15th Jul2025

‘AEW All In: Texas 2025’ PPV Review

by Phil Wheat

Welcome to my review of AEW All In: Texas 2025, the first to take place in the United States since 2018’s original ROH/indie supershow All In, which kicked off AEW as we know it today. The show opened with Zero Hour as usual, which saw the Sons of Texas (Dustin Rhodes, Marshall Von Erich, Ross Von Erich, and Sammy Guevara) defeat Shane Taylor Promotions (Shane Taylor, Lee Moriarty, Carlie Bravo, and Capt. Shawn Dean); “Big Boom!” A.J. and The Conglomeration (Kyle O’Reilly, Hologram, and Tomohiro Ishii) beat the Don Callis Family (Hechicero, Lance Archer, Rocky Romero, and Trent Beretta); and a rematch between FTR (Cash Wheeler and Dax Harwood) (with Stokely) and The Outrunners (Truth Magnum and Turbo Floyd) in which the latter team were defeated – unlike their previous outing! With that, let’s get into the show proper…

Match #1: AEW World Trios Championship Match – The Opps (Samoa Joe, Powerhouse Hobbs & Katsuyori Shibata) def. Death Riders (Claudio Castagnoli & Wheeler Yuta) and Gabe Kidd

The following is courtesy of allelitewrestling.com:

The action broke down immediately, with all six men pairing off into brawls—Shibata and Kidd reigniting their deeply personal feud from New Japan’s LA Dojo, while Samoa Joe and Wheeler Yuta clashed once again after their match on Dynamite just days earlier. Hobbs and Castagnoli, meanwhile, exchanged heavy shots at ringside as the broadcast struggled to keep up with the carnage unfolding across the arena. Shibata and Kidd traded vicious strikes in the center of the ring, including a brutal elbow that dropped Kidd to a knee, only for the War Dog to answer back with a thudding palm strike of his own. After a hard reset, Samoa Joe and Wheeler Yuta became the legal men, where Joe immediately overwhelmed the smaller man with jabs, a massive right hook, and a whip into the ropes that ended in a brutal back elbow and his signature enzuigiri. Powerhouse Hobbs tagged in and put his strength on display with a delayed vertical suplex that left Yuta disoriented. Katsuyori Shibata followed up with a snapmare and precise Penalty Kick for a near fall before tagging Joe back in. The Death Riders fired back with quick tags and timely interference—Claudio even used a giant swing into the barricade on Hobbs to try to turn the tide. Gabe Kidd, who spent much of the match taunting and brutalizing Joe with stomps and right hands on the floor, nearly put Shibata away with a sheer drop brainbuster, but the veteran kicked out at one to a roar from the Texas crowd. Late in the bout, Hobbs blasted Claudio off the apron just in time, sending him crashing into the barricade. That left Yuta alone in the ring with all three champions. After a snapmare from Joe and a precise PK from Shibata, Samoa Joe hoisted Wheeler Yuta up and drove him down with a devastating Muscle Buster to secure the win and retain the AEW World Trios Championship.

My Score: 3.5 out of 5

Match #2: Men’s Casino Gauntlet – Winner: MJF

The following is courtesy of allelitewrestling.com:

