" or continuous tapping to avoid prolonged injury in the performative environment. Unlike pinfall, submissions highlight technical roots, originating from catch-as-catch-can styles where forcing a tap equates to dominance without needing full immobilization. Promotions like and historical territories standardized these to ensure matches resolve decisively within time limits, typically 10-20 minutes for non-title bouts. Count-out occurs when a wrestler fails to re-enter the ring by the 's count of 10 after exiting, penalizing prolonged outside-ring action or recovery. Disqualification results from rule violations, including closed-fist strikes, eye gouges, or excessive rope usage, as adjudicated by the , often leading to abrupt terminations to maintain order. These secondary conditions underscore the 's role in upholding boundaries, with empirical data from major events showing pinfalls accounting for approximately 70-80% of singles resolutions in scripted outcomes. Variations, such as no-disqualification stipulations, alter these basics by permitting weapons or ignoring outs, but standard singles prioritize in-ring purity for storytelling coherence.

Tag Team and Partner-Based Formats

In tag team matches, two teams—typically comprising two wrestlers each—compete with the restriction that only one member per team serves as the legal competitor in the ring at any given time, while partners remain on the . Legal entry and substitution occur via a tag, executed by the incoming wrestler touching the extended hand of their partner, who must maintain contact with the or tag rope; violations, such as blind tags or unauthorized entries, may result in disqualifications depending on promotion rules. Victory conditions mirror standard singles bouts, requiring a pinfall, submission, or countout on the opposing team's legal wrestler, with illegal participants subject to ejection by the if they interfere excessively. The format's structured origins trace to the late 1940s and early 1950s in the United States, when territorial promoters adapted catch wrestling exhibitions into team-oriented contests to sustain audience interest amid post-World War II expansion, featuring ad hoc partnerships that formalized into dedicated divisions. By 1971, the World Wrestling Federation introduced its tag team championship via a tournament, crowning Luke Graham and Tarzan Tyler as inaugural holders after defeating Dick the Bruiser and Bruno Sammartino on June 14, marking a milestone in mainstream recognition and leading to annual defenses that boosted event gates. Common variations expand beyond duos to partner-based multi-man formats, such as trios (three per team) in Mexican promotions, where rules scale to limit active ring participants while preserving tagging mechanics, or six- and eight-person tags in American territories for faction storytelling. Tornado tags dispense with tagging entirely, permitting all competitors to brawl unrestricted from the bell, a high-chaos with roots in early 20th-century San Francisco exhibitions but first prominently structured in the to accelerate pacing. Mixed tag teams pair male-female duos against similar opponents, enforcing segregated combat—males versus males, females versus females—to maintain physical parity, a rule codified in major promotions by the for gender-specific narratives without cross-gender strikes.

Handicap and Unequal Competitions

A handicap match in pits one wrestler or a smaller team against a numerically superior opponent or group, creating unequal odds that emphasize the disadvantaged side's resilience or the advantaged side's dominance. The format typically allows the larger team to tag in and out freely, enabling continuous pressure on the solo competitor, who must secure a pinfall, submission, or other standard victory without relief unless specified otherwise. This disparity serves purposes, such as elevating a monstrous by overwhelming jobbers or testing a heroic baby's resilience against a faction. Variations include one-on-one-plus-interference setups, like a 1-vs.-2 bout where the pair coordinates attacks without mandatory tagging, or escalated 1-vs.-3 or 1-vs.-4 scenarios often featuring a dominant singles star against a stable. Team handicaps, such as 2-vs.-3 or 2-vs.-4, extend the concept to partner formats, where the smaller duo must overcome coordinated assaults. Rules may incorporate no-disqualification elements to heighten brutality, but core matches retain count-outs and disqualifications unless stipulated, preserving wrestling's theatrical boundaries. Notable examples illustrate the stipulation's use in major promotions. At WCW's Bash at the Beach on July 7, 1996, The Outsiders (Scott Hall and Kevin Nash) competed in a 2-vs.-3 handicap against Randy Savage, Sting, and Lex Luger, marking an early nWo invasion angle that blurred tag and handicap lines through interference. In WWE, Evolution (Triple H, Ric Flair, Randy Orton, and Batista) faced The Rock and Mick Foley in a 4-vs.-2 handicap at Backlash on April 18, 2004, showcasing faction superiority until Foley and Rock's improbable teamwork led to victory via pinfall. Another WWE instance occurred at TLC on December 17, 2017, with The Shield (Dean Ambrose, Seth Rollins, Roman Reigns) and Kurt Angle overcoming Braun Strowman, Kane, The Bar, and The Miz in a 5-vs.-4 extreme rules handicap, highlighting endurance amid weapons and tables. These matches often favor the disadvantaged party in outcomes to advance storylines, with data from WWE events showing the solo or smaller team winning approximately 40% of televised handicaps since 2000, prioritizing crowd-pleasing underdog triumphs over logical numerical advantage. Critics note overuse in WWE during the 2000s and 2010s diminished impact, reducing them to punitive segments rather than marquee attractions. In modern promotions like AEW, handicaps appear sporadically, such as 2-vs.-1 bouts in feuds emphasizing alliances, but lack the frequency of WWE's Attitude Era peaks.

Multi-Competitor and Elimination Formats

Battle Royale and Rumble Variations

A battle royale is a multi-competitor elimination match in where participants are removed from the ring by being thrown over the top rope with both feet touching the floor. Typically, 20 or more wrestlers begin the bout simultaneously inside the ring, and the last remaining competitor is declared the winner. This format emphasizes endurance, opportunistic attacks, and alliances that often dissolve, distinguishing it from standard singles or tag matches by its chaotic, free-for-all structure. The battle royale format traces its roots to combat sports predating modern professional wrestling, with early instances appearing in 18th-century boxing exhibitions in England. James Figg, known as the "Father of Boxing," incorporated multi-fighter free-for-alls into his amphitheater events around 1716, blending striking and grappling under rudimentary rules. By 1743, Jack Broughton formalized regulations at his Oxford Street venue, banning certain ground techniques while hosting these brawls, though the concept later migrated to America, where it persisted in informal settings post-Civil War. In professional wrestling, battle royales became staples during the territorial era, often featuring local talent in house shows to build crowds, with eliminations strictly over the top rope to maintain ring safety and pacing. The Royal Rumble represents a prominent variation, devised by WWE Hall of Famer Pat Patterson to inject suspense through staggered entrant intervals. Debuting experimentally at a WWF house show on October 4, 1987, it officially premiered on television January 24, 1988, with 20 participants entering every two minutes until "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan emerged victorious. Unlike traditional battle royales, the Royal Rumble prohibits pinfalls or submissions, relying solely on over-the-top-rope eliminations, and has standardized to 30 entrants since 1989, with intervals shortened to 90 seconds in recent iterations. The winner traditionally earns a world championship opportunity at WrestleMania, amplifying its narrative stakes. Other variations adapt the core elimination mechanic to specific themes or promotions. Tag team battle royales require both members of a duo to be eliminated or, in some cases, only one to disqualify the team, as seen in 's 15-team format at events. The Memorial Battle Royal, introduced by in 2014 during weekend, honors the late wrestler with a trophy for the survivor among 10-30 competitors. In All Elite Wrestling (AEW), the Casino Battle Royale draws 21 entrants assigned by drawn playing cards, with the victor securing a future title shot, incorporating suits to determine entry order batches. These modifications preserve the format's unpredictability while tailoring it to storyline progression or thematic elements across promotions.

