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shamelessposer

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  1. How about rules for a current day NJPW save :)

     

    Long Way Around - Okada must have won and then lost a singles title and a tag title before he can compete in an IWGP World Heavyweight title match.

     

    One Last Run - The next time Tanahashi wins championship gold is the last time he can hold a title in NJPW.

     

    Hard Work Never Pays Off - Ishii must win the IWGP World Heavyweight championship before his contract comes up for renewal, but he also has to lose it in his first defense.

     

    Get Juiced - Juice Robinson must be the holder or co-holder of championship gold for the majority of 2022.

     

    Inoki's Revenge - By the end of 2022, a wrestler with an MMA Crossover style must be recognized as a Star or Major Star in your promotion. (Don't cheat and ask an established star to change styles.)

     

    Change or Die - By the end of 2022, a new gaijin must have debuted, taken over the Bullet Club, and overseen a shakeup of its roster OR the Bullet Club must have disbanded.

     

    Leaving Your Mark - By the end of your first year as booker you must have introduced one new championship and retired another.

     

    Going Big - Pick Oceania or India. This is your new tertiary market, behind Japan and the United States. You must run a minimum of one tour a year each in the United States and in this new market.

  2. Would appreciate some rules for my AEW save using RWC Sept. update. I've booked a few shows but can adjust to the rules. TIA

     

    Big Boy Season - The first five male wrestlers you sign to full time contracts must be of at least light heavyweight size.

     

    Go For The Gold - By the end of 2021, you must introduce either a six man tag belt or women's tag belts.

     

    Down South - Pick three of the below names. Hire them, then find onscreen roles for them.

    - Eric Bischoff

    - Scott Hudson

    - Kevin Nash

    - Scott Steiner

     

    Youth In Revolt - Of Jungle Boy, Darby Allin, Sammy Guevara, and MJF, you must apply one of the following rules to each:

    - One gets to give CM Punk his first loss in an AEW ring

    - One gets to hold the TNT Championship for an entire year

    - One gets a vanity belt, but can NEVER hold the world championship

    - One must leave the company before the end of 2022

     

    Gold Watch - Christopher Daniels must win championship gold before he retires from active competition.

     

    The Mothership - By the end of 2022, you must move one of your shows to Saturday and claim the top rating spot in its time slot for an entire month.

     

    Good Neighbor - You must agree not to steal talent from Impact, NJPW, NWA, and MLW, then honor those agreements through to the end of 2023.

  3. But for a heel? That's hard. Because you'd naturally want to root for a guy rising up the card, right?

     

    There weren't a lot of people cheering for MJF during his ascent to the main event.

     

    Heel promos, a good gimmick, and a high profile betrayal can go a long way to get someone booed. But the important thing is to keep them protected. When an ascending heel loses, it should mean something. Don't give that up on free TV in the midcard.

  4. Thanks so much for your help. I am starting to lean towards a Gilmore or Bach, two i love. Seeing as there is already the three “top tier” companies in America - makes the talent pool that much smaller. So in my head I’m going to have to rip apart one of their rosters with a huge, in fight causing an exodus (or something cooler than that). I’m thinking a SWF youth trio of Starr, Spade and maybe someone out there like Bear (guys that think they’re not getting the opportunities) along with a Gilmore and Greed (good characters and wanting to give back to pro wrestling more so than the company). I look at the likes of Big Show and Henry leaving, Christian.. there’s some value for some of those midcarders to leave that isn’t necessarily out of spite.

     

    Spencer Spade is who I was leaning toward as a kind of Cody equivalent since he's a can't-miss prospect who wasted years of his life getting missed on.

     

    If you must have a tag team I'd go with Matthew Keith and Greg Gauge, even if they're not nearly as established as the Bucks.

     

    All you really need is four or five guys who could pass as midcarders in SWF, one upper midcarder or main eventer, and you've got the core of a promotion that can put on good shows for a Medium-sized promotion. From there it's a matter of staying alive and on TV until some of those bigger companies start shedding midcarders you can turn into either stars or jobbers to the future stars.

  5. This is looking really, really strong for a 1.1 release. Still, noticed a couple of things that I'm pretty sure are typos and one stat thing I'm going to complain about.

     

    1.) Bar Wrestling is listed as "Bar Wresling."

