AEW Full Gear 2025 Results - Swerve Return! New Champ, Winner & Grade
AEW Full Gear 2025 exploded into the Prudential Center with the kind of electricity that only a year-ending supercard can generate. From the moment the pyro hit the stage, it was clear this wasn’t just another PPV — this was a full-scale collision of rivalries, ego wars, championship stakes, and personal vendettas that had been boiling all year long. Every entrance felt bigger, every strike hit harder, and every match carried the weight of a company heading into a new era with everything on the line.
What unfolded was nothing short of chaos and spectacle at its most exhilarating. Shocking betrayals, brutal fights, unexpected alliances, and emotional triumphs kept the entire arena on its feet from start to finish. Champions were dethroned, legacies were challenged, and AEW’s very foundation shifted in real time as the night delivered one unforgettable moment after another. Full Gear didn’t just raise the bar — it smashed it to pieces and set the tone for what promises to be the most unpredictable year in AEW history.
AEW Full Gear 2025 Rundown
AEW Full Gear 2025 Results in Detail Down as follows
TAILGATE BRAWL –
$200,000 Fight – The Acclaimed vs. The Outrunners vs. Bryan Keith & Big Bill vs. Bang Bang Gang
The Tailgate Brawl opened with complete chaos as four highly contrasting teams fought for the $200,000 prize. Max Caster tried to set the tone early, but Juice Robinson immediately capitalized on a distraction by blindsiding him and shifting all momentum. Truth Magnum went after Robinson, Big Bill neutralized him with a brutal kick, and Bryan Keith joined in with heavy strikes at ringside.
Turbo Floyd turned the tide briefly with a burst of powerhouse offense, hitting body slams on anything that moved. Big Bill cut him off, but The Acclaimed jumped both men from behind to reclaim control. Just when it looked like Bowens had the match under wraps, Juice Robinson snuck in and stole a pinfall completely out of nowhere.
Winner: Bang Bang Gang (Juice Robinson & Austin Gunn)
Rating: B-
Boom & Doom (Big Boom AJ & QT Marshall) vs. RPG Vice (Rocky Romero & Trent Beretta)
Boom & Doom didn’t wait for the bell — QT Marshall and AJ jumped RPG Vice the moment they stepped into the ring. Trent was knocked to the floor with a powerslam and clothesline combo, Romero followed soon after, and AJ even launched QT over the ropes to crash onto both opponents on the outside.
RPG Vice eventually recovered and fired back. Rocky hit a tope on QT, and Don Callis emerged from beneath the commentary table to stomp on Romero, trying to tilt momentum back toward his clients. Inside the ring, RPG Vice cornered QT and prevented him from tagging AJ, controlling the pace until Marshall landed a stiff lariat that finally gave him room to breathe.
The match descended into ringside chaos with The Rizzler and Big Justice attacking Romero. Paul Wight stepped away from commentary after being provoked, and suddenly all elements erupted. Back in the ring, AJ came in hot, hitting powerslams and heavy strikes. Trent connected with a running knee, but Big Justice hit a cutter on Romero to shut everything down. Wight rocked Trent with a punch, and Boom & Doom sealed it with a Doomsday Device.
Winners: Boom & Doom
Rating: B
Hook & Eddie Kingston vs. The Work Horsemen (JD Drake & Anthony Henry)
Hook and Eddie Kingston didn’t even make it to the ring before the fighting erupted. All four men collided on the entrance ramp, trading fists and forearms in a fast, chaotic opening. Once they spilled into the ring, The Work Horsemen quickly took control, cutting off Hook and driving him into their corner with stiff chops and rapid double-team attacks.
Drake and Henry targeted Hook with heavy strikes and attempted to wear him down, but Hook created separation by making JD and Henry collide with each other. Showing his signature explosiveness, he muscled both opponents over with a double suplex. Eddie Kingston re-entered the fight with his usual fury, planting Henry with a spinning backfist before delivering a DDT to stop his momentum completely.
With Henry stunned, Hook wrapped him in the Redrum while Eddie knocked Drake out of the ring, preventing any interference. Henry tapped instantly, giving Hook and Kingston a sharp, decisive victory in the final moments of the Tailgate Brawl chaos.
