Wrestlemania 32 Full Show [upd]
WrestleMania 32, held on April 3, 2016, at the AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, was a landmark event that officially set a new WWE attendance record of . Billed as the "Grandest Stage of Them All," the show featured a marathon card of 12 matches, highlighted by high-stakes title changes and iconic stunts. The Main Event: Roman Reigns vs. Triple H
On April 3, 2016, AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, hosted a spectacle that was never meant to happen as it did. WrestleMania 32 was designed to be the crowning achievement of the “Reality Era,” a star-studded avalanche of mainstream crossovers and generational torch-passings. Instead, due to a biblical-scale injury plague that wiped out nearly half its planned main eventers, the show became something far more interesting: a fascinating, deeply flawed, and ultimately resilient monument to the WWE’s ability to manufacture grandeur from the ashes of disaster. wrestlemania 32 full show
The event received generally positive reviews from critics and fans, with many praising the quality of the matches and the historic moment of Roman Reigns winning the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. WrestleMania 32, held on April 3, 2016, at
The saw Sasha Banks vs. Charlotte Flair vs. Becky Lynch . This match showcased the incredible talent within the WWE's women's division, often cited as one of the best matches of the event. The dynamic between the three competitors was electric, ultimately leading to Charlotte retaining her title. Triple H On April 3, 2016, AT&T Stadium
The saw Dean Ambrose defeat Chris Jericho , in a match praised for its technical prowess and storytelling.
The undercard of WrestleMania 32 was a study in contradiction. On one hand, the ladder match for the Intercontinental Championship delivered the high-risk, car-crash violence the event demands. Zack Ryder’s shocking, fleeting victory remains one of the great emotional pop moments in Mania history, a genuine reward for loyalty. On the other hand, The Rock’s impromptu segment—where he squashed Erick Rowan in six seconds and brought out a pre-fight Conor McGregor clone—felt less like wrestling and more like a desperate ratings grab. It was fun, but it exposed the show’s lack of depth; when you need a Hollywood icon to kill a mid-carder just to fill time, you are treading water.