     

    2.) Eva Marie is listed as "Eva Maire."

     

    3.) Nyla Rose is 28 in your mod when every record I can find suggests she's ten years older than that.

     

    4.) Kenny Omega's Star Quality seems a little low to me, maybe? I'd at least get him into the low seventies.

  6. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="mjmiller2010" data-cite="mjmiller2010" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="48209" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>I'm nearly a month in but I would love and appreciate some rules for the 2010 WWE play</div></blockquote><p> </p><p> <strong>The Big Crunch</strong> - By the end of 2010, you must have exactly sixty male wrestlers on the active roster.</p><p> </p><p> <strong>New Blood Rising</strong> - Debut The Nexus in May of 2010 as a stable of five to eight developmental callups. One of their members must main event the following Wrestlemania.</p><p> </p><p> <strong>Revenge of the Pink and Black</strong> - Shawn Michaels must lose his retirement match to a wrestler who is managed by Bret Hart.</p><p> </p><p> <strong>Once In A Lifetime</strong> - The Rock is only allowed to appear at Wrestlemania one more time.</p><p> </p><p> <strong>Passing The Torch </strong> - Whoever ends The Undertaker's streak must be under the age of 30 and must take on the title of "The Phenom."</p><p> </p><p> <strong>The Revolution Starts Now</strong> - It's time to take the women's division seriously. Every woman who holds a singles title in 2011 must be perceived as a star.</p><p> </p><p> <strong>Earth-2</strong> - Debut The Shield before the end of 2012. This stable must be comprised of three developmental callups who are <em>not</em> Roman Reigns, Dean Ambrose, or Seth Rollins.</p><p> </p><p> <strong>Embargo</strong> - Pick one: WWE can never sign talent which has an active contract with NJPW <em>or</em> ROH <em>or</em> TNA. In addition, WWE can never sign a talent which has held a title in the chosen promotion.</p><p> </p><p> <strong>The Heyman Dilemma</strong> - Brock Lesnar and CM Punk may not be under contract at the same time.</p>
  7. With freestyle angles it seems like we're kind of left to use the honor system on whether someone should gain or lose momentum. There doesn't seem to be any real disincentive to just giving everyone a Major Success every time they participate in an angle.

     

    In an attempt to correct this I'd like to propose an adjustment: tie the amount of momentum shift in an angle to that angle's rating. If the Syndicate stands around patting themselves on the back for adding a new member (success all around), that should probably lower the angle's rating a little bit because the angle doesn't have any real stakes. If Tyson Baine tears through an army of jobbers (major success for Baine, defeat for the jobbers), that should provide a little bit of a net boost to the angle. This would encourage players to be a little more conscious of the way they book and prevent angles from being a surefire way to load up on momentum for free.

  8. <p></p><div style="text-align:center;"><p><strong><span style="font-size:18px;">Prologue - An Introduction to J.K. Stallings and Hollyweird Grappling Company</span></strong></p><p>

    <div style="padding: 10px; border: 2px solid #000000; margin:10px;background: #FFFFFF; max-width:40%; ";"><img alt="1032%20-%20JK_Stallings%20jk_stallings_jr.jpg" data-src="https://theo.minuspoint.com/tewbooru/_images/4ab4af8f0f29e484e5697a110dd68541/1032%20-%20JK_Stallings%20jk_stallings_jr.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p><p> </p><p>

    So are you sick of hearing about J.K. Stallings yet? I sure hope you're not, because I'm about to spend the next very long while talking about him. I know, I know - it's 2021 and we've spent the last couple of years listening to him dominate the news cycle. Some of you might be suffering from Stallings overload, something I should have probably considered before spending the last several months researching this topic for our series. But let's make a deal. Better yet, a list. We're not going to talk about the following J.K.s Stallings:</p><p> </p><p>