Gauntlet and Series Challenges

A gauntlet match features a single wrestler or team defending against a succession of challengers in one-on-one or tag encounters, with the winner remaining to face the next opponent until all entrants are defeated or a specified condition is met, such as surviving a set number of foes. The format emphasizes endurance, as the active competitor must achieve repeated victories without respite, often culminating in the survivor earning a championship opportunity or storyline advancement. Matches commence with an initial pairing, where the loser's elimination prompts immediate replacement by the subsequent entrant, preserving a continuous chain of bouts within a single event. This structure differs from battle royals by maintaining discrete falls rather than mass eliminations, allowing scripted narratives of resilience against escalating odds; for instance, a champion might repel five to ten opponents to retain momentum toward a pay-per-view main event. In World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), gauntlets have determined number one contenders, as seen in the February 19, 2018, episode of Raw, where 14 women competed in a grueling sequence to challenge for the Raw Women's Championship at Elimination Chamber, with Alexa Bliss emerging victorious after outlasting the field. Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA, now Impact Wrestling) debuted the Gauntlet for the Gold on June 19, 2002, at their first weekly pay-per-view, involving timed entries akin to a battle royal that transitions to a final tag team phase between the last two survivors and their partners, granting the winners an X Division or world title shot. Series challenges extend the gauntlet concept into multi-fall or multi-event formats, where competitors contest a predetermined sequence of matches against the same or rotating opponents to achieve majority victories, testing sustained performance over time rather than a single sitting. These often involve best-of-three, five, or seven falls aggregated within one bout or across events, with pins or submissions counting toward the overall tally; a prominent example is the 1989 NWA/WCW rivalry between and , which spanned a best-of-seven series for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship, concluding with Steamboat's victory on September 20, 1989, at after alternating wins in prior installments. Such series heighten stakes by allowing momentum shifts across falls, as evidenced in TNA's Call Your Shot Gauntlet, first held October 20, 2019, at Bound for Glory, where Eddie Edwards prevailed in a 20-person elimination sequence to secure a contractual prize redeemable for a title match. Variations include handicap gauntlets, where a solo defender faces teams, amplifying physical disparity, or reverse gauntlets starting with mass entrants whittled down sequentially. These formats prioritize durability, with real-world risks of injury from cumulative wear, as longer gauntlets—sometimes exceeding 30 minutes—demand peak conditioning amid rapid transitions. In TNA's iterations, like the 2024 Bound for Glory event on , surprise entrants have altered outcomes, underscoring the format's adaptability for high-impact storytelling.

Non-Elimination Multi-Man Bouts

Non-elimination multi-man bouts feature three or more wrestlers competing simultaneously under standard rules, where victory is secured by achieving a pinfall, submission, or count-out on any single opponent, without requiring the elimination of all competitors. This format contrasts with elimination-style matches by allowing the bout to end abruptly upon one decisive finish, often fostering temporary alliances, betrayals, and heightened chaos as participants vie to avoid being targeted while seeking opportunities against weakened foes. Such matches typically prohibit disqualifications or impose no-holds-barred stipulations to accommodate the increased number of bodies, emphasizing endurance and opportunistic strikes over methodical one-on-one exchanges. The triple threat match, involving exactly three competitors, emerged as a foundational variant in the mid-1990s, with promotions like Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) codifying it as the "Three-Way Dance" prior to widespread adoption elsewhere. In World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE, then WWF), the first televised triple threat occurred on June 16, 1997, when Owen Hart defended the WWF Intercontinental Championship against Goldust and Hunter Hearst Helmsley on Raw Is War. Earlier instances appeared in smaller promotions like Smoky Mountain Wrestling (SMW), but ECW's version gained prominence for its no-disqualification intensity, influencing the format's evolution into a staple for title contenderships and feuds involving multiple rivals. Expansions to four or more participants include the fatal four-way match, which follows identical non-elimination rules but escalates physicality and unpredictability with additional wrestlers. WWE trademarked "Fatal Four-Way" for its branding, using it in high-profile events such as the June 29, 2008, World Heavyweight Championship bout at Night of Champions featuring Randy Orton, John Bradshaw Layfield, John Cena, and Triple H. Further variants like five-way or six-man matches, often termed "pack challenges," appear in scenarios resolving multi-contender disputes; for example, a six-pack challenge for the WWE Championship occurred on March 11, 2018, at Fastlane, pitting AJ Styles against Randy Orton, Sami Zayn, Baron Corbin, John Cena, and Kevin Owens. These formats prioritize rapid pacing and high-impact spots, though critics note their potential to dilute individual storytelling in favor of ensemble brawls. Notable non-elimination multi-man bouts have headlined pay-per-views, such as the March 30, 2008, Backlash triple threat for the WWE Championship between Edge, The Undertaker, and Batista, which integrated dramatic near-falls amid interference risks inherent to the stipulation. The format's utility lies in efficiently advancing narratives involving divided loyalties, as seen in ECW's Three-Way Dances from 1995 onward, where wrestlers like Shane Douglas, Chris Benoit, and Dean Malenko competed under the Triple Threat banner, though the stable's name predated the match type's formalization. Despite occasional overuse in modern booking—evident in WWE's frequent deployment during the 2010s for undercard filler—these matches persist for their capacity to generate crowd engagement through unpredictable conclusions.

Enclosed and Contained Environments

Cage and Prison Structures

Cage matches in professional wrestling enclose competitors within a surrounding barrier to prevent outside interference and compel a decisive finish, originating with rudimentary wire enclosures in the 1930s. The inaugural recorded cage match occurred on June 25, 1937, in Atlanta, Georgia, pitting Jack Bloomfield against Count Rossi inside a ring surrounded by chicken wire, marking an early effort to contain brawling wrestlers. Over decades, these evolved into steel-barred structures, with the standard steel cage match featuring a chain-link or barred fence around the ring, typically 10-15 feet high, where victory is achieved by escape—either by climbing over the top or exiting through a door—or, in some promotions, by pinfall or submission. The Hell in a Cell variant, introduced by the World Wrestling Federation (now WWE) on October 5, 1997, at Bad Blood in St. Louis, Missouri, between The Undertaker and Shawn Michaels, employs a larger, roofed steel cage with chain-link walls and a grated ceiling, prohibiting escape and limiting wins to pinfall or submission within the enclosed space. This structure, approximately 20 feet high with unforgiving surfaces, has hosted 40 matches as of 2024, emphasizing brutal, no-retreat confrontations. WWE's , devised in 2002 and debuting at on November 17, 2002, for the World Heavyweight Championship involving , , , Kane, Booker T, and , consists of a central ring encircled by steel walls and four pods, with two additional entrants starting inside; competitors enter sequentially every five minutes, and eliminations occur via pinfall or submission until one remains. This format has produced 34 matches by 2024, often determining title contendership. The Punjabi Prison match, first contested on October 8, 2006, at No Mercy between Big Show and The Great Khali, features dual bamboo cages—an inner steel-like frame and an outer spiked barrier—around the ring, with doors opening periodically for 60 seconds; escape requires navigating both cages to touch the arena floor outside, barring internal victories. Limited to five occurrences in WWE, primarily involving Indian wrestlers, the stipulation prioritizes cultural theming over frequent use due to logistical complexities. Other prison-like enclosures include AAA's Domo de la Muerte, a domed cage match inspired by WCW's Thundercage, introduced in Mexican lucha libre promotions for multi-participant bouts where the last escapee or survivor faces high stakes like hair-shaving, as seen in events like Triplemanía XXXII on August 17, 2024. These structures underscore wrestling's tradition of adapting containment to heighten drama and restrict flight in feuds.

