Jump to content

Sigilistic

Members
  • Posts

    947
  • Joined

Everything posted by Sigilistic

  1. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="Bigpapa42" data-cite="Bigpapa42" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41411" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>Also depends on what Azul meant by eye candy. If he means good looking female workers who can't wrestler, maybe there aren't tons . But I don't see that as being a negative lol....<p> </p><p> After toying around with starting saves with the AWF and TCW in the Cverse, I've ended up starting with PWI. Lord knows if I'll stick with it very long, but I have some fun ideas. Pretty sure this something I've asked before, somewhere, but I'm curious on people's perception of the PWI product. </p><p> </p><p> <strong>Key</strong>: Traditional</p><p> <strong>Heavy</strong>: Mainstream & Modern</p><p> <strong>Low</strong>: Cult, Realism, Pure & Daredevil</p><p> <strong>Very Low</strong>: Comedy</p><p> </p><p> Looking at the in-game definitions, Traditional is the old school focus on good-vs-bad athletic contests. Mainstream is the soap opera storytelling, and Modern is the fast-paced and exciting in-ring action. </p><p> </p><p> My perception of what the actual in-ring product looks like has evolved a bit over time. Perhaps their product actually has evolved, but I'm a bit too lazy to bother going back to look. In early Tverse editions - before I ever tried PWI - I perceived them as soulless grapplin machines, slow paced and methodical. Kinda like the negative perception of North of the Border from the Cverse. But that would be Pure, which is Low, and the Modern would mean that the pace would generally be quicker and more exciting. </p><p> </p><p> I've also thought of them as an "American Strong Style" at times. But that aspect of Puro - the stiffer strikes and realistic submissions - would fit under Realism. Which is also Low. </p><p> </p><p> So based on the TEW definitions... matches are presented as fairly serious athletic contests, but still with the defined good-vs-bad dynamic and the match storytelling we are used to. Not everything is going to be fast paced and exciting, but more generally. You could get high flying, brawls, hoss battles, etc. </p><p> </p><p> I always like to do real world comparisons for in-ring product. I end up going back to two comparisons - an updated version of WCW in the 1989-1991 period, or something similar to the 2004-2006 ROH with bigger workers. Which is the same comparisons I use for TCW for the most part. Which does make sense. TCW has Medium down a notch, and Realism up a notch. So they could be relatively similar </p><p> </p><p> How do others see the PWI in-ring action? What would you compare it to?</p></div></blockquote><p> </p><p> Seems like present day ROH fits the bill. Focus on fast-paced in-ring action but you still have storylines and the like. Granted, I don't watch much ROH so I could be way off.</p><p> </p><p> Also, as is usually the case, your post is making me want to give PWI a spin. This never ends well.</p>
  2. <p>Yeah when I made a promotion on a lark after finishing my GLOW binge, I had no problem stocking the fed with women rated Good Sex Appeal or higher. My top tier talent was Alexia Dynamite as the face and, who else, Jess Hart as the heel. </p><p> </p><p> Man, maybe I *should* run a GLOW style fed...</p>
  3. As an aside, watching the new GLOW on Netflix SERIOUSLY makes me want to run a women's eye candy fed. There's plenty of available talent to assemble a roster not unlike that on the show.
  4. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="Bigpapa42" data-cite="Bigpapa42" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41411" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>Tempting to bring back Casey Skym as my user character, since it was Trillion who fired him. <p> </p></div></blockquote><p> </p><p> I brought back Skym and Clay Clinton to work the announce desk with Aria as a a sort of broadcast dream team. </p><p> </p><p> Since in my game Terry Thunder's the one who bought AWF, it makes sense he'd want to make a big impact right away, and shaking up the announce team seemed like a good way to do that.</p>