    </p><ul><li> J.K. Stallings the self-made tech genius who became a billionaire the same year he graduated high school on the strength of nothing but his own God-given talent and the small $20 million loan given to him by his grandfather (and suspected collaborator in 1933's Business Plot) oil baron Ira Stallings (1995)<br /></li><li> J.K. Stallings the island owner, who caused a minor international incident when he said in an interview he was thinking about declaring himself "King of Stallingsland" for tax purposes (2005)<br /></li><li> J.K. Stallings the "entertainment guru" who lost half a billion dollars over three years with a film studio dedicated to wide theatrical releases of subtitled anime movies (2009)<br /></li><li> J.K. Stallings the cryptocurrency baron whose "game changing" mining wall literally caught fire after only nine months of use (2013)<br /></li><li> J.K. Stallings the "billionaire playboy" who put out those promoted tweets making sure we all knew he was dating Amy Roberts (2014)<br /></li><li> J.K. Stallings the "tech trailblazer" who managed to run a streaming platform first into the ground and then into a Reverie buyout (2017)<br /></li><li> J.K. Stallings the sad single dad from those memes (2018)<br /></li><li> J.K. Stallings the failed presidential candidate (2020)</li></ul><p></p><p> </p><p>

    The one glaring success aside, that two and a half decades of hilarious failure in the public eye is just a stunning display of how much money you can piss away if you start young enough and rich enough. Cable news pundits and nerds on Twitter have already done great work tearing apart most of these (in particular I'm a fan of Trevor Reese's Twitter thread listing better names for Stallingsland, my personal favorite being "Server Fire Island"), so there's no need for me to bother covering any of that stuff. But there's a ten year gap in that CV I just posted. What was little Jimmy Stallings doing between 1995 and 2005? Sure, he was CEO of StallingsSoft from his eighteenth birthday until 2003, but he also had a hobby as a wrestling promoter. Rather than covering any of those money losing business ventures I'll be looking at J.K. Stallings’ only successful business outside of StallingsSoft - the Hollyweird Grappling Company - and get into why, despite its financial success, it still belongs on a list next to all those other failures.</p><p> </p><p>

    <strong><span style="font-size:14px;">The Hollyweird Grappling Company</span></strong></p><p>

    <img alt="1031%20-%20HGC.jpg" data-src="https://theo.minuspoint.com/tewbooru/_images/cc6cab165301631532087e630d7d4615/1031%20-%20HGC.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p><p> </p><p>

    If there's a worse name for a wrestling promotion than Hollyweird Grappling Company then I haven't heard it, and I'm a lifelong wrestling fan. The name itself is even a lie - the company's head offices were in Anaheim, not Los Angeles. And if there's a worse idea than an unproven name sinking millions of dollars into challenging the Supreme Wrestling Federation in 1997 for the spot of top wrestling company in the United States then I don't think I've heard that, either. The Supreme Wrestling Federation was at the top of the world in 1997 and there hadn't been a legitimate challenger in the United States in nearly twenty years.</p><p> </p><p>

    What happened next was kind of a perfect storm.</p><p> </p><p>

    <img alt="1033%20-%20sam_strong%20strong.jpg" data-src="https://theo.minuspoint.com/tewbooru/_images/4af7a2d1feef2bf94eba8730ce5253df/1033%20-%20sam_strong%20strong.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p><p>

    <strong>Sam Strong</strong> was still the biggest name in wrestling even if he hadn't set foot in an SWF ring in over two years. The TV pilot he filmed didn't get picked up for the 1996 season, but he'd done a tour with BHOTWG over in Japan the previous year and shown he could be a draw when he wasn't under Richard Eisen's thumb. It was generally understood that if Strong went back to the SWF it'd be to help build new stars, and that was not something he was interested in doing. He was fifty and he was looking for one last payday before he retired from the ring for good.</p><p> </p><p>

    <img alt="1034%20-%20Rip_Chord%20chord.jpg" data-src="https://theo.minuspoint.com/tewbooru/_images/4d31807c3b1593c06456ac8e4f6c6592/1034%20-%20Rip_Chord%20chord.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p><p>

    If Sam Strong was Richard Eisen's top guy during the SWF's ascension, <strong>Rip Chord</strong> was unquestionably his number two. The man was an international wrestling legend who spent the eighties as a villainous foil to Sam Strong, and his willingness to lose cleanly to a rising Bruce the Giant on his way out the door created a new star for Eisen to build his next generation of talent around. Chord had spent a few years away from the ring, in and out of rehab, but a return with Golden Canvas Grappling in 1996 showed that on the right night he could turn back the clock and wrestle like it was still 1983.</p><p> </p><p>