Container and Burial Stipulations

Container matches in professional wrestling require competitors to incapacitate their opponent sufficiently to place them inside a specified container, such as a casket, dumpster, or ambulance, and secure it—typically by closing the lid or doors—to secure victory. These stipulations often operate under no-disqualification rules, permitting the use of weapons and environmental hazards to facilitate enclosing the opponent. The format emphasizes dramatic finality, simulating entrapment or disposal, and has roots in hardcore wrestling traditions where physical containment symbolizes defeat. The casket match, a prominent burial-oriented container variant, mandates that a wrestler fully enclose their adversary in an open casket positioned ringside and fasten the lid. This stipulation debuted in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) on November 25, 1992, at , pitting against Kamala, marking the first official casket match in the promotion despite earlier informal coffin matches in regional territories during the 1970s and 1980s. WWE has hosted 22 such contests, with the majority involving or his storyline brother Kane, underscoring the match's association with supernatural and mortality-themed characters. Notable examples include 's victory over Yokozuna at on January 23, 1994, which incorporated interference from heels like Irwin R. Schyster and involved multiple caskets for added chaos. Buried Alive matches extend the burial theme by requiring the victor to hurl the opponent into a pre-dug grave—typically six feet deep and filled with loose dirt ringside—and shovel sufficient soil to cover them completely, often to the point of obscuring the body. The WWF introduced this macabre format on October 20, 1996, at In Your House 11: Buried Alive, featuring The Undertaker defeating Mankind (Mick Foley) after a grueling brawl culminating in a Tombstone piledriver into the pit. Only five Buried Alive matches have occurred in WWE history, all headlined by The Undertaker, including his win over Stone Cold Steve Austin at Rock Bottom on December 13, 1998, and a triple threat against Vince McMahon and Kane at Survivor Series on November 14, 1999, where McMahon shoveled the final dirt despite not competing. These encounters frequently incorporate supernatural elements, such as lightning strikes or returning combatants, to heighten theatricality while adhering to the core burial mechanic. Beyond burial-specific containers, broader container stipulations utilize everyday or industrial objects for victory conditions. Dumpster matches, for instance, involve slamming the opponent into a large metal dumpster and latching its lid, a format popularized in WWF during the 1990s Attitude Era, such as the WWF Tag Team Championship defense by The Hardy Boyz against The Dudley Boyz on February 5, 2001, at No Way Out. Ambulance matches demand loading the incapacitated foe into an ambulance and shutting its rear doors, debuting in Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) and later adopted by WWF, exemplified by Kane versus Stone Cold Steve Austin on May 20, 2003, at Judgment Day. Variants like the Last Ride match employ a hearse, requiring the opponent to be placed inside and the vehicle driven away, as seen in Eddie Guerrero's bout against Kane on June 27, 2004, at The Great American Bash. These formats prioritize brute force and improvised violence, with outcomes hinging on logistical challenges like maneuvering heavy lids or doors under duress.

Pit and Arena Modifications

The match, introduced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) in 1998, represented an early arena modification emulating octagons, featuring a hexagonal elevated above the ring with no ropes or turnbuckles, allowing on the surrounding platform. Victory conditions mirrored standard bouts but emphasized submissions or knockouts due to the confined, unforgiving structure, which prevented escapes and encouraged ground-based fighting; the debut occurred at on March 29, 1998, between and , with Shamrock winning via ankle lock submission. Subsequent iterations, such as Shamrock versus on June 15, 1998, at , highlighted the format's brutality but limited usage due to safety concerns and shifting booking priorities. Revived in WWE's NXT brand as the Fight Pit match around 2020, this stipulation similarly removes ropes and turnbuckles from the ring, enclosing the area with a tall steel wall and an elevated grated catwalk for multi-level action, drawing direct inspiration from UFC-style pits while adapting to wrestling's theatrical elements. Wins occur exclusively via submission or referee stoppage—typically a 10-count if a competitor cannot continue—eschewing pinfalls to prioritize endurance and realism; early NXT examples include Timothy Thatcher's victory over Matt Riddle on August 22, 2021. The format debuted on the main roster at Extreme Rules on October 8, 2022, where Seth Rollins defeated Riddle inside the structure, refereed by Daniel Cormier, amid a setup requiring extensive arena reconfiguration including reinforced flooring and lighting adjustments for the elevated platform. Novelty pit variations, such as mud or oil-filled enclosures, have appeared sporadically in independent and exhibition contexts but rarely in major scripted promotions, often serving as intergender spectacles rather than competitive stipulations with defined outcomes tied to championships or feuds. These setups modify the arena floor into a slippery, enclosed basin to hinder mobility and amplify physical chaos, yet empirical evidence from wrestling histories shows minimal integration into core match types due to logistical challenges and inconsistent athletic merit. Arena-wide modifications beyond pits, like empty venues for cinematic "Empty Arena" bouts—first prominently used in WWF's March 2020 pandemic-era tapings—alter acoustics and spectator dynamics but retain standard ring parameters without structural overhauls. Such adaptations prioritize production feasibility over gimmick innovation, with verifiable instances limited to transitional periods rather than recurring formats.

Hardcore, Weapon, and Extreme Rules

No Disqualification and Falls Count Anywhere

In professional wrestling, a No Disqualification match removes the standard penalty of disqualification for rule infractions, such as employing weapons, delivering closed-fist strikes, or permitting outside interference, while retaining victory conditions of pinfall, submission, or count-out. This stipulation applies across formats like singles, tag team, or handicap contests, enabling competitors to utilize environmental objects and unrestricted aggression without referee intervention halting the action. The Falls Count Anywhere variant extends combat beyond the ring confines by validating pinfalls and submissions at any venue location, eliminating count-out rules and promoting brawls through arenas, backstage areas, or external sites. These matches inherently preclude disqualifications, aligning with hardcore styles where mobility and improvised weaponry define the encounters, often under designations like Street Fight or . Such stipulations facilitate resolution of intense rivalries, as seen in early examples like the May 4, 1981, Alley Fight at Madison Square Garden between Pat Patterson and Sgt. Slaughter, where falls counted outside the ring amid urban combat simulations. In WCW's Beach Blast 1992 event, Sting defeated Cactus Jack in a Falls Count Anywhere bout that spilled across beachfront settings, highlighting the format's capacity for expansive, narrative-driven violence. WWE prominently featured these rules in a May 4, 1998, No Holds Barred Falls Count Anywhere match on Raw between Mick Foley and Terry Funk, emphasizing endurance amid weapon-assisted brutality. Later instances include the April 18, 2004, Backlash encounter where Randy Orton overcame Cactus Jack (Foley) in a hardcore Falls Count Anywhere defense of the Intercontinental Championship, incorporating thumbtacks and barbed wire for heightened stakes. These matches underscore the genre's scripted athleticism, prioritizing spectacle through relaxed constraints over traditional grappling purity.

Deathmatch and Barbed Wire Variants

Deathmatches constitute an ultraviolent subclass of bouts, permitting unrestricted use of hazardous implements including , fluorescent light tubes, and pyrotechnic elements to inflict damage, with outcomes determined by pinfall or submission amid pervasive no-holds-barred conditions. These encounters prioritize visceral endurance over athletic finesse, frequently yielding profuse and long-term physical trauma to participants, as evidenced by documented cases of severed arteries and chronic joint deterioration among wrestlers. The archetype emerged in Japanese promotions during the late 1980s and early 1990s, spearheaded by Atsushi Onita's (FMW), which integrated as a core fixture to differentiate from mainstream sumo-influenced styles. On August 4, 1990, FMW hosted the inaugural match between Onita and under no-ropes rules, establishing a template for ring perimeters or obstacles laced with razor-sharp wire to lacerate competitors on contact. This innovation escalated with exploding variants, where wire-embedded mines detonate on impact; the prototype occurred on May 5, 1993, pitting Onita against in FMW's first time bomb deathmatch at Kawasaki Baseball Stadium, featuring 200 rigged explosives that triggered concussive blasts and burns. Barbed wire adaptations proliferated across FMW events, including "barbed wire everywhere" setups enveloping the ring and apparatus like electrified cages, as seen in Onita's defenses of the . In the United States, adapted the format via its annual King of the Deathmatch tournament, launched in 1997, which progressed through escalating hazards: preliminary rounds with ropes or boards, advancing to glass-laden or fire-infused finales. Tournament victors, such as in 2002, endured cumulative lacerations exceeding 100 stitches per event, underscoring the stipulation's toll despite safety protocols like pre-blading. Contemporary iterations persist in niche circuits, exemplified by All Elite Wrestling's (AEW) March 7, 2021, exploding barbed wire bout between and at , which employed over 10,000 feet of wire and malfunctioning blasts criticized for diluting intended peril. Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) featured recurring "Barbed Wire Massacre" specials, with the stipulation mandating wire-wrapped weapons and ring elements, as in Abyss versus Sabu on June 15, 2006. These variants, while theatrical, have prompted regulatory scrutiny in jurisdictions prohibiting excessive bloodletting, reflecting causal links between repeated trauma and wrestlers' elevated rates of and orthopedic surgeries.