The stakes were sky-high in the Men’s Casino Gauntlet Match, where 14 AEW stars battled for a guaranteed AEW World Championship shot—and it was Maxwell Jacob Friedman who emerged as the opportunistic victor, stealing the win in the final moments after entering the match at No. 2 and surviving a grueling encounter. Mark Briscoe and MJF started the match, rekindling the fire from MJF’s personal attacks in the lead-up to All In. MJF immediately tried to score a fast win with roll-ups and cradles, but Briscoe wasn’t having it—mounting a furious comeback that saw him pummel Max with chops and a big back body drop. As the countdown ticked, new entrants arrived at regular intervals. Ricochet entered third and quickly aligned with MJF, double-teaming Briscoe until Bandido joined next and turned the tide with a flurry of offense. Bandido back-body dropped everyone to the floor and followed up with a cannonball onto Friedman. The ring filled rapidly from there: Konosuke Takeshita, Mistico, and Josh Alexander all joined the fray, with Takeshita and Ricochet lighting the crowd up with sequences that included a Blue Thunder Bomb and triangle moonsaults, while Mistico soared through the air with a top-rope plancha and locked MJF in La Mistica. Anthony Bowens, Roderick Strong, and Brody King entered in succession. King bulldozed his way through the field with cannonballs in every corner, while Bowens impressed with a swing-out facebuster on Ricochet. Strong showcased his signature punishing backbreakers, including a front kick-assisted backbreaker and the End of Heartache on Ibushi later in the match. Surprises continued as a clean-shaven, returning Juice Robinson entered at No. 11 and brought the fight to Ricochet—only to be blindsided by Gates of Agony, who assisted Ricochet until The Gunns ran in to neutralize the interference, leading to a huge 3:10 to Yuma. Ricochet nearly got the win with a shooting star press, but MJF broke the pin at the last second. When Kota Ibushi entered at No. 12, the Golden Star exploded into action with precise round kicks, a gamengiri on Brody King, and a standing moonsault on Bowens for a near fall. Beast Mortos followed at No. 13, bringing devastating power with a Tombstone Codebreaker on Bowens and a pop-up Samoan Drop on Juice Robinson. The final entrant, Max Caster, barely made it to the ring before being tripped up by Bowens and blasted by Roderick Strong. Briscoe returned with renewed fire, and in a pivotal moment, landed the Jay Driller on Strong—only for MJF to strike from behind, tossing Briscoe from the ring and stealing the pin with a simple lateral press.

My Score: 3.5 out of 5

Match #3: TNT Championship 4-Way Match: Dustin Rhodes def. Daniel Garcia, Kyle Fletcher & Sammy Guevara

The following is courtesy of allelitewrestling.com:

In a match born out of heartbreak but filled with resilience, Dustin Rhodes captured the TNT Championship for the first time in his legendary career, overcoming three top-tier challengers—Daniel Garcia, Kyle Fletcher, and Sammy Guevara—in a thrilling, emotional four-way battle at AEW All In: Texas. From the opening bell, the pace was relentless. Sons of Texas worked together briefly, landing a double suplex on Fletcher and a sliding knee from Dustin before Kyle spilled to the floor following a standing moonsault from Guevara. Garcia and Guevara tangled next, trading quick pin attempts before double dropkicking Fletcher on his return. The temporary teamwork dissolved when Fletcher flattened both men with a vicious double lariat. On the floor, Guevara hit a jaw-dropping Spanish Fly off the apron, taking both himself and Garcia out. Fletcher re-entered and hit Dustin with a Michinoku Driver, but Rhodes kicked out at one. Fletcher then locked in a figure-four leglock, only for Garcia to mirror the hold on Guevara inside the ring. The painful symmetry broke down into traded slaps and reversed pressure before both men released. Garcia then pulled Guevara up the ropes for a superplex, but Dustin intercepted and delivered a massive flip piledriver to Fletcher, followed by a full-impact Cross Rhodes. The pinfall was heartbreakingly close, but Fletcher kicked out at the last possible moment. The crowd erupted as Dustin set Kyle up in the ropes for Shattered Dreams, but Garcia intervened. In a surprising moment of chaos, Garcia and Guevara each took turns punting Fletcher low while he was still tied up—only for Dustin to finish the humiliation with a thunderous Shattered Dreams kick of his own. As the match broke down, Guevara connected with the GTH on Garcia, but Rhodes broke up the cover. Tensions flared between mentor and protégé, and after a hard exchange of words, they clashed in the center of the ring. Guevara delivered Three Amigos, but his attempted frog splash met Garcia’s knees. Garcia transitioned seamlessly into the Dragon Tamer, wrenching back in the middle of the ring—until Fletcher yanked him out and delivered back-to-back apron powerbombs on Garcia and Guevara. Moments later, Guevara countered a brainbuster attempt with a stunning diving ace crusher, only to eat a piledriver from Garcia. Dustin tried to steal the win with a crucifix pin, but Garcia escaped. After another Dragon Tamer on Rhodes, with everyone else incapacitated, it looked like the match was over—but in a burst of veteran instinct, Dustin Rhodes reversed the hold into a small package and scored the three-count, becoming the new TNT Champion. After the match, Guevara seemed to hesitate for just a moment before shaking his partner and mentor’s hand and embracing him.

