Every AEW Pay-Per-View Ranked - From Worst To Best

14. Revolution 2025

toni Storm Mariah May
AEW

Revolution 2025 was a glorious PPV letdown by a below-par main event as Jon Moxley and Adam 'Cope' Copeland failed to find any kind of coherent rhythm or drama. Even Cristian Cage cashing in his title shot failed to lift the occasion, as Moxley retained the AEW World Championship. This was a great shame as so much of the rest of the card was incredible. 

After unquestionably starring in AEW's best women's feud to date, Mariah May and 'Timeless' Toni Storm brought the house down in Los Angeles with the Falls Count Anywhere Match, 'The Hollywood Ending'. Brimming with callbacks, narrative, and violence, Storm and May's battle for the AEW Women's Championship even brought buckets of broken glass into the ring, turning the bout into a Taipei Death Match. Storm would eventually end the carnage by piledriving May through a table emblazoned with the Hollywood sign to get the win, as the screen turned monochrome and fans around the world threw roses at their screens. Probably.

Elsewhere, many of AEW's up-and-coming stars showed why the company has such a bright future. Kyle Fletcher hinted at his ever-growing greatness despite losing to Will Ospreay in a Steel Cage, Kenny Omega claimed the International Championship from Konosuke Takeshita, and Kazuchika Okada and Brody King beat the hell out of each other in a Continental Championship classic.

Contributor

Terry Bezer hasn't written a bio just yet, but if they had... it would appear here.