Ladder, Table, and Object-Specific Weapons

In ladder matches, competitors vie to climb a ladder and retrieve a suspended object, such as a championship belt or contract briefcase, while using the ladder itself as a weapon under no-disqualification rules; victory occurs solely upon possession of the item, with no pinfalls or submissions permitted. The stipulation originated in Stampede Wrestling, where Dan Kroffat pitched the concept to promoter Stu Hart amid a feud with Tor Kamata, resulting in the inaugural ladder match on September 15, 1972, in Calgary, Alberta, with a cash prize hung above the ring as the objective. Kroffat's innovation drew from territorial wrestling's emphasis on high-risk aerial maneuvers, predating modern iterations by decades and establishing ladders as both climbing apparatus and blunt instruments for combat. The format proliferated in the 1990s, notably in the World Wrestling Federation's WrestleMania X on March 20, 1994, where Shawn Michaels defeated Razor Ramon in a ladder match for the Intercontinental Championship, drawing 482,000 pay-per-view buys and solidifying its appeal through scripted athletic spots like ladder-assisted superplexes. Variations include multi-competitor ladder bouts, such as the Money in the Bank ladder match introduced by WWE at WrestleMania 21 on April 3, 2005, where participants—often six to eight—compete for a contract granting a title shot within one year, with the 2005 winner Shelton Benjamin climbing amid chaos involving 12 ladders and high-impact dives. Tables matches stipulate that a wrestler must force their opponent through a standard wooden table—typically 8 feet by 4 feet—to win, with tables provided ringside and legal for offense; the rule emphasizes destructive power moves like powerbombs or piledrivers, often in no-holds-barred environments to heighten spectacle without altering core pinning mechanics. Tables entered wrestling as props in the 1980s, with Randy Savage piling Ricky Morton through one via inverted atomic drop in a 1985 Memphis bout against the Rock 'n' Roll Express, but formalized table matches emerged in promotions like Extreme Championship Wrestling by the mid-1990s, where they rewarded feats of strength over technical prowess. The tables, ladders, and chairs (TLC) match integrates these elements, permitting unlimited use of tables for breakage, ladders for retrieval and assault, and chairs for striking, with the goal mirroring a ladder match but amid structured weapon mayhem; WWE debuted TLC at SummerSlam on August 27, 2000, pitting the Dudley Boyz against Edge and Christian and the Hardy Boyz for the Tag Team Championship, featuring 15 tables, multiple ladders, and chairs in a triple-threat tag format that generated iconic sequences like Jeff Hardy's Swanton Bomb through stacked tables. Object-specific weapon matches center on designated implements as primary legal arms, such as the Singapore cane match—named after rattan canes resembling those from Singapore imports—where a barrel of canes sits ringside for unrestricted use, with wins via pinfall or submission; Extreme Championship Wrestling popularized this in 1995 via Paul Heyman's booking of The Sandman versus Tommy Dreamer on June 9, emphasizing cane welts and blood to evoke gritty, territorial brawls. Similarly, kendo stick matches (using bamboo shinai from Japanese kendo practice) allow strikes with the flexible rods, which leave visible contusions without permanent harm, as seen in ECW's adoption from Japanese promotions like FMW, where Dump Matsumoto wielded them in the 1980s; these stipulations prioritize endurance against repeated impacts, with canes or sticks numbering 10-20 per barrel to sustain prolonged abuse. Other variants include chain matches with steel links as both weapon and restraint, though often overlapping with strap rules, and specialized bouts like the barbed wire bat match in promotions such as , where a taped bat embedded with serves as the focal offensive tool; these emphasize causal risks of lacerations and contusions, with empirical data from wrestling reports indicating higher incidence of superficial wounds—up to 40% more than standard matches—but lower long-term orthopedic damage due to padded or breakaway modifications. Such matches underscore professional wrestling's scripted violence, where object integration heightens viewer engagement through predictable yet visceral destruction, as evidenced by TLC events averaging 300,000-500,000 buys in the early 2000s.

Submission and Endurance Challenges

Submission-Only and I Quit Matches

In submission-only matches, victory is achieved exclusively by forcing an opponent to submit, typically through a tap-out signal or determination that the hold is unbreakable, with pinfalls, count-outs, and disqualifications prohibited. This emphasizes techniques and endurance, drawing from traditions where submissions were central to early professional bouts predating modern scripted entertainment wrestling. Unlike standard matches, it restricts outcomes to avoid dilution of the submission focus, though ropes may still break holds unless specified otherwise. Notable examples include the WrestleMania XIII main event on March 23, 1997, where defeated via the submission after 22 minutes, a bout credited with elevating the stipulation's prestige through its bloody, double-turn narrative. Earlier precedents exist in regional promotions, but the format gained prominence in the amid WWE's push toward technical showcases. Submission-only rules test a wrestler's hold catalog and resilience, often resulting in high-injury risks from prolonged joint locks, as seen in evolutions from basic toe holds to complex figures like the Crippler Crossface. "I Quit" matches, a variant of submission contests, require the loser to verbally declare "I quit" into a microphone, often under extreme duress from holds, strikes, or weapons, with no pinfalls or other standard wins permitted. This adds psychological humiliation, as the verbal concession signals total defeat beyond physical tapping, distinguishing it from pure submission matches where non-verbal signals suffice. Originating in the National Wrestling Alliance, the first documented instance occurred at Starrcade on November 28, 1985, between Magnum T.A. and Tully Blanchard, lasting 22:28 before Blanchard quit amid a figure-four leglock. Subsequent high-profile "I Quit" bouts include Ric Flair versus Terry Funk on July 25, 1989, at Clash of the Champions IX, where Flair forced Funk's surrender after 20 minutes of brawling; Bret Hart retaining the WWF Championship against Bob Backlund at WrestleMania XI on April 2, 1995, via Backlund's family-forced quit; and The Rock defeating Mankind at Royal Rumble on January 23, 2000, after administering repeated chair shots until Mick Foley uttered the words. These matches frequently incorporate no-disqualification elements to escalate brutality, aiming to resolve kayfabe feuds through apparent surrender, though critics note the stipulation's rarity stems from its intensity and potential for performer burnout. By 2022, instances like Ronda Rousey versus Charlotte Flair at WrestleMania Backlash highlighted its endurance in modern booking.

Iron Man and Timed Series

In professional wrestling, an Iron Man match is a singles contest constrained by a fixed , commonly 30 or , where victory is awarded to the competitor accumulating the greatest number of falls through pinfall or submission within that period. Falls via disqualification or countout are typically excluded unless stipulated otherwise, emphasizing sustained performance over isolated decisive moments. Should the falls tally tie upon time expiration, protocols vary by promotion: some invoke sudden-death overtime until a fall occurs, while others declare a draw or adhere to pre-match agreements favoring one participant. The format tests wrestlers' cardiovascular endurance, tactical pacing, and recovery between falls, distinguishing it from untimed bouts by introducing clock management as a core element; wrestlers must balance aggressive offense with energy conservation to avoid exhaustion-induced vulnerabilities late in the match. Originating in regional promotions during the mid-20th century, the Iron Man concept gained prominence in major North American leagues for high-stakes title defenses, with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, later WWE) formalizing it in televised spectacles starting in the 1990s. A purported early WWF instance occurred on January 9, 1993, in Boston, though documentation remains sparse compared to landmark events. Notable Iron Man matches include Bret Hart defending the WWF Championship against Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania XII on March 31, 1996, which extended to 61 minutes and 52 seconds after a 1-1 deadlock, with Michaels prevailing in overtime via submission to claim the title. Triple H captured the WWF Championship from The Rock in a 60-minute bout at Judgment Day on May 21, 2000, securing a 6-5 falls advantage amid interference controversies. Kurt Angle defeated Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania 21 on April 3, 2005, in a 60-minute contest ending 2-1, highlighting Angle's amateur wrestling background in fall accumulation. Outside WWE, AJ Styles outlasted Christopher Daniels 3-1 in a 60-minute Total Nonstop Action (TNA) X Division title match at Against All Odds on February 13, 2005, underscoring the stipulation's adaptability to athletic, high-pace styles. Timed series matches extend the endurance theme across multiple discrete contests, often structured as "best-of" formats (e.g., best of three, five, or seven falls/matches), where each segment may impose individual time limits to prevent indefinite prolongation. These series simulate prolonged rivalries, with promoters booking outcomes to culminate in decisive finales that affirm parity between competitors, though real-world scheduling occasionally abbreviates longer intended runs for logistical reasons. Unlike singular Iron Man bouts, timed series distribute physical toll over events or segments, allowing narrative buildup via momentum shifts; for instance, WWF's 1997 "Stone Cold" Steve Austin vs. Bret Hart rivalry featured timed falls across pay-per-views, culminating in title changes. Variants like WCW's 30-minute Iron Man series, such as Rick Rude vs. Sting at Beach Blast on June 20, 1992, integrated time caps per fall to heighten tension without marathon single-match demands. This structure prioritizes strategic booking, as empirical patterns show promotions reserving series for feuds requiring extended storytelling to maximize viewer investment.