  5. El Mitico. Guy is tailor-made to be the cornerstone of a small fed and he seldom gets poached.
  6. <p>I'm pretty pleased with how my latest game is going so I thought I'd share.</p><p> </p><p> After his departure from AWF, Casey Skym wandered around the indy scene for a bit before he struck out in an unexpected direction: Partnering with several investors to form the Zombie Entertainment Network, with its flagship show being ZEN Art Of Wrestling. (It's too good a name not to use)</p><p> </p><p> ZEN is run in the Lucha Underground style, seasonal format with angles given a cinematic flair. Basically, it's less a wrestling promotion than it is a TV show about a wrestling promotion.</p><p> </p><p> Each season consists of 22 hour-long episodes (with a three-month hiatus between)and a special 2-hour finale in May.</p><p> </p><p> The in-story premise for ZEN is that Skym has persuaded the leaders of four powerful crime families to financially support his Temple, where wrestlers from around the world fight for money and glory. In exchange, these gang leaders can settle their grudges inside the ring, saving them from costly and bloody turf wars.</p><p> </p><p> Skym is portrayed as blood-lusting but generally well-meaning. He doesn't want any shenanigans getting in the way of his violence. Unfortunately, he often butts heads with Tatiana, who has been sent by the four families to represent their interests in the Temple.</p><p> </p><p> Some of the stars of our show include VIP, who plays the character of a prize fighter, a mercenary who cares only about cracking skulls and cashing checks, and who does so on behalf of an East Coast gang called The Family.</p><p> </p><p> Then there's Hell Cat, who was a policewoman in Mexico City until her family was gunned down before her eyes. That tragedy led her to don the mask and become a luchadora, fighting in underground fight clubs while tracking down the person who gave the kill order. She knows it's one of the four gang leaders involved with the Temple and she's determined to find out which one so she can exact bloody revenge.</p><p> </p><p> Shay Kinsella was happily retired from professional wrestling, but when he saw how his beloved Urbana, Illinois, was fighting a losing battle with despair and blight, he reluctantly took up an offer from the leader of the Fallen Angels biker gang to fight on their behalf in exchange for the protection and improvement of his hometown. </p><p> </p><p> Johnny Hollywood was living the high life, all champagne wishes and caviar dreams. But his prodigal lifestyle wasn't cheap, and he soon found himself deep in debt to some bad men in Las Vegas. Now he fights in the Temple, hoping to pay off that debt and perhaps even make a profit while he's at it.</p><p> </p><p> Everyone believed that Wilson Hancock was past his prime, an aging second-string star who would never be a champion in a major promotion. But then the leader of a brutal Texas crime family found Hancock in a bingo hall somewhere and made him an offer he couldn't refuse: Fight for them and get one last chance at greatness.</p><p> </p><p> Jess Hart had done it all. She was the most respected woman wrestler on the planet, she'd won titles in every company she had been in. But it wasn't enough. When her father refused to name her as the heir to his legacy (and wrestling school) she snapped. She realized it wasn't enough to be the best woman wrestler, she had to be the best WRESTLER. Now she's come to the Temple to prove she's just that and to force her father to recognize that SHE is his greatest legacy.</p><p> </p><p> Francine (played by Sissy/Diane Stone) is just some eye candy, the ring announcer who calls wrestlers down to the ring and looks good doing it. Right? Of course not! In truth, she is actually an undercover FBI agent who has infiltrated the Temple in order to learn who Skym's employers really are and then bring them to justice. But she plays a very dangerous game...</p><p> </p><p> Finally, there's the Ghost Rider. A dark force of nature resurrected from the dead by persons unknown for reasons unknown. All that's known is that when he shows up, someone is about to go for their Last Ride.</p>
  7. In a classic case of art imitating life, I hired WMD to be a monster in my second season. Then after our first show of the new season she announces she's pregnant. That's downright eerie.