My Score: 3.5 out of 5

Match #4: Swerve Strickland & Will Ospreay def. The Young Bucks

The following is courtesy of allelitewrestling.com:

In one of the most emotionally charged and consequential matches in AEW history, Swerve Strickland and Will Ospreay defeated Matthew and Nicholas Jackson, stripping the Young Bucks of their Executive Vice Presidencies in AEW. With the stakes clearly defined—EVP status on the line for the Bucks, and a yearlong AEW World Title ban looming over Strickland and Ospreay—the two teams delivered a match for the ages. Early exchanges saw each side trying to gain control. Ospreay and Strickland hit tandem offense like a Poetry in Motion corkscrew moonsault, while the Bucks responded with veteran precision, isolating Ospreay and unloading a superkick party that left the “Aerial Assassin” reeling. The Bucks controlled the mid-match tempo, targeting Ospreay with a Tombstone setup outside the ring and a vicious Penalty Kick off the apron to Strickland. But Swerve eventually turned the tide with a diving corkscrew uppercut and a brutal powerslam counter to a Frankensteiner. The challengers then connected with stereo corkscrew moonsaults but couldn’t get the three. Momentum shifted again with rapid-fire sequences, including a wheelbarrow facebuster, a dropsault into an enzuigiri, and a mid-ring explosion of kicks on kicks on kicks. The crowd erupted when Swerve and Ospreay executed stereo Styles Clashes, nearly ending it. They followed with a breathtaking combo—Swerve Stomp-assisted Storm Breaker—only for Nicholas to break the pin. Outside the ring, Prince Nana was laid out with a superkick, and inside the brouhaha continued. Matthew Jackson drilled Ospreay with a low blow, leading to More Bang For Your Buck… but still only two! The Bucks hit EVP Trigger after EVP Trigger, and still Ospreay wouldn’t stay down. At one point, Ospreay accidentally clocked Strickland with a Hidden Blade, leaving the match hanging in the balance. Matthew followed with a devastating TK Driver, but Ospreay kicked out again, defying logic and gravity. Strickland reemerged, shielding Ospreay from a final Superkick Party by absorbing the blows himself. As the crowd roared, Strickland rose to his feet, teeth clenched, taking superkick after superkick before catching the EVP Trigger, countering with a backslide into a Tombstone setup. Ospreay ascended and crushed Matthew Jackson with a Swerve Stomp-assisted Tombstone, but still—Matthew survived. In the final moments, Ospreay removed his elbow pad, Strickland lined up the target, and the duo struck with a brutal House Call / Hidden Blade combo. The cover was academic, and the Young Bucks were EVPs no more.

My Score: 5 out of 5

Match #5: Women’s Casino Gauntlet – Winner: Athena

The following is courtesy of allelitewrestling.com:

The match began with Kris Statlander and Megan Bayne, two of AEW’s strongest competitors, locking horns in a grueling test of strength. After trading elbows and blocked suplexes, Bayne landed a Falcon Arrow, only for Statlander to respond with a risky moonsault off the apron—an opening salvo that set the tone for what was to come. Willow Nightingale entered third, immediately sparking hostilities with her former friend Statlander. A low crossbody and spinebuster nearly ended things early, but Bayne roared back in with a leaping lariat and teamed with Kris to land a double chokeslam on Nightingale. Tay Melo entered next and delivered pump kicks to anyone standing, followed by a spinning bulldog on Statlander. Melo even trapped Bayne in a painful Rings of Saturn, but interference from ringside—courtesy of Penelope Ford, Anna Jay, and a returning Harley Cameron—fractured the ring into madness and cleared the way for new entrants. Thekla stormed in with a flurry of offense, hitting a diving crossbody and engaging in striking battles with Tay and Willow. Nightingale nearly ended it with a Doctor Bomb on Thekla, but Statlander broke it up. Then, a devastating Doomsday Device from Bayne and Kris flattened Willow just before the next countdown hit. Julia Hart was the sixth entrant and instantly made an impact with a diving moonsault, followed by a walk-the-ropes Old School lariat and a gorgeous octopus hold. But Tay broke it up with a Gotch-style piledriver, and the chaos only intensified as Julia and her ally Skye Blue traded sneaky assists. Queen Aminata entered next, bringing pure intensity with a stiff Queen’s Crown headbutt, a fisherman’s neckbreaker, and her brutal Off With Her Head elbow. Nightingale broke up the pin with a surprise senton, setting up stereo Spider Superplexes from Julia and Thekla. Momentum shifted again as Mina Shirakawa hit the ring, wiping out Skye Blue with a rolling solebutt and locking in a creative double submission: a victory roll deathlock on Statlander and a dragon screw leg whip on Skye. She wasn’t done yet—moments later, Mina spiked Bayne with a DDT and put Stat in a figure four leglock. The ninth entrant was none other than Athena, and she wasted no time cleaning house with suplexes, big elbows, and a Tombstone piledriver on Queen Aminata. As the countdown resumed, Thunder Rosa charged in at No. 10, reigniting her heated rivalry with Athena. Rosa connected with a side Russian legsweep into a Cobra Clutch, but it was broken up before she could secure the win. Syuri, making her AEW debut, was the eleventh entrant and stunned the field with clinical striking and flawless footwork, lighting up Mina Shirakawa with rolling solebutts, snapmares, and a wicked roundhouse kick to the spine. Finally, Alex Windsor entered at No. 12, going straight after Syuri with a spiking DDT, back suplex, and a thunderous Blue Thunder Driver. Windsor and Syuri went strike-for-strike in the match’s hardest-hitting exchange, culminating in Syuri’s rising knee that had everyone believing it was over—until the pinfall was broken up by every woman in the ring. Bodies piled up outside after Bayne Gourdbustered Statlander on the apron, and Willow responded with an apron Death Valley Driver on Athena. Megan Bayne then attempted to scale the top rope—but Statlander met her with an avalanche powerbomb off the apron, taking out the entire field in a car-crash of bodies. In the final moments, Rosa and Mina battled inside the ring. Shirakawa connected with a diving sling blade and a devastating buzzsaw roundhouse kick, then applied a figure four leglock in the center of the ring—only for Athena to return with the O-Face out of nowhere, dropping Shirakawa flush and securing the pinfall.

