One MIND-BLOWING Secret From Every WWE Royal Rumble

By Michael Sidgwick /

2021 - We Nearly Saw A Sequel To A Famous Cinematic Match

WWE.com

At WrestleMania 36, WWE presented a ‘Firefly Fun House’ match between Bray Wyatt and John Cena.

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It was hardly a match at all, rather a pandemic-enforced short film, and it was weirdly incredible for what it was: a shocking exploration of John Cena’s flawed psyche. It was visually arresting, the only time an empty arena WrestleMania actually felt worthy of the name, and the reveal that Cena was a politicking bully all along was catharsis for all those awful years of his mean-spirited top guy run. It wasn’t just stunning for what it was; it was stunning that WWE would do it.

The Fiend’s programme with Randy Orton deeper into 2020 was less well-received. That’s probably because the Fiend created a demonic doppelganger of Orton, who was never seen afterwards, before the real Orton murdered the Fiend with fire. It culminated at WrestleMania 37, during which Alexa, sitting atop a “box-like structure”, turned on Wyatt with a goo-assisted distraction.

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It was meant to be advanced at the 2021 Royal Rumble; in a report originally written by Ringside News and corroborated by the January 4 Observer, a Firefly Fun House match had been added to the schedule. Obviously, this didn’t happen - but what might it have looked like?

Cena’s rep took a beating in the first Fun House match. Wyatt depicted him as a homophobe and fake good guy who did nothing more than punch down at his opponents. How would the Fiend have tormented Orton in that mental prison?

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Perhaps it might have included a Brian de Palma-length take of Orton’s chinlock to mock how boring he is. We’ll never know.