  8. <p>Fired up a new game, running a promotion in the style of Lucha Underground. </p><p> </p><p> So far it's going like gangbusters. Having bought my own network, my plan is to run 22-episode seasons with each episode being an hour long. In addition, I've got an hour-long "After Dark" B-show to give my lower card more screen time. </p><p> </p><p> I'll run a season a year, with the remaining time serving as downtime. Only my top talent with be contracted to long-term written deals, the lesser talent is all hired to season-long written deals instead.</p><p> </p><p> My stars this season are Wilson Hancock, VIP, Shay Kinsella, Jack America, Hell Cat, Manu Samoa, Evan Kuja, Ghost Rider and Alex Pierce (American Warrior).</p><p> </p><p> Rudy Single is cast as Darius, my Dario Cueto analogue, while Casey Skym is a prominent non-wrestler basically hired by Darius to scour the world for top talent to bring into the company.</p><p> </p><p> I have to say it's been a hell of a lot of fun to book the show in the same format at Lucha Underground, with over-the-top and slickly produced angles and then solid wrestling.</p>
  9. <p>Switched up again. Playing HONOUR now.</p><p> </p><p> I've set it up in a league format, with Heavyweights, Juniors, Ladies and Tag Teams all getting their own standings.</p><p> </p><p> A title win earns 7 points, a title defense earns 5 points, a regular win earns 3 points, a draw earns 1 point and a loss earns 0 points.</p><p> </p><p> Champions start the tour with a 7 point advantage. In order for a wrestler to qualify as a title challenger, they must fall within 6 points of the champion, such that a win would make them the highest rated wrestler in the division.</p><p> </p><p> At the end of the tour, the eight highest-scoring male wrestlers, heavyweight and junior, can compete in the Openweight Grand Prix.</p><p> </p><p> Every time a wrestler or tag team wins a league match, if they are a member of a stable the stable also gets those points. In non-league, stable-vs-stable matches, only the stables and not the individual wrestlers get the points. Stablemates may, if mutually agreed upon, agree to take a draw instead of facing one another. Most do this, although Fergus Storm and every member of the Raging Gaijins insist on wrestling every single match.</p><p> </p><p> At the end of the tour, a stable adds 25 points for every title it possesses, and 50 points if a member wins the Openweight Grand Prix. Being the winning stable is a matter of pride and honor.</p><p> </p><p> We're running a spring and a fall tour, with tour dates Monday through Friday and a blow-off PPV on the last Sunday of the last month. It's a bruising schedule, but so far my wrestlers are managing. </p><p> </p><p> I brought in a handful of touring wrestlers. Kris Phoenix, who aligned himself with SHAME, Alejandro Iglesias, The Guardians, Graham Mackenzie, Hell Cat, Sara Faust, June Black and Jack America. I also signed Gao Xi to a written deal.</p><p> </p><p> It's kind of fun running a puro fed. Storylines are broken down along divisions, with some wrestlers competing in both tag and singles divisions. For lower card matches, I often let the road agent assign the outcome, figuring they'll do what's best for the match. So far, King's Road and SHAME are neck-and-neck for points, with the Raging Gaijins and Tokyo Wrecking Crew falling behind. Fergus Storm has captured the Junior Crown, which was the blow that finally brought SHAME up to King's Road's level. I'm playing that faction as a big deal, especially Storm himself.</p>
  10. <p>Another month, another $300,000 loss. By far, talent is my biggest drain. But AWF dropping to Cult and becoming competition (meaning I have to up all my production values) means it's going to get even more expensive. And we aren't big enough to get a deal in Mexico or Canada.</p><p> </p><p> Would it be better to stay on our existing network (medium in the U.S.) or jump to the Danger Network (very small in the U.S. and Canada)? Would the extra viewership make up for the smaller size in terms of revenue?</p>
  11. <p>Well, Jack America feuding with VIP is MONEY. Ratings are up and I am happy. Had to bring in some more women to appease the fans. Introduced a Nitro Girls-esque dance segment to provide a mid-show bathroom break. I feel a little dirty using extremely talented wrestlers for this, but I needed Sex Appeal.</p><p> </p><p> Ran into a tiny (TRANSLATION: A huge) problem. We're spending way too much on talent. We lost about a quarter of a million in January and most of that was talent. To rectify that, I cut a lot of PPA guys and signed some other PPAs to written deals, which saves me a little money and also prevents them from getting poached. Now, only Kris Phoenix is on a PPA agreement, since he's intended to just drop the belt to Hollywood, lose the rematch, then move on.</p><p> </p><p> We'll see how February shakes out. I might need to try and find a new source of revenue...</p>