    <img alt="1035%20-%20dusty%20dusty_streets%20streets.jpg" data-src="https://theo.minuspoint.com/tewbooru/_images/0437cea67b598902d718df01727a5549/1035%20-%20dusty%20dusty_streets%20streets.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p><p>

    Son of a hall of famer, <strong>Dusty Streets</strong> spent most of his career as one of the SWF's great utility players. Never a top guy or a world champion, it seemed his ceiling was as a house show contender to the title whenever a heel was on top. After parting ways with the Eisens in 1990 he found new life with BHOTWG in Japan as one of that company's top gaijin. Dusty was nearing the end of his career, but he was a star on two continents and exactly the kind of guy who could bring legitimacy to a company looking to establish itself.</p><p> </p><p>

    <img alt="1037%20-%20coach%20coach_dick_pangrazzio%20dick_pangrazzio%20pangrazzio.jpg" data-src="https://theo.minuspoint.com/tewbooru/_images/c674edbc031b2e4c43f8bfc9f2db0cf1/1037%20-%20coach%20coach_dick_pangrazzio%20dick_pangrazzio%20pangrazzio.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="1036%20-%20pangrazzio%20richie_pangrazzio%20richie_pangrazzio_jr.jpg" data-src="https://theo.minuspoint.com/tewbooru/_images/e5aed0129bd853646857f1c258a10e5f/1036%20-%20pangrazzio%20richie_pangrazzio%20richie_pangrazzio_jr.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p><p>

    <strong>Coach Dick Pangrazzio</strong> and <strong>Richie Pangrazzio Jr.</strong> were a pair of SWF stars from way back, spending the seventies and eighties with the company as it transitioned from an upstart east coast promotion to to the household name it was today. Richie was a perennial midcard threat and his father was his manager. The two stepped away from the SWF to focus on family at the tail end of the nineties. After seven years laying sheetrock as Pangrazzio and Sons (alongside Fiero, Richie's younger brother uninvolved in wrestling), the two started making appearances on the independent scene again near the end of 1996.</p><p> </p><p>

    It was a first in American wrestling - five guys with this much name value were all looking for work at the same time. And then you had J.K. Stallings himself, a teenage wrestling fan with money to burn who claimed one of his earliest memories was of watching a Sam Strong vs. Richie Pangrazzio Jr. match with one of his uncles.</p><p> </p><p>

    Sam Strong was the first to receive an offer, and legend has it that Stallings’ opener was a 3x5 index card on which he’d just written “Enough.” With Strong onboard and Chord following shortly after, Stallings’ still unnamed wrestling company signed around three dozen other talents in the following month. Offices opened in Anaheim and Stallings started negotiation with a few different networks.</p><p> </p><p>

    Three months out from their December 1996 debut the company started its ad blitz. Thirty second TV spots and full page newspaper ads across the United States and Canada advertised the new alternative in North American wrestling: The Hollyweird Grappling Company. As I said before, I don’t think I’ve ever heard a worse name for a wrestling company. Supposedly the name came about because of multiple layers of interference - an early attempt to buy the California Pro Wrestling name from Preston Holt got tied up when another stakeholder objected, then a series of other names were rejected by focus groups. Hollywood Championship Wrestling tested well and was a favorite, but right before orders for promotional material went out Stallings himself stepped in and insisted on a last second change to the inexplicably bad Hollyweird Grappling Company.</p><p> </p><p>

    <img alt="1039%20-%20maple_leaf_sports.jpg" data-src="https://theo.minuspoint.com/tewbooru/_images/e542b1fb7be10987c426dd95fe498584/1039%20-%20maple_leaf_sports.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /><img alt="1038%20-%20nctv.jpg" data-src="https://theo.minuspoint.com/tewbooru/_images/7bd45f405be9b581af94d674a03b29a8/1038%20-%20nctv.jpg" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /></p><p>