Last Man Standing and Texas Death Variants

The Last Man Standing match is a no-disqualification stipulation in professional wrestling where the objective is to render the opponent unable to stand unaided before a referee reaches a count of ten following any knockdown or incapacitation. This format permits falls anywhere in the venue and the unrestricted use of weapons or environmental elements, focusing on physical endurance and resilience rather than traditional pinfalls or submissions. The referee's count begins only after both competitors are separated and the downed wrestler remains prone, with the match concluding if the opponent fails to achieve verticality by the count's end. The stipulation traces its formalized use in major promotions to the late 1990s, with World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE, formerly WWF) introducing it as an "Armageddon Rules" match on February 14, 1999, pitting The Rock against Mankind at St. Valentine's Day Massacre in Cleveland, Ohio; this bout, lasting 32 minutes, highlighted the format's brutality through repeated high-impact maneuvers and chair shots, culminating in Mankind's inability to rise after a Rock Bottom onto the announcer's table. Earlier precedents existed in territorial wrestling, but WWE's iteration standardized the ten-count knockout mechanic without interim pinfalls, distinguishing it from standard singles contests. By the early 2000s, it became a staple for resolving feuds, as seen in Triple H versus Shawn Michaels at In Your House: Beware of Dog on July 21, 1996—though billed differently, it prefigured the ruleset—and later high-profile clashes like Edge versus John Cena at Unforgiven on September 17, 2006, where Cena retained the WWE Championship via a forced count-out after an AA through a broadcast table. Texas Death matches represent a variant that intensifies the Last Man Standing framework by mandating a pinfall or submission immediately preceding the ten-count, ensuring the victor demonstrates both offensive control and prolonged incapacitation. Under these rules, after achieving a three-count pin, the referee initiates the standing count; if the pinned wrestler rises before ten, the bout restarts without disqualifications or count-outs, often incorporating weapons to amplify damage accumulation. This layered requirement—pin plus knockout—elevates the match's duration and risk, as competitors must repeatedly overcome submission threats before exploiting exhaustion. The format originated in Texas-based promotions during the mid-1960s, with the earliest documented instance occurring in Amarillo when Dory Funk Sr. defended his North American Heavyweight Championship against "Iron" Mike DiBiase on August 23, 1965; the match, sanctioned by the Amarillo territory under Southwest Sports, Inc., emphasized regional bravado with its "bigger and bloodier" ethos, allowing chairs and ring steps while enforcing the pin-then-count sequence. Popularized in the 1970s and 1980s through Southwest Championship Wrestling, it influenced broader hardcore styles, though rules varied by promoter—some imposed 30-second recovery intervals post-pin, others permitted falls anywhere akin to no-holds-barred bouts. Notable revivals include Terry Funk versus Jerry Lawler in Memphis on April 26, 1987, which drew over 10,000 fans and featured barbed wire and thumbtacks, underscoring the stipulation's appeal for drawing crowds via escalating violence without altering core wrestling psychology. Modern adaptations, such as All Elite Wrestling's (AEW) 2023 Full Gear event between Jon Moxley and Orange Cassidy on November 18, deviated by blending elements like unrestricted weapons but retained the pin-to-enable-count mechanic, reflecting promotional flexibility over rigid tradition.

Gimmick and Stipulation-Driven Matches

Pole, Strap, and Chain Contests

Pole contests require wrestlers to retrieve a designated object, such as a weapon, flag, or championship replica, affixed to the top of a pole mounted on a ring turnbuckle. The first competitor to successfully climb and claim the item secures victory, with matches typically ignoring count-outs and often waiving disqualifications to facilitate aggressive interference. This format, documented as early as July 9, 1974, emphasizes vertical climbing amid physical obstruction, evolving from standard singles bouts into weapon-oriented variants where retrieval enables immediate use against the opponent. Strap matches tether competitors' wrists with a or belt, mandating the winner to sequentially touch all four ring corners without excessive delay, though some iterations permit pinfalls as an alternative. No count-outs or disqualifications apply, and the functions as a primary for whipping or pulling. Established by May 6, 1955, this type originated in territorial promotions, with the Bullrope variant substituting a rugged rope—sometimes fitted with a for blunt strikes—while retaining core tethering mechanics. Chain contests similarly restrict movement but employ a metal chain, most notoriously in matches where the chain links steel collars secured around each wrestler's neck, affording 10 to 15 feet of separation. Wins occur via pinfall or submission, leveraging the chain for dragging, throttling, or improvised attacks, with no count-outs or disqualifications. These evolved as a brutal escalation of strap rules, with a landmark instance on November 24, 1983, when outlasted in a bloodied bout at NWA , highlighting the stipulation's potential for sustained injury through relentless proximity. Russian chain variants chain opponents to opposite corners, forcing corner-touching under duress, while general chain matches mirror strap dynamics but amplify risk via the implement's rigidity.

Humiliation and Loser Consequences

In professional wrestling, humiliation and loser consequence matches impose permanent or highly visible penalties on the defeated participant, elevating stakes beyond mere victory to include personal degradation or career disruption, often as a narrative device to resolve feuds dramatically. These stipulations, rooted in traditions like Mexican lucha libre's luchas de apuestas (wager matches), compel the loser to forfeit elements of their identity or professional standing, such as hair, mask, or employment with the promotion. Such matches amplify emotional investment but carry real psychological and physical risks, including public embarrassment that can affect performers' marketability. Hair versus hair matches require the loser to have their head shaved bald immediately post-match, a consequence originating in where long symbolizes masculinity and honor, with losses documented as early as the 1940s in . In American promotions, this format gained prominence in the 1980s; for instance, at WWF's on March 29, 1987, defeated , leading to Adonis's shearing and temporary retirement angle. More recently, WWE's Extreme Rules event on May 4, 2010, saw defeat in a hair vs. hair bout, resulting in Mysterio's head being shaved to reinforce Punk's antagonist persona. These matches often feature post-bell brawls to enforce the shave, underscoring the stipulation's punitive intent over athletic resolution. Mask versus mask matches, a staple of lucha libre since the mid-20th century, pit masked wrestlers against each other with the loser's identity revealed through unmasking, effectively stripping their anonymous persona central to the style's mystique and fan connection. In Mexico's Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL), such bouts occur at major anniversary shows; a landmark example is Atlantis defeating Villano III on December 12, 2009, at CMLL's 76th Anniversary event, unmasking Villano and exposing his real name, Arturo Díaz Mendoza, which diminished his drawing power thereafter. The cultural weight is profound: unmasked wrestlers frequently adopt new gimmicks or retire, as masks represent career longevity and heritage, with over 2,000 documented apuestas matches emphasizing identity over physical pins. American adaptations, like WWE's Sin Cara vs. Sin Cara on October 21, 2011, mimic this but rarely match the permanence, often serving short-term storylines. Loser leaves town or promotion matches mandate the defeated wrestler's departure from the territory or company, simulating firing to facilitate booking changes or hiatuses, with examples tracing to territorial wrestling in the 1970s. A classic is WWF's on March 24, 1991, where beat , enforcing Savage's temporary exit and storyline evolution into a face turn upon return. Variants like retirement matches heighten finality; lost to at on March 30, 2008, leading to an official (though later reversed) retirement, blending humiliation with career endpoint. These stipulations, while scripted, impose verifiable absences—e.g., John Cena's scripted "firing" by on September 7, 2009, Raw—yet promoters occasionally ignore them for business needs, eroding stipulation credibility. Overall, such matches prioritize permanence for drama, though real-world enforcement varies by promotion policy.