  12. <p>Doesn't Drake start out making a movie though? Or is that just something that happened in my game that I didn't notice a news item about?</p><p> </p><p> Maybe VIP could give me a ratings bump? More upside than Richards, about the same price tag.</p><p> </p><p> Here's what I've got for storylines starting out:</p><p> </p><p> Cloud James vs Riley Johansen vs Michael Anicetti vs Herculez</p><p> Your bog standard four-way feud. Everybody's chasing James' title, but he'll hold on to it because I have plans for him at Glory Bowl.</p><p> </p><p> El Estandar vs Seven Brandt </p><p> Estandar's at the top of the Cruiserweight food chain, but some new talent has come in to offer a challenge. Iago de Brun's on the horizon but first up is Seven Brandt, who uses mind games to get inside Estandar's masked head and make him question his skill. Lots of Brandt speechifyin', and some quality workrate matches barring bad chemistry.</p><p> </p><p> Kris Phoenix vs Johnny Hollywood</p><p> Phoenix is in the company on a limited contract. He'll be dropping the AWC World Heavyweight title to Johnny Hollywood at the end of their brief feud, in order to set Hollywood up as our top heel and initiate a slow-burn feud with Cloud James that pays off in a title vs title match at Glory Bowl.</p><p> </p><p> The Furlong Brothers vs Too Famous</p><p> Not sure where I'm going to take this one yet. Too Famous basically run a reality show gimmick, with their antics intended to be as annoying as possible.</p><p> </p><p> Cordero Calderon vs Maxim Kozlov</p><p> Calderon became the first man in more than a decade to hold the AWC American Heavyweight title, and Kozlov will be his first opponent. Your standard American vs Ebul Furriner storyline.</p><p> </p><p> Shay Kinsella vs Mattias Taylor</p><p> Both men just debuted with the company, and Taylor crashed Kinsella's debut to call the veteran out. This is a low-key feud just intended to establish Kinsella as a top star and give Taylor some ring and screen time. </p><p> </p><p> I'm also running a series of videos hyping the debut of Jack America. I could have VIP be a surprise return and feud with good old Jack. Or maybe he could feud with Shay, playing up the Big League Star vs Indy Darling angle. Hmmm...</p>
  13. <p>Finally settled on HCG.</p><p> </p><p> Having some difficulties meeting the ratings requirement of our TV broadcaster. They want a C show, but two weeks running I've only been able to pull of a C-. </p><p> </p><p> I've brought in a couple of other big indy names, Shay Kinsella, Jack America, Kris Phoenix on a 15-show deal.</p><p> </p><p> Anybody else struggle with this? Any advice for ways I can goose the ratings a bit?</p><p> </p><p> Side note, Perfect Show Theory or whatever it's called now has been turned off.</p>
  14. Referee Sonja Dawson (I think that's her name) in AWF has the wrong sex assigned. She's listed as male.
  15. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="Markw" data-cite="Markw" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41411" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>While I'm rambling about my thoughts on the update, I'm a bit disappointed that Chase Paige/Paige Global didn't buy the AWF and release Timothy Hawk/Kelly. Would have created so many wonderful dilemmas. With the AWF you'd have lost your biggest star and have a roster with a large attitude entertainment contingent potentially having to be toned down to fit in with Paige Global. As PWI you'd have to struggle with whether Shane Allman would sign the face of Sports Entertainment and how he could justify that if he did. If you decide he wouldn't then there's numerous different places he could wind up that would be really interesting. I might have to have a fiddle in the editor and set up a couple of games on the back of Paige taking over the AWF rather than Chief.<p> </p></div></blockquote><p> </p><p> I like this so much I made this change in my T-verse setting.</p><p> </p><p> But rather than Chase Paige, it was Lois Paige that stunned the world when she bought it. Instead of slinking off, she gets revenge on Hawk and King in a big way, and acquires a huge asset for Paige-Digital, the online subscription-only subsidiary of Paige-Global. </p><p> </p><p> I'm going to play her as a Stephanie McMahon type. I'm considering even making it to where she has had some basic wrestling training so she can pull the occasional match off, like the McMahon/Bella match at SummerSlam a few years back. Basically, she'll be a real life Shadowrun villain. She's the perfect heel. She fired the face of the company, but she had justification for doing so. The best heels are the ones who speak uncomfortable truths.</p>
  16. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="Jon The GOAT" data-cite="Jon The GOAT" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41411" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>I spent like 3hrs after picking a UC trying to figure out what company to take. Took PWI. Did a bit of planning, went to sleep, woke up, took DRAGON after like a second.</div></blockquote><p> </p><p> Yeah I finally settled on HGC. But then I was like, "AWF! With Drake and Chap and TrillionCorp gone, it's ready for some industrial-scale house-cleaning!"</p><p> </p><p> And now I'm pretty much back to being undecided again.</p>
  17. The worst part of the Thunderverse finally coming out is my indecision while I figure out which promotion I want to play first. So many fun ones!