    Pay-per-view providers in the United States and Canada were willing to bite, but without the ad buys from weekly programming the promotion wouldn’t be able to turn a profit. Even with Strong and Chord each signed to a five year commitment it was still difficult to find a network willing to take a gamble on professional wrestling if it didn’t come with the Eisen name. Some backroom dealing eventually led to a one-year agreement with Maple Leaf Sports, contingent on the promotion signing additional Canadian talent. This was shortly followed by a very unfavorable deal with American network NCTV. Not only was NCTV a channel dominated by sci-fi programming - not a demographic known for its wrestling fans, at least in the 1990s - but it came with many, many strings attached: NCTV would keep the ad revenue, and Stallings would need to pay for each episode broadcast. NCTV also demanded that they have final say over who got the still unassigned head booker position in the company. In several ways this was a worse deal than not broadcasting to the United States at all, but Stallings and his team were convinced that if they could survive two years of NCTV they could build an audience and look more appealing to a better network.</p><p> </p><p>

    Next episode we’ll get into the first month of Hollyweird TV and how NCTV’s say in who got the book for HGC nearly ruined the company just a few weeks in.</p></div><p></p><p></div></p>

  9. A Comedy of Errors - The Hollyweird Grappling Company

    A podcast series by Jay Armstrong

     

    Episode List

    Prologue - An Introduction to J.K. Stallings and Hollyweird Grappling Company

     

    It is December 1996 in Hollyweird Time.

     

    Hollyweird Grappling Company

    #2 in the world

    Hollywood TV airs on NCTV (USA) and Maple Leaf Sports (Canada), with the announce team of Jason Azaria and Kyle Rhodes

    <div style="padding: 10px; border: 2px solid #000000; margin:10px;background: #FFFFFF; max-width:40%; ";">Roster

    Sam Strong

    Rip Chord

    Dusty Streets

    The All-Star Team (Coach Dick Pangrazzio, Richie Pangrazzio Jr., Larry Vessey & Bryan Vessey)

    Black Serpent Cult (Cobra & Viper)

    The Blazing Flames (Joey Flame & Teddy Flame)

    Whistler

    Charlie Homicide

    Romeo Heartthrob

    BLZ Bubb (with Karen Killer)

    The Demons of Rage (Demon Anger & Demon Spite)

    Golden Fox

    Jimmy Power

    The Danger Kid

    Liberty

    Cowboy Ricky Dale

    Danny Rushmore

    Dark Eagle

    Mucha Lucha (Mr Lucha & Electrico)

    The Nation of Filth (Stink & Grunt)

    Jack Bruce

    Jason Jackson

    Savage Fury (Java & Tribal Warrior)

    The Untouchables (Eric Tyler, Robert Oxford, Joel Bryant, Paul Steadyfast)

    Monty Walker

    Ramon Paez

    Peter Valentine</div>

  10. A fixed venue for TV shows.

     

    Allowing companies to not have announcers (Stardom doesn't use them, as does a bunch of smaller indies in Mexico and Japan).

     

    I'd suggested months ago that a future release could allow promotions to have attributes in the same sense workers do to further modify existing products, and this could be a good addition to that. It would make sense that a promotion that sets the expectation it won't have an announce team would maybe suffer a less severe penalty to its matches than a promotion which is expected to have an announce team and then doesn't.

  11. The way it works is that each product is rated on several categories (lucha, hardcore, deathmatch, family friendly, in ring, pure sports, aerial, MMA, technical, extreme, and skit-based) as either being a core part of their product, neutral, or the antithesis of what they're about. The rating of each category is then compared, giving them positive points if they match, heavy negative if they're complete opposites, and small negative is they don't match up. The total points then decides how long the change time is.

     

    This is interesting and not at all what I had assumed. I'd figured it was closer to the Europa Universalis III government type chart, where there was a "tree" that was invisible to players:

     

    Xc6Tr0z.png

     

    Would you consider adding in descriptive text in a future patch that makes this more transparent to players? I'd like to see something that straight up says "As this product is lucha-based and your current product is not, this accounts for an extra three months in the transition process" or "As this product is family friendly like your current product, there are no additional penalties for this transition process."

  12. I don't know if it would be worth it as the game isn't meant to be an exact simulation, but I could reach out to an old classmate that works in finance for a major promotion that can maybe give some ideas on what numbers are off putting everything out of balance.

     

    Realism is not nearly as important as playability. Ideally, finances should remain scary for any promotion that doesn't have a national broadcasting deal, and losing that TV deal should cause even a national promotion to start hemorrhaging money.

  13. There's been a bunch of complaints on the forums over the last few months about how certain game systems seem to make long-term saves untenable. Workers get better too fast, there's too many stars, nobody seems to run out of money. A few of these problems feel like they could have some (hopefully) simple solutions.