Winners: Hook & Eddie Kingston
Rating: C+
CMLL Trios Championship Match: Don Callis Family (Takeshita, Okada & Hechicero) vs. The Sky Team (Místico, Neón & Máscara Dorada)
This match began before the bell even rang, as Takeshita and Hechicero ambushed The Sky Team during their entrance. With Kazuchika Okada nowhere in sight, the Don Callis Family still held firm control, isolating Místico and brutalizing his arm. Hechicero slammed the limb into the steel steps, folded it into a chair, and wrenched it violently, forcing medical staff to tend to Místico as he was escorted away.
With The Sky Team suddenly down a man, Neón took the fight to Takeshita while Máscara Dorada launched a spectacular Tornillo on Hechicero. As they rebalanced the momentum, Okada finally arrived — calmly pulling into the arena, fully dressed in gear, acting as if nothing was wrong.
AEW Full Gear 2025 Main Show –
Okada’s entrance sparked arguments with his partners inside the ring, creating a brewing tension within the Don Callis Family.
Just then, Místico returned, arm heavily bandaged, erupting into the ring with a burst of adrenaline. He hit a hurricanrana, a Tiger Feint Kick, and a string of fast-paced counters, re-energizing the crowd. The action spiraled into pure chaos as everyone traded aerial offense and high-impact counters.
Neón and Dorada hit synchronized dives on Okada and Takeshita outside, leaving Hechicero alone. Místico locked in La Mística on Hechicero, forcing the submission and completing a dramatic comeback despite the earlier injury.
Winners: The Sky Team (Místico, Neón & Máscara Dorada)
Rating: A-
Darby Allin vs. PAC
Darby Allin came into Full Gear heavily bandaged after the burns he suffered at Blood & Guts, but the pain only fueled his stubborn determination. He opened with sharp submissions, catching PAC off-guard and forcing him to retreat to the floor after a dropkick. With PAC down, Darby stood in the ring defiantly, daring him to come back and fight.
PAC shifted the momentum with a brutal counter on the apron, lifting Darby into a press slam and dumping him to the outside. He targeted Darby’s neck and injured skin, grinding him against the ropes and stretching the burns with nasty precision. Darby fought back with desperation, trapping PAC on the apron and smashing him with a suicide dive that sent both crashing into the barricade.
Back in the ring, PAC unleashed a German Suplex followed by a belly-to-belly, but Darby blasted him with a lariat to stay alive. When PAC finally locked in the Brutalizer, Darby crawled to the ropes, refusing to quit despite the pain radiating through his bandaged body. Darby dodged the Black Arrow and transitioned into a Scorpion Deathlock, nearly stealing the match as the crowd erupted.
But PAC had support waiting. Wheeler Yuta hopped onto the apron, distracting the referee long enough for PAC to grab a baseball bat. With no hesitation, PAC smashed Darby with the weapon, dropping him instantly and scoring the tainted victory.
Winner: PAC
Rating: B+
Women’s World Tag Team Championship Tournament 4-Way Match – Sisters of Sin vs. Megan Bayne & Marina Shafir vs. Babes of Wrath vs. Timeless Love Bombs
The women’s 4-way tag match exploded from the opening bell, with every competitor immediately entering the ring to create nonstop chaos. Marina Shafir opened by dominating Toni Storm, wrenching the former world champion before Toni countered and literally tossed Mina Shirakawa onto Megan Bayne for an early near fall. Skye Blue tagged herself in and kept the pressure on Mina, who managed to respond with a Slingblade and reached for the tag—only for Julia Hart to cut her off.
Willow Nightingale entered like a one-woman wrecking crew, overpowering both Skye and Marina before tagging Harley Cameron for a double-team flurry. Megan Bayne soon bulldozed her way into the match, throwing Mina into Shafir, who caught her in the Mothers Milk submission. Storm broke the hold at the perfect moment, saving her partner and shifting momentum.
The match filled with rapid-fire counters as Nightingale flattened everyone, Mina dove onto the field at ringside, and Harley exchanged a chain of pin attempts with Storm inside the ring. After several frantic roll-ups, Toni Storm trapped Harley just long enough to secure the three-count, earning her team a crucial tournament victory.
Winners: Timeless Love Bombs (Toni Storm & Mina Shirakawa)
They earn the right to choose their semifinal stipulation.
