Pull up a barstool, grab a cold pint of cheap domestic light beer, and let’s talk about the state of the WWE main event scene. We are just over four weeks away from the two-night SummerSlam show in Minneapolis on August 1 and 2, and the internet is locked in a civil war over two guys: a giant named Oba Femi and a technician named Chad Gable.

The debate is loud, sweaty, and filling up threads faster than an ankle lock. Everyone has a theory or a complaint, so let's dissect the madness and see who has the right take.

The Oba Femi Conundrum: Too Fast or Too Slow?

First up is King of the Ring winner Oba Femi. The big question is when he will cash in his guaranteed world title shot. Scroll through Reddit and you will see a massive divide on whether he should main event tomorrow or wait.

Dave Meltzer thinks the wait might be long. As Wrestling Inc reported, the powerhouse will likely hold his shot until next year. This has fans debating if WWE is wasting his momentum.

The impatient crowd wants powerbombs and destruction right now. One fan on Reddit posted that WWE must strike while the iron is hot, claiming Femi has more aura in his pinky than current champions. They want a squash match next week.

Contrarians are pleading for patience. Rushing a young monster to the top too quickly can ruin him. He needs matches longer than ten minutes to develop his character and promos. Another post warned that once the initial squash thrill wears off, monsters struggle without a foundation.

Our Take on the Oba Femi Timeline

The patient crowd is right. We have seen giants win the big belt early and fail because they never learned to work a long, dramatic match. Rushing Femi now would ruin his career.

A slow burn lets him work with veterans without the pressure of carrying the company. If he cashes in tomorrow, he gets exposed. Let him hold the contract, tease champions, and build the anticipation.

Does Chad Gable Belong in the WWE Title Picture?

Next up is the master of the alpha academy, Chad Gable. The guy has been on a tear, culminating in a brutal mask vs. mask match. Gable is convinced this performance proved he belongs in the WWE title picture. He argues it was not a one-night stand, but a statement of intent.

He feels the match showed he can hang with the best. A report by Ringside News details his confidence. But fans are split on whether Gable is actually main-event material or just a midcarder.

Gable enthusiasts are vocal about his talents, pointing to his technical wrestling, suplexes, and crowd reactions. A forum post made the case that Gable is the most underutilized wrestler on the roster, claiming his in-ring work is flawless. They argue a short title run would reward a loyal soldier and create a great underdog story.

Skeptics are throwing cold water on this. They argue Gable is a midcard gatekeeper who lacks main-event drawing power. One fan posted that they love Gable's work, but cannot picture him looking like an equal next to the company's top stars. They think his ceiling is a run with the Intercontinental Championship.

The Cold Hard Truth About Gable's Main Event Hopes

Here is the hard truth Gable stans hate: he is not a world champion. He is an elite worker and a great heel, but he is not the guy you build a stadium show around. The mask vs. mask match was fun, but it did not make him a main-event draw.

His recent match went exactly 17 minutes before a messy finish that left fans frustrated. That finish showed his booking limits. He relies on stable interference and cheap heat, which wears thin quickly. Putting the world title on Gable would hurt ratings; he is perfect elevating younger talent in midcard matches.

The Road to SummerSlam in Minneapolis

All of this drama is building toward SummerSlam in Minneapolis on August 1 and 2. This is a massive two-night event, meaning WWE has double the time to fill. Fans are already speculating about what other matches will be added.

As reported on the SummerSlam build, we can expect a flurry of announcements. The two-night format gives the creative team room to breathe, but it also creates the risk of a bloated card. Nobody wants eight hours of wrestling if the matches do not feel important.

There are also rumors of several title changes happening before Minneapolis. A list compiled by WrestleTalk highlighted potential title changes that could shake up the card. If these titles start changing hands on weekly television, the whole scene will look completely different by August.

Some fans are excited about the unpredictability of these changes. Others are worried that hot-shotting titles on TV cheapens the belts, arguing that titles should only change hands at major events to keep them feeling prestigious.

Why Pre-SummerSlam Title Changes Are a Risky Bet

The skeptics are right. Hot-shotting titles on free television to create buzz is a lazy booking trope that makes champions look like temporary placeholders. If a wrestler wins a belt on Raw only to lose it at SummerSlam three weeks later, nobody wins.

WWE must focus on building long-term stories that make SummerSlam feel like a big deal. The two-night format is a tough sell for fans paying for two tickets or dedicating a weekend to wrestling. If the creative team swaps titles around like hot potatoes, they will lose the crowd. Let's hope they keep the belts where they belong and focus on matches people actually want to see.