10 Biggest Title Changes In Summerslam History

While no show WWE produces will ever reach the of spectacle or importance of Wrestlemania, the one show that comes the closest is Summerslam. It’s position at the opposite end of the year from the grandaddy of them all means it’s a good mid-way point for the wrestling calendar, generally Summerslam is when we get an idea of what the stories are going to be for the rest of the year and there are even cases where WWE start to lay the ground work for Wrestlemania season.

A huge part of those storylines are the championships. It’s what everyone in the company is supposed to be fighting for after all and whoever is holding a title can be a big influence on what path the storylines go down. As such a big show like Summerslam is a great place to do some big title changes that can act as shifts in attitude for what the company will be doing in the months to come. Whether it’s the ending of a long-lasting storyline or the start of a new one, Summerslam has been home to some of the biggest and most fondly remembered title changes in WWE history, so I thought it would be nice if we looked over some of the biggest.

10 – Charlotte Flair def. Carmella(c) & Becky Lynch
(Smackdown Women’s Championship) – 2018

This title change isn’t big because of who won the title, who lost the title or even the story going into it, it’s what it started that makes this title change so important.

Support for Becky Lynch was big going into Summerslam 2018, people were sick of Carmella’s boring reign as Smackdown Women’s Champion and Becky had been underappreciated and underused ever since she lost the title at the tail end of 2016; so when a singles match between Carmella and Becky was booked for Summerslam people were excited. It seemed like it would finally be Becky’s time to shine…enter Charlotte Flair.

Charlotte had been away for a few months due to needing minor surgery and upon her return she was immediately inserted into the title match at Summerslam, making it a Triple Threat, people were not happy about this, to say the least. While Charlotte was a face at the time, people were getting increasingly tired of her dominance at the top of the women’s division (this being just off the back of her ending Asuka’s undefeated streak at Wrestlemania 34) and her insertion in this match that was supposed to be Becky’s coronation seemed like a slap in the face.

So imagine everyone’s displeasure when Charlotte won the title. No-one was happy about this, least of all Becky Lynch because after the match the two locked eyes only for Becky to unleash a vicious attack on Charlotte. This was intended by WWE to be a heel turn on Becky Lynch’s part (no matter what Road Dogg says on Twitter) but it ended up having the exact opposite effect as the crowd in the Barclay’s Center exploded with cheers and Becky unleashed on Flair. This is what ultimately led to Becky becoming “The Man” in WWE becoming the most popular wrestler in the whole company.

Ironically, as much as we all hated this title change at the time, without it we may never have gotten the perfect storm that was required for the first-ever women’s Wrestlemania main event this year, which ended in Becky’s true coronation as The Man.

9 – Stone Cold Steve Austin def. Owen Hart(c)
(Intercontinental Championship) – 1997

The Stone Cold character wasn’t quite in full swing yet, but when you talk about moments in Austin’s early WWF career, it’s hard to ignore this moment for both good and bad reasons.

Come 1997, Austin’s 3:16 persona was in full swing and although he hadn’t reached the height of his popularity yet, it’s clear he was only months away from permanent main eventer status. However, this was during a time in the WWF where in order to get to the main event, more often than not you would have to go through the Intercontinental Championship.

When Austin won the belt, it was officially his first singles championship in the WWF and was a clear omen of things to come for the superstar, although not quite as soon as we’d all hoped. As has been well documented by this point, a sit-out piledriver from Owen Hart to Austin in the match caused a severe neck injury that required Austin to undergo surgery and although Austin would return by that October, it would ultimately see him end his career so much earlier than we’d all have hoped in 2003.

That said, this title change was still a fantastic moment for Austin’s career and the injury meant that he was hotter than ever when he returned that autumn to take the title from Hart a second time.

8 – Ronda Rousey def. Alexa Bliss(c)
(Raw Women’s Championship) -2018

We’ve already talked about one half of the Wrestlemania 35 main event, now let’s talk about the other.

There are plenty of mixed opinions out there on how good of a wrestler Ronda Rousey is (I personally think she’s great), so naturally there was plenty of mixed opinion going around when Rousey won the Raw Women’s Championship from Bliss in extremely dominant fashion, just 8 months after debuting in WWE.

Love it or hate it, it’s impossible to deny that Rousey’s mainstream appeal and raw star power elevated the title to a level that it hadn’t been seen at in quite some time and given that Ronda would actually defend the title on a monthly basis, it gave us some great matches against the likes of Nia Jax and Sasha Banks along the way. Of course, it would be remiss of me to go without mentioning the part Ronda had to play in the Wrestlemania 35 main event this past year.