Cinematic and Location-Based Scenarios

Cinematic matches in professional wrestling deviate from traditional live in-ring competition by incorporating film production techniques such as multiple camera angles, editing, retakes, and visual effects to create a narrative-driven spectacle, often filmed on location rather than in an arena. This format allows for scripted action sequences emphasizing storytelling over athletic improvisation, with outcomes predetermined but executed to simulate high-stakes combat. While not bound by standard wrestling rules like ring boundaries, victories typically occur via pinfall, submission, or stipulation-specific conditions, though the emphasis lies on dramatic visuals rather than crowd interaction. The origins of cinematic elements trace to pre-pandemic experiments, including WWE's Boiler Room Brawl on August 22, 1999, at SummerSlam, where Mankind (Mick Foley) defeated Al Snow in a backstage industrial area filled with pipes and debris, prioritizing environmental hazards over ring psychology. Impact Wrestling (formerly TNA) advanced the style with the "Deletion" series starting July 5, 2016, featuring Matt Hardy's Final Deletion match against Brother Nero (Jeff Hardy) at the Hardy Compound in Cameron, North Carolina, which involved pyrotechnics, family cameos, and surreal vignettes filmed outdoors and indoors. These early instances demonstrated how location-specific filming could enhance character arcs, such as Hardy's "broken brilliance" persona, though they remained niche until external constraints amplified their use. The COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 catalyzed widespread adoption, as promotions like WWE and AEW shifted to empty arenas or remote shoots to avoid live crowds. WWE's Boneyard Match at WrestleMania 36 on April 4, 2020, pitted The Undertaker against AJ Styles in a graveyard-themed warehouse set with lightning effects and motorcycle chases, culminating in a burial finish that drew 2.65 million YouTube views in its first day. AEW followed with the Stadium Stampede at Double or Nothing on May 25, 2020, a pre-taped melee across an empty stadium involving The Elite versus The Inner Circle, incorporating golf carts and fireworks for chaotic, multi-location action. Critics noted these matches prioritized production value—such as drone shots and slow-motion impacts—over physical risk, enabling safer performances amid health protocols, though some wrestlers reported challenges in adapting to non-live feedback. Location-based scenarios extend cinematic principles by confining or theming bouts to non-traditional venues, amplifying environmental storytelling while often retaining falls-count-anywhere rules. Examples include parking lot brawls, where combatants use vehicles and concrete for improvised weapons, as in WWE's 2002 bout between The Rock and Hulk Hogan spilling into the arena lot. Boiler room variants, like the 1999 WWE example, restrict action to dimly lit utility spaces, heightening tension through confined chaos and potential for real hazards like exposed wiring. Dungeon matches, popularized in promotions like Stampede Wrestling in the 1980s, occur in basement-like areas with chains and cages, emphasizing endurance in brutal, low-light settings. Empty arena matches, such as the June 4, 1981, Continental Wrestling Association clash between Jerry Lawler and Terry Funk broadcast without spectators, focused on audio echoes and isolation to build psychological intensity. These formats intersect with cinematic production when pre-taped, as in Impact's King of the Road match on June 12, 2016, a truck-pursuit stipulation across rural roads ending with a rooftop pinfall. Post-pandemic, usage declined with WWE halting cinematic bouts by July 2021 upon resuming tours, citing fan preference for live energy, though AEW occasionally revived them for thematic events. Risks include heightened injury potential from unscripted falls on uneven terrain—Foley sustained legitimate bruises in the Boiler Room Brawl—and logistical costs for setups, but proponents argue they expand creative boundaries beyond athletic repetition.

Team and Thematic Variations

Mixed Tag and Intergender Formats

Mixed tag team matches pair one wrestler and one female wrestler per team, with the core that only opponents of the same sex may legally engage in the ring simultaneously, necessitating tags to facilitate opposite-gender confrontations. This format preserves dynamics while imposing gender-based restrictions, often to align with promotional policies on physical interactions between sexes. Violations, such as a male wrestler striking a female opponent, typically draw disqualifications or interventions, though enforcement varies by promotion. The structure emerged prominently in North American professional wrestling during the late 20th century, building on traditional tag rules to incorporate women's divisions amid growing gender integration. Early examples include territorial-era bouts, but mainstream exposure surged in the 1990s; World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) featured a mixed tag at WrestleMania XIV on March 29, 1998, pitting Marc Mero and Sable against Goldust and Luna Vachon. WWE formalized the concept with the Mixed Match Challenge tournament, launching on January 16, 2018, on Facebook Watch, where teams like Braun Strowman and Alexa Bliss competed in seven weekly episodes per season, culminating in championships awarded to The Miz and Asuka in Season 1 on April 3, 2018. Other promotions, such as Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), integrated mixed tags into storylines, often tying them to personal feuds rather than standalone titles. Intergender matches, by contrast, pit a male against a female wrestler without tag partners or gender-segregated rules, allowing unrestricted physical exchanges akin to standard singles bouts. These contests emphasize athletic disparity, with outcomes scripted to highlight technique over raw power differences, though critics note inherent risks from average male-female strength gaps—men typically possessing 50-60% greater upper-body strength per biomechanical studies applied to combat sports. Major U.S. promotions like have limited them due to liability concerns and audience sensitivities around male-on-female violence; a rare example occurred at No Mercy on October 17, 1999, when Chyna defeated for the Intercontinental Championship via pinfall after interference. Independents and alternatives like TNA and All Elite Wrestling (AEW) have embraced intergender formats more frequently, with TNA hosting over 50 televised instances since 2002, often in hardcore or multi-person scenarios. Notable AEW bouts include sporadic integrations, such as Orange Cassidy's mixed encounters pre-2022, though full matches remain infrequent to avoid diluting divisions. Internationally, Japan's promotions like World Wonder Ring Stardom occasionally feature them, but global data shows intergender participation below 5% of total matches, per event logs from 2000-2020, reflecting selective use for novelty or crossover appeal rather than routine competition.

WarGames and Faction Battles

The WarGames match originated in 1987, conceived by wrestler and booker Dusty Rhodes for Jim Crockett Promotions under the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), as a means to escalate factional rivalries, particularly against the dominant Four Horsemen stable. The format pits two teams, typically of four or five members each, inside a steel cage encompassing two adjacent rings, emphasizing prolonged brawling and strategic entries to simulate group warfare. The first such match occurred on July 4, 1987, at The Great American Bash, where Rhodes, Nikita Koloff, the Road Warriors (Hawk and Animal), and manager Paul Ellering defeated Ric Flair, Arn Anderson, Tully Blanchard, Lex Luger of the Four Horsemen, and their manager J.J. Dillon. In its original NWA iteration, the match commenced with one wrestler from each team in the rings for five minutes, after which a coin flip determined the "advantage" team to send the next entrant, creating temporary numerical superiorities (e.g., 2-on-1), with subsequent entries alternating every two minutes until all participants entered; only then did the "Match Beyond" phase activate, permitting victories solely via submission or verbal surrender, with no pinfalls allowed and no disqualifications. The cage, complete with a roof, enclosed the double-ring setup, and weapons were often improvised from the environment, heightening the brutality. This structure forced teams to endure outnumbered assaults, testing endurance and loyalty within factions. World Championship Wrestling (WCW), succeeding Crockett Promotions, featured WarGames annually from 1988 to 1998, often at pay-per-view events like the Great American Bash and WrestleWar, with notable bouts including Sting's Squadron versus the Dangerous Alliance in 1992. Variations emerged, such as team sizes reduced to four or inclusion of special stipulations like Lethal Lottery pairings. WWE revived the concept in 2017 for NXT TakeOver: WarGames, initially as a three-team format without a cage roof, and expanded it to the main roster starting at Survivor Series 2022, modifying rules to allow pinfalls alongside submissions while retaining timed entries but shortening intervals to every five minutes with simultaneous team selections. Beyond WarGames, faction battles in professional wrestling commonly employ elimination tag team formats to resolve stable-on-stable conflicts, where teams of four or five eliminate opponents via pinfall or submission until one side remains, often without disqualifications to permit hardcore elements. WWE's event, since its inception in 1987, has showcased such matches pitting branded or factional teams (e.g., Team vs. Team Andre the Giant in 1987), with 5-on-5 structures dominating until recent shifts toward WarGames integration. These contests highlight , betrayals, and attrition, mirroring real faction tensions seen in promotions like WCW's nWo invasions or ECW's gang-style brawls, though they prioritize sequential eliminations over timed builds.

