The forbidden door just got a whole lot wider
Stop what you are doing and look at the calendar. It is June 9, 2026, and somehow, the professional wrestling industry managed to make WWE and AAA, the biggest promotion in Mexico, actually shake hands on a working relationship. Rey Mysterio recently opened up about how this is a full-circle moment he never expected. The guy has seen everything in this business, yet even he seems slightly floored by the corporate detente.
The optimists are already booking their dream cards
The diehard fans are currently losing their collective minds, mostly envisioning luchadores crossing the border to mix it up under the bright lights of Raw or SmackDown. We are talking about the potential for high-flying spectacles that make the current tag team divisions look like they are stuck in quicksand. Every forum board is currently flooded with long-winded fantasy booking scenarios detailing how Dragon Lee could clash with the best AAA has to offer.
These supporters argue that the sheer talent exchange will revitalize the cruiserweight scene, a division that WWE has treated like a neglected stepchild for years. They view this as a rare opportunity for legitimate cross-promotion exposure that could actually put eyes on both products. It is the kind of business move that usually happens only in the fever dreams of people who spend too much time on Cagematch.net.
The skeptics are looking for the hidden fine print
Of course, the cynicism is flowing just as fast as the hype. You have a massive section of the fan base convinced this is just a recruitment drive disguised as a partnership. There is a strong sentiment on social media that WWE is purely looking to lock down talent before anybody else gets a sniff at them. It feels less like a friendly collaboration and more like a tactical acquisition strategy to strip-mine Mexico of its brightest stars.
Critics point to the history of these companies and how such deals typically end up favoring the giant with the bigger checkbook. Some are already venting about the inevitable dilution of the lucha libre style once the WWE house producers get their hands on a dynamic worker. They are terrified that the crisp, chaotic, lightning-fast pacing of AAA will be slowed down to fit the standard 4-camera television show format that makes everyone move like they are wading through molasses.
The contrarians just want to see people get hit
Then you have the group that could not care less about corporate strategy or business maneuvers. They just want to see a Vikingo double rotation moonsault onto a ladder in a WWE ring without being forced through a sterile, watered-down performance center filter. They do not care about the suits in Stamford or the families managing Mexico City. They want big moves and high stakes.
This group argues that as long as the match quality holds up, the politics are completely irrelevant.
Rey Mysterio has been around long enough to see the wrestling business change in ways nobody saw coming, but WWE and AAA working together still...
My take? The skeptics probably have the winning hand here. We have seen this movie before, and it rarely ends with the smaller partner coming out with the gold. While the prospect of seeing fresh matchups is genuinely exciting, the execution is going to be the real test. Will we see legitimate innovation, or just more of the same tired tropes?
The current partnership is fragile at best. History tells us that one bad booking decision can scorch the earth and shut the door again. We need to be realistic about the shelf life of these deals. If we do not get a major show payoff within the next 9 months, it is likely just another corporate press release designed to juice the stock price before a quarterly earnings call. Enjoy the honeymoon phase while it lasts, because the reality of professional wrestling booking usually sets in sooner rather than later.
I will be watching closely, but keep your expectations at 0 percent when it comes to long-term creative freedom for the AAA guests. This is WWE's playground, and they rarely let anyone else choose the games. If they manage to elevate talent instead of just consuming it, I will be the first to apologize for my pessimism. Until then, keep your eyes on the 6 o'clock time slot for any potential cross-brand surprises.