While Becky Lynch’s newfound persona was what got the fans so invested in the hype surrounding the match that would become the main event of Wrestlemania 35, I’d argue the match never would’ve been given that spot if it wasn’t for the star power and marketability of Ronda Rousey. Becky was what got the fans involved, but Ronda Rousey is what got the sponsors, the press and the mainstream public involved in that match becoming the monumental milestone for women’s wrestling that it was, and that makes this title change a massive one.

7 – Randy Orton def. Chris Benoit(c)
(World Heavyweight Championship) – 2004

You can’t argue with the making of a future HOFer.

Now, I’m well aware that this decision was only made in-part so Brock Lesnar would no longer be “the youngest world champion ever” after he left the WWE earlier that year, but it’s undeniable that this title win confirmed the fact that Orton would be a mainstay of the main event scene in WWE in the years to come. Benoit’s title reign was pretty disappointing as a whole, as it’s clear since the only things notable about it, is who he won it from and who he lost it to, but being tied in with Evolution the whole way did at least make this title win make a decent amount of storyline sense.

The thing that doesn’t make this title reign nearly as big as it could’ve been is what happened in the month after it. The next night on Raw, Evolution turned on Orton and Triple H demanded Orton hand the title over. This created a fantastically done face turn where Orton spat in Triple H’s face and laid him out. Orton quickly became the biggest babyface in the company (because anyone who faced Triple H in the early 2000s was the biggest Babyface in the company) however as many of these stories from this time period would end, Triple H beat Orton the next month at Unforgiven clean as a whistle and that was that.

As much as Orton would quickly have the rug swept from under him, this title win was a clear indication that the company had faith in him to carry a world title, and he would go on to carry many more before the present day.

6 – Brock Lesnar def. John Cena(c)
(WWE World Heavyweight Championship) – 2014

Brock Lesnar’s WWE return had been pretty lacklustre before 2014 rolled around. He lost to John Cena, lost to Triple H and beat CM Punk in matches that were all very good, but were completely inconsequential. Then 2014 happened.

Brock Lesnar would be responsible for the most shocking moment in WWE history at Wrestlemania 30 when he ended the undefeated streak of The Undertaker, this turned Lesnar into the most unstoppable force in all of WWE and he was going to eviscerate the next person he came up against. Conversely, the WWE title scene in the summer of 2014 was a little bit of a mess, Daniel Bryan was forced to vacate the title after facing a neck injury so the title was quickly placed back around Cena’s waist until they could work out what to do.

When it was announced Lesnar was going to be fighting Cena, there was alot of trepidation about how things were going to go down. Many thought Cena would do what Cena does and win even when he really shouldn’t and others thought Lesnar’s win over The Undertaker guaranteed a win here, but I think it’s safe to say no-one was expecting what actually happened.

In completely shocking fashion, Lesnar absolutely destroyed Cena. In this 15 minute match, Cena only got in about a single minute of offence and the rest was Lesnar throwing Cena all around the ring. By the time Lesnar pinned Cena to win the title it was clear we were going to see a title reign like never before, which is exactly what we got…over and over again for the next 5 years with various titles Lesnar would hold. So yes, this title reign may have lead us to years of Lesnar being an absentee champion for months at a time, but you can’t say that this moment in 2014 wasn’t a huge deal.

5 – The Ultimate Warrior def. The Honky Tonk Man(c)
(Intercontinental Championship) – 1988

Ok, so there’s not much to this one, but you can’t deny that it’s a moment that has endured stronger than most others over the years.

Although he was by no means the first, Honky Tonk Man is arguably the man who made the idea of a modern heel champion so popular, to the point where on the current WWE roster, there’s almost always at least one champion that follows this archetype. Getting counted out, disqualified and cheating to his hearts content, there’s nothing that The Honky Tonk Man wouldn’t do to ensure he held onto the Intercontinental Championship as long as he possibly could and for 454 days, it worked and when a champion uses heel tactics to hold onto a title for that long, when they eventually lose it, it’s huge.

Summerslam 1988 was the night in question for that huge moment to happen. After Brutus “The Barber” Beefcake – who was originally set to challenge for the title – was laid out and unable to compete, everyone was in the dark as to who The Honky Tonk Man would defend his title against that night. Until to everyone’s delight, The Ultimate Warrior came sprinting down to the ring and 30 seconds later he was the new Intercontinental Champion.

Warrior’s title reign didn’t end up being all that notable in the long run, but that didn’t matter, as the manner in which he won it would go down in the highlight reels for decades.

4 – Daniel Bryan def. John Cena(c) &
Randy Orton def. Daniel Bryan(c)
(WWE Championship) – 2013

We got ourselves a twofer because Summerslam 2013 was the night that set up one of the biggest moments of the decade.