Rating: B
AEW World Tag Team Championship Match – Brodido (Brody King & Bandido) (c) vs. FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler)
The AEW World Tag Team Championship match opened at a frantic pace, with Bandido and Cash Wheeler starting things off. Bandido launched into action instantly, hitting a slick arm drag on Cash before knocking Dax off the apron with another, preventing early interference. When Dax finally entered legally, Brody King stepped in and traded heavy blows with him. Dax managed to slip away, but King pursued him around ringside, mowing down both members of FTR with crushing strikes.
Just as Brodido looked fully in control, Stokely Hathaway appeared and created the opening FTR needed. His distraction allowed Bandido to attempt a high-risk dive, but FTR caught him mid-air and powerfully slammed him through the announce table. From there, FTR isolated Bandido, slowing the match down and dissecting him with their trademark precision double-team offense. Bandido fought desperately and eventually reached Brody King, who stormed the ring with a Death Valley Driver on Dax followed by a massive Cannonball that wiped out both challengers.
FTR regrouped for their Proud & Glory combination, but King muscled Cash away and Bandido rejoined the action to swing momentum back. Brody attempted a dive, only for Stokely to sacrifice himself to protect Dax. Bandido then nearly stole several pinfalls, forcing FTR into pure survival. Cash hit a Liger Bomb into a top-rope splash for a close two-count, but Bandido rallied, Press Slamming Cash onto Dax at ringside before diving onto both challengers in a spectacular burst.
Bandido hit the 21 Plex, but FTR answered with the Shatter Machine—only for Brody King to save the match at the last possible second. In the ensuing scramble, Cash grabbed the championship belt. King tried to take it from him, but during the struggle, Cash accidentally struck Bandido with the title. Dax nearly pinned him off the mistake, but Bandido kicked out, roaring back to life. Brody and Bandido executed their own Shatter Machine for a dramatic near fall.
The chaos continued as Bandido countered a Doomsday Device into a roll-up, barely missing the victory. Brody locked Dax in a sleeper on the ropes, but Cash climbed up behind him and applied his own sleeper. King fought free, but FTR immediately spiked him with a Piledriver on the ring apron—the most dangerous move of the match. Inside the ring, Bandido suffered another Spike Piledriver, yet still found the strength to stand, point defiantly at FTR, and raise his finger in a final show of heart.
FTR ended the war with one final Shatter Machine, this time enough to keep Bandido down for good.
Winners and NEW AEW World Tag Team Champions: FTR
Rating: A
Casino Gauntlet Match for the AEW National Championship
Early Entrants and Immediate Chaos
The match began with Bobby Lashley and Shelton Benjamin, but Ricochet interrupted, telling the crowd they didn’t pay to watch a stare-down. That opened the door for Gates of Agony to attack from behind, taking out Lashley, Benjamin, and MVP until referees forced them away.
Claudio Castagnoli entered next and instantly stopped Ricochet’s dive with a mid-air uppercut before Press Slamming him back inside, followed by Daniel Garcia, who helped Claudio punish Ricochet while Orange Cassidy entered slowly, hit a Hurricanrana, and shook up the ring before Wheeler Yuta arrived and joined the Death Riders’ assault.
Mid-Match Momentum Shifts
Kevin Knight added speed with a flying clothesline but was quickly overwhelmed by Claudio and Garcia, while Roderick Strong entered swinging backbreakers and a Sick Kick on Ricochet. Mark Davis followed and bulldozed through everyone with lariats and piledrivers until Yuta broke a near fall.
Speedball Mike Bailey arrived and attacked Davis with rapid kicks, briefly teaming with Knight before Garcia shoved them aside and locked Bailey in the Dragon Slayer, which triggered Matt Menard to enter and chase Garcia into the crowd while Lashley and Benjamin returned to overpower multiple competitors at ringside.
Final Chaos & Victory
Outside the ring, Claudio and Davis dumped Lashley as Orange Cassidy fired off Orange Punches, only for Yuta to hit him with a Busaiku Knee before Knight saved the match with a UFO Splash. Just as Knight looked like he had momentum, Ricochet struck with the Spirit Gun, dropping him instantly.
With bodies everywhere and the match at peak chaos, Ricochet quickly covered Knight for the three-count, earning the historic victory as the first-ever AEW National Champion.
Winner and NEW First Ever AEW National Champion: Ricochet
Rating: A-
No Holds Barred Combat: Jon Moxley vs. Kyle O’Reilly
Kyle O’Reilly wasted no time as he entered the ring, immediately swarming Jon Moxley with rapid kicks and punches. Mox absorbed the onslaught long enough to force both men to the mat, where they traded scrambles and stiff shots. Moxley dropped to a knee, reached for a fork, and despite Kyle’s attempt to stop him, Mox drove the fork into O’Reilly’s face before cruelly jabbing him in the chest with it.