Non-Wrestling and Hybrid Challenges

Non-wrestling challenges in deviate from core mechanics, resolving disputes through isolated feats of strength, skill, or endurance that emphasize performer attributes beyond in-ring athleticism. These formats, often scripted yet presented with competitive , emerged in territorial eras to exploit carnival-style attractions and have persisted in major promotions for storyline escalation or novelty. Empirical outcomes typically favor pre-determined victors aligned with booking narratives, though occasional legitimacy—such as in shoot-style variants—introduces variability, as evidenced by injury data from hybrid bouts where real impacts exceed choreographed risks. Arm wrestling contests, conducted at a reinforced table with referees enforcing elbow placement and grip rules, test isometric upper-body power without full-body leverage. In WWE history, these have featured prominently: John Cena bested Mark Henry on the February 25, 2008, episode of Raw after a prolonged stalemate, capitalizing on Cena's grip endurance. Triple H overcame The Great Khali in an Indian-style variant involving broken glass on October 8, 2007, Raw, highlighting strategic positioning over raw force. Scott Steiner defeated Triple H on December 23, 2002, Raw, using leverage tactics that underscored the match's worked nature despite physical strain. Such events, dating to at least 1975 with Superstar Billy Graham versus André the Giant, prioritize spectacle over sport authenticity, with no verified records of unscripted upsets in major promotions. Boxing or prizefighting integrations impose glove usage, round structures, and stand-up striking, sidelining wrestling submissions. The tournament from June 29 to August 13, 1998, attempted legitimacy as a no-holds-barred shootfight series, where legitimately knocked out wrestlers like Bradshaw and before upsetting Dynamite Kid's protégé, leading to his stiff punishment in a subsequent "worked" bout against Butterbean on August 24, 1998. Crossover spectacles, such as Floyd Mayweather's gloved victory over via at on March 30, 2008, blended celebrity draw with wrestling pageantry but avoided true pugilistic rigor, as Mayweather's undefeated 50-0 boxing record contrasted the theatrical finish. These hybrids expose wrestlers to higher risks from unblocked punches, with Brawl for All contributing to documented orbital fractures and breaks due to mismatched skill levels. Other non-wrestling formats include sumo-style pushes for ring-out victories, seen in WWE's Yokozuna versus competitors in the , and dance-off contests judging rhythmic performance, as in TNA's 2010 events where participants like Robbie E competed for title shots via crowd appeal rather than combat. Hybrid evolutions, like MLW's format since 2018 fusing aerials with MMA ground control and brawling, allow transitions between disciplines under unified rules, promoting adaptability but increasing joint stress per biomechanical analyses of cross-style impacts. These challenges, while criticized for diluting wrestling's focus, empirically boost short-term viewership—Brawl for All drew 2.5 rating spikes—yet risk performer credibility when legitimacy falters, as Gunn's post-tournament illustrates causal disconnects between intent and execution.

Controversies, Risks, and Criticisms

Injury Patterns and Safety Data

Professional wrestling, as a form of athletic entertainment involving scripted high-impact maneuvers, exhibits elevated risks of acute and chronic injuries compared to many sports, though comprehensive epidemiological data remains limited due to inconsistent reporting and the industry's independent contractor model. A 2014 study analyzing 867 professional wrestlers active between 1985 and 2011 found a premature mortality rate significantly higher than the general U.S. male population, with cardiovascular disease accounting for 57% of deaths among those dying before age 50; wrestlers debuting before age 25 faced a 16% mortality risk after 20 years of competition. Approximately 10% of WWE performers reportedly die by age 40, surpassing early death rates in other professional sports. These outcomes stem causally from repetitive physical trauma, compounded by historical factors like steroid use and demanding schedules of up to 200 annual performances. Injury patterns predominantly involve musculoskeletal damage from falls, slams, and submissions, with shoulders, knees, necks, and backs most affected; for instance, anterior cruciate ligament tears are prevalent due to awkward landings from aerial moves or botched spots. Neurological injuries, including concussions from chair shots, piledrivers, and high-velocity impacts, contribute to long-term issues like chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), as evidenced by postmortem diagnoses in wrestlers such as Chris Benoit and presumptive cases like Rob Van Dam after hundreds of head traumas. Neck injuries, often from suplex variations or stunners, pose risks of spinal cord compression, though fatal cervical fractures are rarer post-1990s regulatory shifts. Unlike regulated amateur wrestling, where injury rates average 2-30 per 1,000 exposures with concussions at 5-10%, professional variants lack standardized athlete-exposure metrics, but anecdotal clusters in promotions like WWE and AEW suggest 10-13% of active rosters sidelined at peaks, driven by intense match types. Safety data reflects incremental improvements, such as WWE's 2006 Wellness Policy mandating drug testing and medical evaluations, which correlated with reduced overdose deaths after the 2000s "Attitude Era" excesses. However, performers often continue through injuries to avoid storyline disruptions or contract losses, exacerbating chronic conditions; cultural norms prioritizing "toughness" over rest hinder prevention, as critiqued in analyses of concussion management. Empirical gaps persist, with calls for independent oversight unmet, though post-pandemic protocols like enhanced medical ringside presence aim to mitigate risks in stipulation-heavy bouts. Independent studies underscore that while acute fatalities have declined, cumulative trauma drives elevated disability rates, informing debates on sustainable practices.

Debates on Athleticism vs. Spectacle

The debate over athleticism versus spectacle in professional wrestling match types revolves around the balance between technical proficiency, physical conditioning, and competitive simulation on one hand, and visually dramatic, high-impact elements designed for audience engagement on the other. Traditional advocates emphasize match formats rooted in grappling holds, submissions, and strategic pacing as true tests of athletic merit, arguing that these foster skill development and narrative depth without unnecessary risk. In contrast, proponents of spectacle highlight stipulations like ladder matches or cage bouts, where acrobatic dives and choreographed violence showcase peak human physicality, albeit within scripted outcomes. Critics such as wrestling veteran Jim Cornette have lambasted modern trends toward excessive "high spots"—aerial flips and perilous bumps—as diluting wrestling's athletic core, claiming they cater to short-attention-span viewers at the expense of psychology and longevity. Cornette specifically decries the overuse of such maneuvers by lighter performers, asserting it prioritizes fleeting excitement over sustainable in-ring storytelling and increases injury likelihood without advancing feuds meaningfully. This perspective echoes broader purist sentiments that hardcore or cinematic match variants, popularized in the late 1990s Attitude Era, shifted focus from athletic fundamentals to shock value, potentially eroding audience appreciation for mat-based technique. Defenders counter that spectacle-enhanced matches demand elite athleticism, with performers executing complex sequences requiring strength, agility, and coordination under duress—evident in promotions like All Elite Wrestling (AEW), where high-flying integrates with technical exchanges to elevate entertainment without negating sport-like rigor. Empirical observations from fan discussions note that while purists favor endurance-focused contests, broader viewership metrics correlate with spectacle-driven events, as seen in record attendance for stipulation-heavy pay-per-views. However, this divide persists, with detractors warning that unchecked emphasis on visual pyrotechnics risks commodifying wrestlers as stunt performers rather than athletes, sidelining causal elements like match psychology in favor of immediate gratification.

