Show !exclusive!: Wrestlemania 32 Full

Then came the main event. Triple H vs. Roman Reigns for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. The problem was not the work rate—both men fought a surprisingly stiff, hard-hitting brawl. The problem was the audience. In a stadium of 101,763 people (the largest in WWE history), the crowd rejected the narrative with religious fervor. They cheered the villainous Triple H and booed the heroic Reigns mercilessly. The match became a meta-drama: the company trying to force a coronation while 100,000 people screamed for anyone else. When Reigns finally speared Triple H to win, the silence was deafening. It was not a triumphant end; it was an exhausted surrender. The record-breaking crowd went home not celebrating a champion, but exhausted by the effort of hating him.

The saw Sasha Banks vs. Charlotte Flair vs. Becky Lynch . This match showcased the incredible talent within the WWE's women's division, often cited as one of the best matches of the event. The dynamic between the three competitors was electric, ultimately leading to Charlotte retaining her title. wrestlemania 32 full show

In the final analysis, WrestleMania 32 is not a great show, nor is it a terrible one. It is a . It is the wrestling equivalent of a commercial airliner landing safely after losing two engines. The show is bloated (nearly six hours), narratively confused, and anchored by a main event that actively worked against the audience’s will. Yet, it contains the birth of the modern women’s division, a legendary ladder spot (Shane McMahon falling off the Hell in a Cell), and an undeniable sense of scale that no other promotion can replicate. Then came the main event

Here's a rundown of the full show:

The saw Dean Ambrose defeat Chris Jericho , in a match praised for its technical prowess and storytelling. The problem was not the work rate—both men