Mox locked Kyle against the ropes in a neck hold until O’Reilly countered with a sharp Dragon Screw that shifted momentum. Kyle took the fight to ringside, slamming Moxley’s head into the ring post and splitting him open.
Back in the ring, the match devolved into a brutal exchange of submission holds. Kyle wrestled the fork away from Mox and stabbed him in the head, reopening the wound. He then pulled a heavy steel chain from beneath the ring and wrapped it around his fists, trying to choke Moxley.
Both men battled for control of the chain, each attempting to strangle the other until O’Reilly delivered a suplex that sent them crashing to the mat with the chain cinched around their necks. Kyle fired off a barrage of kicks, but Mox caught him in a Bulldog Choke. Kyle wriggled free, and Mox responded by digging his fingers into Kyle’s mouth to pry open his jaw as they rolled into more counters. Mox trapped O’Reilly’s arm inside a steel chair and stomped down with full force.
Moxley hit the Death Rider and immediately transitioned into a Kimura Lock, trying to force a submission. Kyle rolled with the pressure, twisted his hips, and reversed into a devastating Ankle Lock. He wrapped the chain around Moxley’s foot and tightened the hold, wrenching back with everything he had. The added pressure was too much—even for Moxley. With no escape left, Jon Moxley tapped out.
Winner: Kyle O’Reilly
Rating: A-
No Disqualification Match for the TNT Championship: Kyle Fletcher (c) vs. Mark Briscoe
Kyle Fletcher and Mark Briscoe started the fight by exchanging heavy blows in the center of the ring before Mark immediately escalated things, grabbing chairs from ringside and smashing them into the champion. The fight spilled onto the steel steps, where Briscoe took Fletcher down hard and dragged out a ladder. Mark leaned the ladder against a chair, bit Kyle to stun him, and pinned him against the setup.
He climbed for a diving attack, but Kyle rolled away, sending Mark crashing violently onto the ladder. Sensing an opening, Fletcher brought another ladder into the ring and launched Briscoe off it for a two-count. Mark retaliated by hurling the ladder straight into Kyle’s face before blasting him with a running dropkick—leaving both men pouring blood as the match continued.
Briscoe set up a table at ringside and tried to lay Kyle on it, but Fletcher escaped. Kyle then arranged a cluster of chairs, only for Mark to turn the tables and place him on top of them. Before Mark could fly, Don Callis climbed onto the apron and distracted him just long enough for Fletcher to recover. Kyle capitalized by throwing Briscoe from the ring post and sending him crashing through the table outside the ring.
Back inside, they wrestled near another table until Fletcher planted Briscoe with an Alabama Slam through it, followed by a Last Ride Powerbomb, but still couldn’t put him away. Desperate, Kyle emptied a bucket of thumbtacks into the ring, stuffed some into Mark’s mouth, and kicked him. Briscoe somehow surged back with a Brainbuster—right onto the tacks.
Outside the ring, Briscoe delivered a Swinging Neckbreaker onto the chairs before dragging Kyle back inside and driving him through a table. Mark climbed a massive ladder, but Kyle followed. Briscoe fought him off and connected with a brutal Froggy Bow from the top of the ladder through the table, but Fletcher barely hung on. Mark introduced a wire-covered table, while Callis slipped Kyle a screwdriver.
Fletcher jabbed Mark in the forehead, licking the blood from the weapon before attempting a full stab, but he got caught in the corner and took another Brainbuster for a near fall. They battled on the top rope with Kyle lining up the screwdriver’s point for a final strike, but Mark countered, throwing him face-first into the metal turnbuckle. Briscoe hoisted Kyle up and delivered a devastating Razor’s Edge through the wire table, then followed with the Jay Driller to seal the match.