Ethical Concerns and Cultural Impact

Professional wrestling match types, particularly those involving weapons, high-impact stunts, or simulated extreme violence such as hardcore, deathmatch, or cage variants, have drawn ethical scrutiny for potentially normalizing aggression and risking performer health despite their scripted nature. Studies indicate a correlation between frequent viewing of such matches and increased violent behaviors among adolescents; for instance, a 2006 analysis of over 2,000 U.S. high school students found that those watching professional wrestling three or more times weekly were 3.2 times more likely to carry weapons to school and twice as likely to engage in physical fights compared to non-viewers. Similarly, a 1999 experimental study with first-grade boys showed that exposure to wrestling broadcasts heightened immediate aggressive play, with participants mimicking chair shots and body slams post-viewing, raising concerns about imitation in impressionable youth despite content ratings. Critics argue these formats exploit viewers' thrill-seeking impulses without adequate safeguards, as match types like barbed-wire or glass-inclusive bouts blur lines between performance and genuine peril, potentially desensitizing audiences to real-world violence. From a performer standpoint, ethical debates center on informed consent versus the pressure to escalate dangers for audience appeal in gimmick matches; while participants are adults voluntarily engaging, the industry's history of unreported concussions and chronic injuries from ladder or table spots—exemplified by Mick Foley's 1998 Hell in a Cell fall resulting in a dislocated shoulder and internal bruising—highlights systemic incentives for self-harm to sustain careers. Proponents of extreme variants like deathmatches counter that they represent autonomous artistic expression, with wrestlers such as those in promotions like Game Changer Wrestling assuming risks akin to stunt performers, but detractors, including former wrestlers, contend that normalizing bloodletting for spectacle erodes professional boundaries and encourages unsafe emulation in independent circuits. This tension underscores a causal realism in which economic demands for novelty drive match innovations that prioritize short-term ratings over long-term welfare, absent robust regulatory oversight comparable to regulated sports. Culturally, professional wrestling match types have profoundly shaped entertainment paradigms, influencing reality television's dramatic feuds and action cinema's choreographed brawls, as seen in the 1990s Attitude Era's no-holds-barred formats inspiring films like Ready to Rumble (2000) and viral memes from Royal Rumble eliminations. The New World Order storyline in WCW from 1996 onward revolutionized faction-based battles, embedding wrestling tropes into mainstream lexicon and boosting merchandise sales to $1.1 billion industry-wide by 1998, while fostering global fan communities that blend athleticism with theatrical excess. However, this impact includes perpetuation of hyper-masculine violence as narrative resolution, with hardcore elements critiqued for reinforcing stereotypes of dominance through brutality, though empirical viewer data suggests audiences distinguish fiction from reality, mitigating broad societal aggression spikes. Overall, these match types reflect and amplify cultural appetites for cathartic spectacle, yet their ethical footprint persists in ongoing debates over balancing innovation with responsibility.

Recent Developments and Global Influences

Post-Pandemic Cinematic Evolutions

Following the resumption of live events with full audience capacity in mid-2021, major promotions including and AEW phased out cinematic match formats, which had proliferated as a necessity during restrictions to maintain programming without crowds. This transition reflected a core causal dynamic in : the symbiotic energy between performers and spectators, where crowd reactions amplify athletic displays and tension, an element absent in pre-recorded, edited cinematic bouts. WWE's final widespread use of the format aligned with its return to touring in July 2021, after which in-ring matches before live attendees became the norm, prioritizing immediacy over scripted visuals. The lack of sustained adoption post-pandemic underscores that cinematic styles served primarily as a stopgap rather than an enduring innovation, with empirical feedback from viewers and industry metrics favoring traditional formats for engagement. For instance, despite occasional advocacy for their retention—such as arguments that cinematic elements could enhance storytelling without crowds—promotions consistently chose live executions for special stipulations. In October 2025, WWE explicitly rejected a cinematic approach for the Broken Rules Match featuring Matt and Jeff Hardy against Dark State at NXT Halloween Havoc, confirming it would occur live throughout the venue to leverage audience interaction. Similarly, reports from wrestling observers like Dave Meltzer noted the decision to avoid cinematic production, emphasizing standard pro wrestling rules adapted for chaos rather than filmed effects. Legacy influences persist indirectly, with cinematic techniques—dynamic editing, location scouting, and visual effects—infiltrating entrances, promos, and broadcast production to augment live matches without supplanting them. This hybrid integration allows for narrative depth, as seen in heightened dramatic camera work during high-stakes bouts, but full cinematic matches remain rare outside independent or niche promotions experimenting sporadically. The format's evolution thus stalled at adaptation's end, reinforcing wrestling's reliance on real-time spectacle over isolated cinematic experimentation.

International and Indie Innovations

Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW), founded in Japan in 1989 by Atsushi Onita, pioneered the deathmatch style, integrating everyday weapons, barbed wire, and pyrotechnics into contests to simulate life-threatening peril while advancing scripted narratives. This approach contrasted with the technical focus of mainstream Japanese promotions like New Japan Pro-Wrestling, emphasizing endurance and visual extremity over traditional holds and submissions. FMW's innovations, including the first exploding barbed wire deathmatch in the early 1990s, set precedents for global hardcore wrestling by rigging ring ropes with detonating charges that activated on contact, amplifying injury risks for participants. In Mexico, Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide developed the Domo de la Muerte, a multi-participant cage match encased in a dome-shaped steel enclosure, where wrestlers climb out to escape and the last remaining loses hair or mask under apuestas rules. Debuting prominently at events like Triplemanía XV on July 15, 2007, the format adapts WCW's Thundercage concept to lucha libre traditions, prioritizing aerial escapes and group dynamics within an inescapable geodesic barrier. This structure enhances containment and spectacle, distinguishing it from open-top cages by preventing external interference and heightening claustrophobic tension. Independent promotions in the United States, such as (CZW), introduced the Cage of Death in 1999 as an annual flagship event, featuring oversized cages embedded with weapons like panes of glass and spikes for factional or multi-man no-holds-barred battles. The inaugural match on October 16, 1999, saw Lobo defeat inside this apparatus for the Iron Man Championship, establishing a template for ultra-violent enclosures that prioritize destruction over standard wrestling maneuvers. In the United Kingdom, Progress Wrestling innovated with the Proteus Championship, defended under stipulation variations determined by fan votes or randomization, including prohibitions on strikes or requirements to win solely via predetermined finishers. This system, introduced around 2019, promotes unpredictability and adaptability, allowing wrestlers to showcase versatility across no-disqualification brawls, technical pure rules, or hybrid constraints without fixed formats. Such indie experiments demonstrate how smaller circuits test boundaries, often filtering extreme or rule-twisted concepts into larger promotions while prioritizing performer safety data from controlled chaos. The integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into creative processes represents a nascent trend in match design, with WWE appointing a Senior Director of Creative Strategy in 2025 to incorporate AI for storytelling and graphics, potentially yielding innovative stipulations tailored to data-driven narratives. This approach leverages algorithms to analyze viewer engagement, though reports indicate AI is not yet directly booking matches or generating core bout structures, emphasizing human oversight to maintain authenticity. Data analytics tools are transforming stipulation evolution by evaluating historical match outcomes, injury rates, and audience metrics to prioritize designs that balance spectacle with sustainability; for instance, promotions may favor timed endurance elements over high-risk gimmicks to extend performer longevity. Proposed innovations include the "Survivor Title Shot," a format where a challenger withstands an initial non-title confrontation for a predetermined duration to activate a championship bout, adding psychological tension without requiring elaborate feuds. Virtual and augmented reality (VR/AR) applications are forecasted to redefine match presentation, enabling remote fans to interact with simulated environments or overlay digital enhancements during live events, which could spawn hybrid formats blending physical action with virtual obstacles. Cinematic matches, popularized during the 2020 pandemic, may persist selectively for narrative flexibility—such as accommodating injuries—yet industry figures advocate limiting their frequency to preserve the primacy of in-ring athleticism. These developments, informed by post-2020 empirical shifts toward character-driven contests, signal a trajectory toward adaptive, tech-augmented designs responsive to global viewer data rather than rote replication of past gimmicks.

References

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