     

    Popularity Caps

    I know there were a couple of complaints about popularity caps which led to popularity restrictions being eased, but I'd like to see an in-game option (maybe on the database level?) to revert to the popularity caps we had on release.

     

    Skill Scaling

    Another potential option that could be incorporated on the database level would be a scaler for skill increases. Personally, I'd like to see skill increases slowed down to about a third of what they are (so workers take a decade or so to hit their peaks rather than only a few years). It would be great if this was an option that would allow mod makers to adjust things to align with their game worlds.

     

    The Money Problem

    I don't have an easy solution for this one, but something needs to be done about the financial situation in the game. It seems borderline impossible for most promotions to lose money and once a promotion gets to the upper end of Medium it's never going to be in any real danger again. Hitting Medium (or Cult) in 2016 used to be a scary time for a promotion, but now it's very easy for a company to hang around indefinitely. I don't know if the answer is as simple as reducing income to a fraction of what it is now, but I once tried using the in-game editor to reduce SWF's popularity by forty points AND putting it ten million dollars in debt and a year later the promotion was back at Medium and had an eight digit bank account again.

  14. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="mmaaddict" data-cite="mmaaddict" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="47616" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>There’s a lot to go through in this thread, but I’m new to the game and using TCW. Who do you all use as top tier faces outside of Andrews?<p> </p><p> I know there is Bach, but he’s older and the game seems to be pointing towards him declining right now. </p><p> </p><p> It feels like the next level after Andrews are all heel...Chord, Wolf, Huggins, Gauge...</p><p> </p><p> Do you all turn one of them face? I am trying to build T-Bone and plan to give him the TV Title when I want to bump Gauge up a tier. Just feels like I need at least one more guy at the top besides Andrews and a declining Bach.</p></div></blockquote><p> </p><p> I really like to push Edd Stone as a comedic foil to Wolf Hawkins, who absolutely refuses to respect Stone even though he's totally incapable of (cleanly) beating him. Outside of him, Mo, and possibly One Man Army you're hurting for top of the card faces, and TCW's structure kind of demands that you bring in new talent and start pushing them in a hurry.</p>
  15. Looking for rules for a loooooooooong term April 2014 WWE game where I control both WWE and NXT!

     

    1.) Stick to the plan. Unless injuries dictate otherwise, Daniel Bryan MUST lose his title in a squash match against Brock Lesnar in the main event of Summerslam 2014.

     

    2.) Brock Lesnar may not be pinned or submitted until 2016.

     

    3.) The Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal winner MUST appear in the main event of a pay-per-view the same year he wins the trophy.

     

    4.) Before you break up the Shield you must first introduce a fourth member to the group. This fourth member MUST be an NXT callup.

     

    5.) Of Ambrose, Rollins, and Reigns:

    5a.) Pick one who will lose to Triple H in a singles match at the next Wrestlemania.

    5b.) Pick one who will win the 2016 Royal Rumble and CANNOT win a world title until Wrestlemania 32.

    5c.) Pick one whose contract you will not renew under any circumstances.

     

    6.) Before the end of 2014 you must either bring back King of the Ring or introduce a six man tag belt.

     

    7.) By the end of 2014 Adam Rose must be the leader of a stable with no fewer than five members (Rose included). They must all be NXT callups. One must take on the role of "The Bunny." One of them MUST be either Braun Strowman or Becky Lynch.

     

    8.) Don't give up on Cesaro. He's a Paul Heyman Guy and that has to mean something. Cesaro MUST win three pay-per-view matches for every one he loses for as long as he is associated with Paul Heyman, and this relationship must continue until he is a Star.

     

    9.) Cody Rhodes cannot be given the Stardust gimmick and cannot win a non-tag title until after he has retired his brother.

     

    10.) The Women's Revolution starts now. The Divas title must be retired and replaced with a new women's belt by Summerslam and at least four women on the roster must be Stars by Summerslam 2015.

     

    11.) Any new signing who has not held a world-level title in a Medium-sized or greater promotion must spend no less than a year in NXT before being promoted to the main roster.

     

    12.) John Cena cannot win another world title unless he is a heel.

     

    13.) You get one more Wrestlemania out of The Undertaker, and he must lose his match. Make it count.

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