10 WWE Survivor Series 2018 Impulse Reactions

Raw beats SmackDown Live in brand battle, but Lesnar and Rousey are left with the scars of war...

Daniel Bryan Brock Lesnar Survivor Series
WWE

The build for this year's Survivor Series was thankfully dominated by the company's lack of opportunity to assemble one.

Thanks to the controversial and at-times catastrophic Crown Jewel taking place at the start of November, the company were left with a fortnight to build a show that has, in previous years been given the video game treatment. In 2016, WWE spoke of fantasy warfare coming to life when cyborgs Brock Lesnar and Bill Goldberg went to war, while Triple H booked his own career mode last year after inserting himself into a winning position in the main event as if he had exclusive access to a pre-release cheat code.

Raw Vs SmackDown Live is an inherently stupid concept for just how little it matters the other 11 months of the year, but wrestlers are so often portrayed with inherent stupidity that it's finally starting to marry up with the performers themselves.

As fans, we are told to invest in the battle for brand supremacy, but the message too easily gets lost in translation along the way. For this year's show, WWE didn't have the time to bother their a*ses too much with the usual song-and-dance, and were given a panicked last-minute change in the time they did have.

In all-too-brief planning, it was suddenly a supershow with several mega matches. And in execution...

10. A Nonentity

Daniel Bryan Brock Lesnar Survivor Series
WWE

...it wasn't allowed to count until the show started proper.

SmackDown Live's doubles division were successful against Raw's largely laughable conglomerate in a match that did well to somehow be unpredictable in the final third.

Stubbornly showcasing themselves in a way the main roster never has, The Revival were Raw's last men standing against a blue brand side anchored by The New Day and The Usos. Xavier Woods even gamely took the Shatter Machine from a coast-to-coast leap before a Roman Reigns tribute splash finished the former NXT champions off.

This match was a rather tragic tribute to the league in 2018 - hardly anybody mattered, even the few that did barely got a chance to prove it, and the result was quite literally meaningless. It spoke too to the downward trajectory a life holding the tag rope can bring - almost everybody in this match was in a worse state than they had been the prior year, with Bobby Roode's main event thumping by NXT gaffer Triple H kickstarting a plummet he's yet to recovered from.

Contributor
Contributor

Michael is a writer, editor, podcaster and presenter for WhatCulture Wrestling, and has been with the organisation nearly 8 years. He primarily produces written, audio and video content on WWE and AEW, but also provides knowledge and insights on all aspects of the wrestling industry thanks to a passion for it dating back over 35 years. As one third of "The Dadley Boyz" Michael has contributed to the huge rise in popularity of the WhatCulture Wrestling Podcast and its accompanying YouTube channel, earning it top spot in the UK's wrestling podcast charts with well over 62,000,000 total downloads. He has been featured as a wrestling analyst for the Tampa Bay Times, GRAPPL, GCP, Poisonrana and Sports Guys Talking Wrestling, and has covered milestone events in New York, Dallas, Las Vegas, Philadelphia, London and Cardiff. Michael's background in media stretches beyond wrestling coverage, with a degree in Journalism from the University Of Sunderland (2:1) and a series of published articles in sports, music and culture magazines The Crack, A Love Supreme and Pilot. When not offering his voice up for daily wrestling podcasts, he can be found losing it singing far too loud watching his favourite bands play live. Follow him on X/Twitter - @MichaelHamflett