5 Ups & 2 Downs From WWE King And Queen Of The Ring (Results & Review)

A very workmanlike and solid - if unspectacular - PLE, very on-brand for the Triple H Era.

WWE King and Queen of the Ring 2024 Lyra Valkyria Nia Jax
WWE

If you’re looking for a simple way to sum up WWE’s latest PLE offering, King and Queen of the Ring, it could best be described as “workmanlike, with a bunch of pyro.”

WWE’s six-match card featured four title matches and the finals of the King and Queen of the Ring tournaments. While there were certainly a few great moments in some of the matches, none of them are going to make anyone’s end-of-year lists.

The two tournament finals were solid, with clean finishes putting over deserving winners and giving the losers some direction going forward. Lyra Valkyria came close to a major upset over Nia Jax as the newcomer in the Queen tourney, while King finalist Randy Orton has a legit gripe to fuel a rematch with Gunther down the line.

Cody Rhodes and Logan Paul provided a fun World Title match that featured a simple but effective story and an eye-popping spot that will get replayed a dozen times on WWE programming during the next few days. The Intercontinental Championship triple threat was entertaining and delivered the right outcome to set up the next chapter of this story. However, the Women’s World Championship match fell short of expectations, despite there being shenanigans and a title change. That level of ga-ga couldn’t overcome what seemed like two wrestlers failing to get on the same page.

Overall, the show was very much in line with several other PLEs from the Triple H Era, delivering what it promised but not leaving you salivating. That's not a bad thing, but sometimes you want a show to blow your mind rather than mildly satisfy.

Let’s get to it…

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Contributor
Contributor

Scott is a former journalist and longtime wrestling fan who was smart enough to abandon WCW during the Monday Night Wars the same time as the Radicalz. He fondly remembers watching WrestleMania III, IV, V and VI and Saturday Night's Main Event, came back to wrestling during the Attitude Era, and has been a consumer of sports entertainment since then. He's written for WhatCulture for more than a decade, establishing the Ups and Downs articles for WWE Raw and WWE PPVs/PLEs and composing pieces on a variety of topics.