Okay, let’s talk about this WarGames thing in WWE. I’ve been messing around with it, and here’s how it went down.
So, first off, this WarGames setup is crazy. It’s not just one ring – it’s two of them, side by side, all inside this massive steel cage. I started by picking my teams. You can have like four or five wrestlers on each team, which is nuts.
I kicked things off with just one wrestler from each team in the ring. They went at it for five minutes. It was pretty intense, just a straight-up brawl to start. After those five minutes, my team supposedly had the “advantage” – I guess we were doing better, I don’t know. Anyway, because of that, I got to send in another wrestler. Now it was two against one, which was a huge shift.
- First, only two wrestlers, one from each team. Five minutes of fighting.
- Then, my team got the advantage, so I added a second wrestler.
- Every three minutes after that, we each added another wrestler.
This went on, adding a new wrestler every three minutes, alternating between the teams. It got pretty crowded in those rings. Finally, once everyone was in, that’s when the real WarGames match began. The rules were basically thrown out at this point. It was a no-disqualification, anything-goes kind of deal.
The Only Way to Win
You can only win by pinfall or submission. I tried all sorts of stuff – body slams, suplexes, you name it. But, generally, only traditional wrestling moves are allowed. If you go too wild with stuff like eye-gouging or hair-pulling, you can get disqualified. I didn’t want that, so I tried to keep it somewhat clean. Of course, a disqualification means the other team wins, so that’s another way to lose. And if your wrestler gets counted out of the ring, that’s it, you lose.
It was a wild experience, to say the least. I spent a good chunk of time just figuring out the controls and how to manage all those wrestlers at once. It was chaotic, but a whole lot of fun.
Eventually, after a lot of back and forth, I managed to get a submission. I forget who it was, some random wrestler, but I locked in some kind of hold, and they tapped out. That was it – I won the WarGames match. It felt pretty good, I have to admit, after all that craziness.
So yeah, that’s my WarGames story. It’s a wild ride, but definitely worth checking out if you’re into wrestling games.