  18. <p>AWF got whacked hard. But they're in a position to reform and clean out all the rot so it's a good booking project. </p><p> </p><p> Playing HCG right now, though, as the recent boost has made them an exciting choice. </p><p> </p><p> HONOUR is another good-looking prospect and probably my new go-to when I get the urge to run a work-rate fed.</p>
  19. Doing something kind of crazy in my MAW game. I tweaked the start data so that the American Wrestling Council (the new name for the COTT) also included FCW, ACPW, CILL, EMLL, AAA and QAW. Basically one promotion per territory. I also created World Lightweight, World Women's and World Women's Tag Team titles and assigned starting champions. Since Pee-Wee Germaine canonically is a billionaire, in my game he struck a deal with Sam Keith to take over ownership of MAW and also leadership of the AWC. I created a brand split for the company. One brand is MAW, and that's where all the MAW originals are located. The other brand is AWC, which is where the top stars of all the other AWC promotions as well as MAW wrestle. Each brand has a weekly show on the network. We got poached mercilessly at the start of the game but we've reached a new equilibrium. Amazingly, Greg Gauge has not been signed to a written deal yet, but it's still early. "The Big Bad" George Wolfe is getting the push of a lifetime right now. He beat Gauge for both the title and the Rip Chord Invitational Trophy in the main event of that show, and he followed that up two days later when he defeated AWC World Heavyweight Champion El Bandido in a title match. The Dynamite Express got poached, so I hotshotted the tag team titles onto The American Cobras for the time being while I build up a new "MAW Original" tag team to take the belts back.
  20. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="gord" data-cite="gord" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41303" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>I don't know if you're aware or just playing it this way, but DeBones can appear on Supreme TV, he just can't wrestle on TV, only on PPV.</div></blockquote><p> </p><p> Just found that out. <img alt=":)" data-src="//content.invisioncic.com/g322608/emoticons/smile.png.142cfa0a1cd2925c0463c1d00f499df2.png" src="<___base_url___>/applications/core/interface/js/spacer.png" /> But it worked out well, forced me to be creative with the spooky effects and such. I do like that that changed, makes it the proper "Brock Lesnar/Undertaker contract" it's meant to be.</p>
  21. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="Comradebot" data-cite="Comradebot" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41928" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>I'm of a similar mindset. While a company that exists as a huge reference to the film is amusing, it feels a little too on the nose. Wouldn't mind changing the name of the company and some of its characters, but by and large it should remain as it is: a zany, theatrical cash grab by an out of shape, semi-pro basketball player and his friends.</div></blockquote><p> </p><p> Honestly, I'd prefer the name change. The utility of the joke is overshadowed by the loaded meaning of the initials. It's the same reason I always remove "Antonio" from Frederique Garcia's ring name. I get the joke, it just isn't funny.</p>
  22. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="MarkyGeorge" data-cite="MarkyGeorge" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41303" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>Yeah, I'm planning on moving that PPV to May to decide the challenger for TSC. I just prefer it as a way of setting up the biggest match of the year as anybody can realistically win a lottery based battle royal, and I like having that luxury when it comes to setting up that main event. I'm just not sure which match I want main eventing to ensure the best ratings and was wondering if anybody had experimented yet.<p> </p><p> I'm going to replace the August PPV with a bracketed tournament named after Christian Faith, and use that more as a launching pad for a particular talent to start competing for the SWF Championship over the coming year.</p></div></blockquote><p> </p><p> Ooh, I like the Christian Faith-themed tournament. Tournaments in general are a lot of fun, and with his name attached to it you can really add to the importance.</p><p> </p><p> You could always steal a page from what WWE is doing with the Cruiserweight Classic: Get a bunch of indy guys who are promising talents and run a series of special events for the tournament, leading up to the finale. The winner gets an SWF contract and a guaranteed title shot. Maybe make the tournament about how a wrestler rises above and seizes the brass ring, like Christian Faith did in the mid-90s after Sam Strong and Rip Chord left.</p>