My Score: 4 out of 5

Match #6: AEW World Tag Team Championship 3-Way Match: The Hurt Syndicate (Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin) def. JetSpeed (Kevin Knight & “Speedball” Mike Bailey) and The Patriarchy (Christian Cage & Nick Wayne)

The following is courtesy of allelitewrestling.com:

From the outset, it was clear the reigning champions were in no mood to play defense. Lashley and Benjamin immediately went on the offensive, punishing all four challengers with stiff strikes and power moves, including a nasty spinebuster on Nick Wayne and an apron-launch face-first whip into the steel steps on Kevin Knight that left the young flyer dazed and vulnerable. JetSpeed—riding a wave of momentum and quickness—fought back valiantly. Mike Bailey strung together rapid-fire kicks and an enzuigiri before tagging in Kevin Knight, who wowed the Texas crowd with a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker and a pinpoint springboard dropkick. The two nearly scored the win off a wheelbarrow rana / double stomp combo, but Benjamin kicked out just in time. The Patriarchy, meanwhile, used timing and cunning to stay alive. Nick Wayne connected with a cutter and a full nelson suplex, while Christian looked to steal the win with a reverse DDT and a frog splash—but MVP broke up the pin to save the titles for his crew. As the match spiraled into mayhem, all three teams threw caution to the wind. Christian Cage attempted the Kill Switch on Lashley, but “The Almighty” shoved him directly into an incoming FTR—who were watching from ringside—and then delivered a crushing Spear on Cage for the three-count.

My Score: 3.5 out of 5

Match #7: AEW Women’s World Championship – Toni Storm def. Mercedes Moné

The following is courtesy of allelitewrestling.com:

In an emotional, physically grueling main event, Timeless Toni Storm defended her AEW Women’s World Championship in dramatic fashion, surviving a relentless challenge from Mercedes Moné and handing the “CEO” her first singles loss in AEW. The build to this match was full of pageantry and pressure. Mercedes entered covered in gold, escorted by the Six Shooters, while Toni Storm arrived with an ethereal stage production fitting of her “timeless” moniker. But once the bell rang, the artistry gave way to an intense and technical war. The early goings featured tight grappling, with Moné attempting her Statement Maker submission and Storm countering into a series of near-falls. Moné went to the mat with a headscissors takedown, then transitioned beautifully into a grapevined ankle lock, but Storm powered through, reversing into a roll-up. Storm fired back with German suplexes and her signature hip attack, while Mercedes punished the champion’s arm with joint manipulation and a tight double wristlock. A sunset flip powerbomb from Moné on the floor stunned the crowd, and a follow-up buckle bomb only added to the champion’s mounting injuries—especially after her nose began bleeding from a mid-match strike. Momentum swung repeatedly as both women hit signature moves: Toni landed the Storm Zero, but Moné kicked out. Mercedes connected with the Mone Maker, but Toni somehow survived. The crowd watched breathlessly as the two exchanged a blur of counters—Moné with a backstabber, Storm with an STF, then a crucifix pin attempt into a lungblower. In the closing moments, Storm set Moné up for one final assault. With both women exhausted and bloodied, Storm pulled Mercedes to the top turnbuckle and planted her with an earth-shaking Avalanche Storm Zero, scoring the win and defending her championship.

