9 Times WWE's Attitude Era Broke The Rules Of Professional Wrestling

Kayfabe may have been dead, but the WWF wasn't exactly respecting the memory of it.

By John Bills /

WWE.com

By the middle of the 1990s, professional wrestling was in one heck of a rut. The old good guy vs. bad guy formula was tired, fans bored of seeing muscle-bound superheroes overcome cartoon villains and something needed to change. Extreme Championship Wrestling started a revolution by ignoring the rulebook, giving World Championship Wrestling and the World Wrestling Federation no choice but to follow suit.

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With much larger audiences the rule-breaking of WCW and the WWF was felt that much more, and just like excitable teenagers on a night-out once the rule-breaking had been tasted it was almost impossible to stop. The rulebook was therefore found at the bottom of the pile of books in a less than usable state.

The Attitude Era took the tried and true rules of professional wrestling and set fire to them, exposing the industry in a way not seen previously. Kayfabe may have died a long time prior, but the late 1990s and early 2000s desecrated its corpse in a most vulgar manner.

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The list of rules that the WWF broke during this time is as long as a Bruno Sammartino title reign, but here are 10 big ones.