  23. <blockquote data-ipsquote="" class="ipsQuote" data-ipsquote-username="MarkyGeorge" data-cite="MarkyGeorge" data-ipsquote-contentapp="forums" data-ipsquote-contenttype="forums" data-ipsquote-contentid="41303" data-ipsquote-contentclass="forums_Topic"><div>Has anybody run a Royal Rumble style match yet?<p> </p><p> I'm doing it in May to decide the Supreme Challenger, and giving Mikey Lau (upper midcard) a title shot at the same event to hopefully give him a handsome pop boost against the 86 rated Remo. I'm just not sure which order to run the two matches in, bearing in mind the title match should get a good but probably not fantastic rating.</p></div></blockquote><p> </p><p> That's usually how I treat Welcome to the Jungle. I make it a cross between the Royal Rumble and Money in the Bank, with the winner getting a guaranteed title shot sometime in the next year. It helps that it's the PPV after the Supreme Challenge, so you get to immediately set up next year's big storyline.</p>
  24. <p>Started a new SWF game.</p><p> </p><p> I went with the starting storylines, but after a triple-threat with Remo, Rogue and Angry Gilmore I spun Rogue and Gilmore into their own feud and moved Remo into a rather one-sided feud with Skull DeBones, who only appears on PPV and is billed as a special attraction. I took a page from recent WWE booking of Undertaker for DeBones, lots of Remo standing around screaming at DeBones, the occasional flickering lights, eerie music and spooky effects, and once or twice a mysterious "Lights go out then on again and we see Remo down and out" angle. Obviously, you can only do that for so long, maybe two PPVs, but I'm trying to decide who I want to send at Remo next. My plan is for him to be a dominant, Brock Lesnar-esque champion so he won't be dropping the belt any time soon. That leaves out Valiant, who won't be pushed for the title until he's a bit more seasoned.</p><p> </p><p> The Eric Eisen "Make SWF Great Again" storyline is going like gangbusters. He does a Donald Trump routine while Bear Bekowski and the Pain Alliance stand around looking menacing. Occasionally, he attacks a face and claims that face was keeping SWF from being great again. After a few weeks of this, including a high-profile PPV interference of a Valiant-Brandon James match, I had on-screen authority Jerry Eisen confront Eric. He can't suspend his brother, but he can suspend his thugs, so he does. The plan is for Jerry to be "mysteriously attacked," leading to him and Richard Eisen taking an on-screen hiatus. Richard will cut an emotional promo, saying he's leaving to help Jerry on the road to recovery but thank God there's another able-bodied Eisen in SWF to run things while he's away. Eric Eisen will then transition into an abusive authority figure role, which will keep him FAR away from the belt while still giving him the screen time his name (and promo ability) requires.</p><p> </p><p> After 10 years of tagging, I've decided it's time for the Bumfholes to split up. Randy, the younger Bumfhole, grows resentful of living in his big brother's shadow. After all, Zimmy has a singles title to his name while Randy does not. When Randy's solo outings cost the tag team some title opportunities, and leaves him conveniently tied up when Zimmy is getting double-teamed by rival tag team The Awesomeness, tension boils to a head between the Bumfholes. My plan is to split them and push them both, ala The Shield. The question is, should they immediately feud with one another or should I keep them as far away from each other as possible until a Supreme Challenge program opens up?</p>
  25. Enforcer Roberts lives up to his name. The man is the judge, jury and executioner of Wrestler's Court, and he keeps the roster in line.
×
×
  • Create New...