Winner and NEW TNT Champion: Mark Briscoe
Rating: A+
Million Dollar Match: Kenny Omega & Jurassic Express (Jack Perry & Luchasaurus) vs. Josh Alexander & The Young Bucks (Matt & Nick Jackson)
The Million Dollar Match began with Jack Perry and Nick Jackson trading crisp, evenly matched counters until Luchasaurus and Matt tagged in. Matt tried to shift momentum with help from both Josh Alexander and Nick, but Luchasaurus dropped all three with ease, clearing the ring. Kenny Omega entered next, only for Josh to yank him off the apron and attack him from the outside as the Bucks protested. Omega retaliated with a splash on Josh, but Alexander recovered quickly and targeted Kenny’s leg, shifting the focus of the match. Kenny attempted a dive onto the Bucks, but Josh cut him off again, grounding The Cleaner.
Don Callis made his presence felt, distracting Omega long enough for Matt Jackson to leap from the top rope and wipe him out on the outside. The Bucks followed with Risky Business on Jack Perry, but only managed a two-count. Jack escaped Josh’s grip with a DDT and tagged in Luchasaurus, who burst in with Chokeslams and heavy strikes, wiping out all opponents. A standing Moonsault on Matt earned another near fall. Kenny tried for You Can’t Escape, but his damaged leg gave out before he could finish. A rapid flurry of interference ensued—strikes, kicks, dives—leaving all six men laid out.
Trading blows in the final stretch, Josh Alexander went head-to-head with Kenny Omega until the Young Bucks re-entered. Omega fired off a series of Snap Dragon Suplexes on everyone in sight, but Josh caught him in an Ankle Lock while the Bucks simultaneously connected with a BTE Trigger. Alexander then drilled Matt with a TK Driver, but it wasn’t enough to end things. Josh tried for the Countdown to Extinction, but Jack Perry broke it up. Jack attempted a Double Doomsday Device on the Bucks, but both landed on their feet. In the chaos, Omega hit a One Winged Angel on Josh, while the Bucks crushed Jack with the BTE Trigger to secure the Million Dollar victory.
Winners: Josh Alexander & The Young Bucks
After the bell, the Don Callis Family stormed the ring. Don Callis grabbed one of the million-dollar bags and smugly declared that Josh and the Bucks would now celebrate as part of his family. Meanwhile, the rest of the faction surrounded Kenny Omega, preparing to assault him. The Bucks stood on the ramp, conflicted and unsure, looking between Callis and their longtime friend.
Then, in a dramatic moment, The Young Bucks sprinted back to the ring—choosing Kenny over Callis. They confronted the Don Callis Family, driving them out of the ring. Jurassic Express and the Bucks shook hands in a rare show of unity. The moment grew even more emotional when the Bucks offered their hands to Kenny Omega. At first he refused—only to pull them into a full embrace, completing the long-awaited reunion.
Rating: B+
AEW Women’s World Championship Match: Kris Statlander (c) vs. Mercedes Moné
Mercedes Moné tried to seize control early, but Kris Statlander immediately countered with raw power, blocking holds, reversing pin attempts, and overpowering Moné at every turn. Mercedes attempted a dive to the outside, but Kris caught her in mid-air, carried her back into the ring, and delivered a massive Superplex. That momentum didn’t last long, as Moné targeted Statlander’s arm relentlessly, attacking it inside and outside the ring before locking in a Cross Armbreaker. Kris broke free, but Mercedes cinched her legs around the injured arm to continue the pressure, then followed with a DDT for a near fall.
Moné escalated her assault by hitting fourteen consecutive suplexes, leaving Kris barely standing. She attempted a Frog Splash, but Statlander countered with kicks from the mat and powered through the pain to fire back. Moné kept returning to the injured arm, trying to weaken Kris for the finish, but when Mercedes attempted another attack to the floor, Statlander caught her and planted her with a Blue Thunder Bomb at ringside. Mercedes barely crawled back in before the ten-count. She regained control with a Lungblower, Backstabber, and Sunset Bomb, but when she charged again, Kris flattened her with a Discus Lariat. Statlander followed with a belly-to-belly suplex and transitioned into a Crossface, but Moné escaped by twisting Kris’s injured hand and rolling into her Statement Maker.
Statlander muscled through the pain, hoisted Moné into the corner, and connected with a diving Ribbreaker for a two-count. Kris attempted her finisher, but her damaged arm gave out, allowing Mercedes to counter. Both women exchanged rapid-fire roll-ups, reversals, and clutch counters until Kris hit a Piledriver; Moné survived by reaching the ropes. Mercedes tried for a Meteora, but Kris caught her—only for Moné to twist into a Poisonrana and crack Statlander with a knee strike for another close two-count. They battled through a flurry of reversed signatures and finishers, with Kris slamming her own chest into the corner out of desperation and adrenaline. Finally, Statlander powered through the pain, hit Saturday Night Fever, and secured the decisive three-count.