My Score: 4.5 out of 5

Match #8: AEW Unified Championship Match – AEW Continental Champion Kazuchika Okada def. AEW International Champion Kenny Omega

The following is courtesy of allelitewrestling.com:

In the fifth—and perhaps final—singles chapter of one of the most celebrated rivalries in wrestling history, Kazuchika Okada defeated Kenny Omega in a brutal and brilliant main event at AEW All In: Texas, unifying the AEW Continental and AEW International Championships to become the first-ever AEW Unified Champion. With Don Callis spewing venom on commentary and Kota Ibushi at ringside in Omega’s corner, the match began with a slow burn. Both men, masters of their craft, jockeyed for control through crisp chain wrestling and psychological warfare. Okada delivered a cheap shot to Omega’s midsection—the same region damaged during Omega’s diverticulitis battle—setting the tone for a methodical, targeted assault. Okada relentlessly worked the abdomen, with DDTs on the floor and the Spanish announce desk, stomps, shoulder gutbusters, and a Tombstone Piledriver. Every move forced Omega to fight from underneath, wincing in pain with every breath. Omega found hope with a missile dropkick to the back, a Dragon Superplex, and a series of V-Triggers, including one to the back of the head while Okada was draped in the ropes. He even landed Croyt’s Wrath and the One-Winged Angel, but as referee Bryce Remsburg counted—Don Callis pulled him out of the ring, robbing Omega of the win. Back in the ring, the action escalated again. Omega landed a staggering Tenryu Powerbomb into another V-Trigger, but Okada countered the follow-up into a Tombstone. A Discus Lariat and two Rainmaker attempts were both avoided. At one point, Omega pulled off an Avalanche Dragon Suplex, nearly dropping Okada on his head. The crowd erupted in disbelief. In the final exchange, as the two collapsed to their knees and rose trading elbows, Omega countered a Rainmaker attempt with a small package for a near-fall, then tried to reset with another V-Trigger. Okada absorbed it, reversed the next shot, and hit one final, emphatic Rainmaker lariat, becoming the inaugural AEW Unified Champion.

My Score: 4 out of 5

Match #9: AEW World Championship Texas Death Match – Hangman Adam Page def. Jon Moxley

The following is courtesy of allelitewrestling.com:

The match opened with fists flying—Moxley struck first, Page responded, and from there, we were off to the most brutal races you’ll ever see. Forks were introduced early, with Page gouging Moxley’s forehead, painting his chest with the champion’s blood. Moxley retaliated by wrapping barbed wire around Hangman’s face, drawing deeper wounds, and Marina Shafir joined the assault by biting at Page’s lacerations. From there, the violence escalated rapidly. Moxley introduced a barbed wire steel chair, launched it at Page’s head, and followed with crossface strikes and a stomp that embedded glass into Page’s back. Tables were set up outside the ring. A Tombstone Piledriver into the glass, and later a Gotch-Style Piledriver into the back of a chair, had Moxley firmly in control—but Hangman refused to stay down. Page fired back with a powerbomb into the backs of two steel chairs and a barbed wire-wrapped rolling elbow. After Wheeler Yuya interfered and was taken out by Page with a barbed wire elbow and Angel’s Wings, Marina Shafir returned, only to be taken out with a Death Valley Driver off the apron and through a table by Hanger. Page landed a Deadeye into the glass, but Claudio Castagnoli and Gabe Kidd arrived to swarm him again. Just as it looked like the numbers would overwhelm Hangman, Will Ospreay arrived for the save—only to be decimated with a chair by Claudio. As Ospreay was stretchered out, Moxley took advantage and suplexed Hangman off the apron and through barbed wire tables, then hit a Gotch-style piledriver followed by a Bulldog Choke. When that didn’t finish it, he leveled Page with a Death Rider into the back of a chair. Still, Hangman stood at nine. A bag was passed to Moxley—a plastic bag, like the one used to end Bryan Danielson’s career months earlier. As Mox prepared to suffocate Page, Darby Allin appeared in a video promo—filmed from the summit of Mount Everest—promising revenge. And then… Bryan Danielson returned. Dressed in blue, disguised under a mask, Danielson exploded into the ring with a Busaiku Knee and began unloading kicks on every Death Rider in sight. The arena erupted. Seconds later, Darby Allin rappelled down from the ceiling, descending like a specter of vengeance. He wiped out the remaining Death Riders with a Coffin Drop, while Danielson launched Wheeler over the barricade. Back in the ring, Hangman dropped Moxley with a Buckshot Lariat, and followed it with a Deadeye off the apron and through a table. As Moxley struggled to rise, Marina Shafir helped him up, flipping off Page. But the fight wasn’t over yet. The Young Bucks hit the ring with a Superkick Party and an EVP Trigger, aiding Moxley and introducing a bed of nails from under the ring. Moxley drove Page into it with a Blackout, followed by a Paradigm Shift into the nails. Yet somehow, Hangman survived. As Moxley demanded the locked briefcase containing the AEW World Title, wanting to take out the championship and brandish it as a weapon against Hangman—”I want him to taste it,”—Prince Nana appeared and handcuffed Marina Shafir to the barricade. And moments later, Swerve Strickland made his choice. Striding to the ring with Hangman’s own steel chain, Swerve took out the Young Bucks, then walked to the apron and handed the chain to his former bitter rival. Hangman didn’t hesitate. He wrapped the chain around his fist, leveled Moxley with loaded punches, then looped it around his neck and draped him over the top rope. A Buckshot Lariat into the bed of nails followed. And with one final heave, Page hung Moxley over the top rope again, the chain cinched tight. Mox struggled with sheer panic all over his face, but he had no recourse. A quick tap-out gave Page the championship once more.

My Score: 5 out of 5

News of the Night:

  1. Juice Robinson made a surprise return to action in the Men’s casino gauntlet match.
  2. In a tearful scene, Adam Cole relinquished his TNT title due to injury and hinted at a possible retirement in his [near] future.
  3. Syuri made her AEW debut in the women’s casino gauntlet match.
  4. Nick Wayne turned on Christian Cage post 3-way tag match, effectively ending The Patriarchy. Cage was saved from a beat down by Adam Copeland.

Final Verdict: 4.5/5

What the hell can you say about AEW All In: Texas? I was at the first AEW: All In in London, it was an amazing experience and I think that this PPV, THIS show, was the nearest I’ve come to that same feeling, being at home and watching on TV! Apparently, the LONGEST wrestling pay-per-view in history, it NEVER felt like things were dragging, I was glued to the TV from the very beginning – and I mean the beginning, I was in for Zero Hour and never left until the “credits” rolled. Amazing stuff, some of – if not THE – best mix of storytelling and in-ring action we’ve seen in 2025. Christ, just look at what went down! I know the Adam Cole situation was a low point but out of that we got Dustin Rhodes winning a title in his home state – he’s now got THREE well-deserved belts; we had Swerve and Ospreay defeat the Young Bucks in what is easily a match of the year contender – and then the pair came out to hep Adam Page in the main event too! Athena winning the women’s gauntlet match was the correct choice IMHO – she’s been holding down ROH, some might say almost single-handedly, and she’s MORE than earned a title reign in AEW (if she can beat Toni Storm, I’m looking forward to seeing what those two can do together). Speaking of Toni Storm, her match with Mercedes Mone was undoubtedly one of the best women’s matches of the year across ALL companies IMHO! We knew Okada and Omega would deliver and the match did, though I was surprised Okada took the win – though technically Don Callis helped him do it, which gives us potential for a SIXTH match between the two (and hopefully Don Callis gets his ass kicked too!) As for the main event. Wow. Just wow, Violent yes, but it was also the payoff for TWO YEARS of storytelling – Hangman’s journey is complete and Moxley (and the Death Riders) grasp on the title is over. It will certainly be interesting to see where AEW goes now with a “good guy” as the champ and face of the company. And what about Mox and the Death Riders? They lost ALL their matches here… is it the end for them? All in all (pun intended), All In: Texas has to be up there as PPV/PLE of the year. Seriously.

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