Wrestlemania Weekend’s Real Main Event? Fourth Rope, No Debate.

Las Vegas was on fire during WrestleMania week, but if you followed the trail of Griselda merch and 4th Rope tees, you knew exactly where the real show was happening. Fourth Rope Vegas wasn’t just another event—it was history in motion. From the airports to the Strip, the energy was undeniable. Westside Gunn & Smoke DZA orchestrated something monumental, and they didn’t just meet expectations—they obliterated them.

Starting at midnight on Friday and stretching into the early haze of 4:20AM, fans stayed locked in the entire night. Not one yawn, not one early exit. This wasn’t a casual crowd—this was a community wide awake for every entrance, every spot, and every surprise. The blend of hip-hop and pro wrestling reached its apex, bringing out legends, rising stars, and live performances that turned the arena into a cross-cultural battleground.

MATCH HIGHLIGHTS:

Matt Riddle vs Gabe Kidd was a brutal display of intensity, where two warriors traded vicious strikes and takedowns that blurred the line between sport and war. The energy was raw, the tension thick, and the crowd lived for every second.

Zilla Fatu vs Josh Bishop inside a steel cage delivered a main event that looked ripped from the Attitude Era but hit harder. Zilla, carrying the legacy of the Bloodline, brought heat to every blow while Bishop matched it with heavyweight ferocity. The cage wasn’t just a prop—it became a canvas for carnage.

The Fourth Rope Flyweight Battle Royale turned the venue into absolute chaos with appearances from Real1 (Enzo Amore), Nic Nemeth (fka Dolph Ziggler), Cha Cha Charlie, AJ Francis, and more. It was star-studded madness with the crowd on their feet from bell to bell, cheering every elimination and pop moment like it was the Rumble in the Garden.

The wrestling was one thing—but the live performances elevated it to another realm. Flatbush Zombieslit up the ring with psychotic energy, turning their set into a mosh pit, while Joey Bada$$ came through with a performance so cold it felt like NYC teleported into the desert. This wasn’t just a show—it was a full-on cultural renaissance.

Fourth Rope Vegas proved once again that wrestling isn’t confined to arenas and old-school rules. It lives where music, fashion, and raw energy meet. And with Westside Gunn and Smoke DZA at the helm, you better believe this is only the beginning. 4:20AM may have hit, but the legacy just woke up.