Winner and STILL AEW Women’s World Champion: Kris Statlander
Rating: A-
Backstage, Don Callis appeared confident as he stood alongside Kazuchika Okada and Konosuke Takeshita, proudly declaring that when the two are aligned, they are “the best tag team in AEW—bar none.” The moment was meant to project unity, but it quickly fell apart. Okada and Takeshita immediately began arguing, each insisting they were the true standout of the team. Their frustration peaked when both men announced they would enter the upcoming Continental Classic, each determined to prove superiority on their own terms.
Before Callis could regain control, Kyle Fletcher stormed into the frame, still furious about being abandoned during his TNT Championship match earlier in the night. Fletcher confronted Callis and the group, demanding to know why none of them helped him when he needed support. Fueled by frustration, he declared that he, too, would enter the Continental Classic—promising to outshine every member of the Don Callis Family in the tournament.
Steel Cage Match for the AEW World Championship: Hangman Adam Page (c) vs. Samoa Joe
Samoa Joe opened the Steel Cage war with ruthless precision, targeting Hangman Page’s heavily bandaged midsection with a barrage of knee strikes before throwing the champion face-first into the steel mesh. Joe charged at him again, but Hangman narrowly dodged and fired back with desperate offense, eventually connecting with a moonsault—but Joe powered out at not even a one-count. Page, already fighting from behind, ripped off one of his boots and used the heel as a weapon, grinding it against Joe’s bleeding face. Joe retaliated with sharp elbows to Hangman’s head, leaving both champion and challenger covered in blood.
Hangman managed to land on his feet after a suplex attempt, driving Joe into the cage wall before suplexing him in return. In a bold statement, Page locked in Joe’s own Coquina Clutch, but Samoa Joe escaped and planted him with an Uranage. They battled into the corner where Hangman hit a Sunset Bomb, but before he could continue the assault, a major distraction arrived—Katsuyori Shibata appeared at ringside. Eddie Kingston sprinted out to attack Shibata, and the fight spilled outside. Inside the cage, Page and Joe collided with the referee, knocking him out of commission. Hangman hit the Deadeye and covered Joe, but there was no one conscious to count.
The match erupted again when Powerhouse Hobbs broke the chain and forced his way into the cage. Hangman hit him with a low blow and sent him crashing into the steel. Joe recovered and trapped Page in the Coquina Clutch, but Hangman escaped and hit the Buckshot Lariat—again with no referee to make the count. HOOK then ran in, seemingly to wake the referee, but instead he grabbed the AEW Championship belt. In a shocking turn, Hook blasted Hangman with the title, opened his jacket, and revealed an Opps t-shirt. Joe capitalized immediately, finishing Page with a Muscle Buster onto the championship.
Winner and NEW AEW World Champion: Samoa Joe
After the match, Samoa Joe celebrated with The Opps and members of the Opps Dojo as they filled the cage—until the arena lights suddenly went dark.
SWERVE STRICKLAND returned.
Swerve walked slowly toward the ring as Joe stepped aside, motioning for him to attack the fallen Hangman Page. Swerve entered the cage, stood over the champion… then turned and attacked the Opps Dojo instead, clearing house with furious strikes. Samoa Joe and The Opps retreated as Swerve continued his assault. In a final, powerful moment, Hangman Page—still battered—stood beside Swerve as the two made a defiant exit together.
The show went off the air with Swerve Strickland standing tall.
Rating: A
AEW Full Gear 2025 delivered one of the most dramatic and unpredictable nights in recent company history, leaving the landscape of every major division shaken by betrayals, surprise returns, and championship upheavals. From Ricochet’s shocking rise as the first National Champion to Mark Briscoe’s emotional TNT Title victory, to Samoa Joe regaining the AEW World Championship in a chaotic Steel Cage Match, the card never stopped escalating. Hangman’s collapse, Hook’s betrayal, and the seismic return of Swerve Strickland ensured that the road to the Continental Classic will be filled with intensity and unanswered questions. As seen throughout these AEW Full Gear 2025 Results & Review, the momentum shifts tonight guarantee that the next chapter of AEW will be one of its most explosive yet.
Overall Show Rating: A
A must-watch AEW PPV.
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