John Cena vs Daniel Bryan was an excellent match and one in which the fanbase at large was completely and totally behind Daniel Bryan and no-one was really sure if WWE would actually let a guy like Bryan beat a guy like Cena. To our amazement, after a great match, Bryan pinned Cena clean as a whistle with the Knee Plus to win his very first WWE Championship and it was a brilliant moment. The biggest indie darling ever had finally reached the pinnacle of WWE and it seemed clear that times were changing in the WWE landscape. It wasn’t to last though.

As the confetti fell, the music of Mr Money in the Bank Randy Orton hit and the two men stared each other down. Orton then looked to back away, until special guest referee Triple H hit Bryan with the pedigree, allowing Orton to become WWE Champion. This set off the Daniel Bryan vs The Authority storyline that would be the A story for most of the way from that show until Wrestlemania 30 the next year.

If it wasn’t for these title changes here (and a little bit of pushing from the fans) it’s entirely possible that the wonderful moment of Wrestlemania 30 ending with Daniel Bryan holding both the WWE and World Heavyweight Championships aloft might never have happened.

3 – Brock Lesnar def. The Rock(c)
(WWE Undisputed Championship) – 2002

Say what you like about his push nowadays, but no-one before or since has seen a meteoric rise like that of Brock Lesnar in 2002.

The moment he showed up on WWE TV it was clear that Lesnar was ear marked to be the next major star for the company, quite literally being labelled as “The Next Big Thing” as an onscreen nickname. Debuting in March of 2002, it took a mere 5 months for Lesnar to be defeating The Rock for the WWE Championship. Lesnar made very short work of opponents like The Hardys and RVD and when he won King of the Ring, a title victory seemed inevitable.

Although Lesnar would sour WWE’s investment in him a couple of years later when he left the company, Lesnar left a lasting impression on the WWE and by the time he returned to the company in 2012 his star power had grown tenfold, as seen by the fact that since 2014 he’s almost always been holding championship gold. Lesnar probably would’ve reached this level of star power anyway, but WWE certainly did him all the favours in the world by building so quickly to this moment.

2 – CM Punk def. John Cena
(WWE Championship) – 2011

When CM Punk won the WWE Championship at Money in the Bank 2011, it was a huge moment. Not only was this the first time an “indie darling” had won the WWE Championship, but the storyline in play meant that Punk was now leaving the WWE for an extended period of time. Of course, that ended up not being the case, since 8 whole days later Cena had won the new WWE Championship and Punk reappeared to face off with him.

Eventually, a match was put in place for Summerslam to crown an undisputed WWE Champion, since both men claimed their title was the legitimate one. The matched carried on the threads from their match the previous month to create a pretty great match and ultimately Punk’s win here solidified him as more than just a flash in the pan champion. It would take a little longer for him to have his 434-day title reign thanks to a sudden Kevin Nash and Alberto Del Rio appearance after this match, but this certainly put everything in place.

1 – The British Bulldog def. Bret Hart(c)
(Intercontinental Championship) – 1992

I mean come on, what else could it be?

We’ve all seen the clip a hundred times by now because it really was that huge a moment. Wembley Stadium, London, England in 1992, the first (and to date, only) time a big 4 WWE PPV has been held in the UK, so what other match could you possible have outside of British Bulldog and Bret Hart, two of the best wrestlers of the time going at it for the Intercontinental Championship.

Obviously, I don’t have the same kind of emotional connection as many people as my birth was still 7 years away when this match took place (sorry if that made you feel old), but all you have to do is listen to the reaction of the crowd when Bulldog pinned Hart to see just how magical a moment it was for everyone in attendance at the time. It would ultimately be a short title reign for the Bulldog, but it didn’t matter in the end because, in a single moment, he had secured his legacy forever.

And that’s this list! Thank you very much for taking the time to read, let me know what you think of it in either the comments below or on Twitter @10ryawoo. Make sure to come back here next week as the Summerslam festivities continue with my predictions for next Sunday’s show!|

Every Episode of Doctor Who Series 3 (2007) Ranked

Series 3 had quite the challenge ahead of it because it was the first series of New Who to not feature Rose as the companion. You can sit there and debate all day about how good of a companion Rose actually was, but in 2007, Rose was still a beloved companion that was fresh in the mind of the fanbase at large, so anyone that came along next was going to be heavily scrutinized.

I’ll get into detail on what I thought throughout this list, but overall I think Martha was a worthy replacement to Rose that took the characterisation of a companion in enough of a new direction to avoid feeling like “another Rose”.

However, there was a lot more to this series than just Martha, so let’s get into it and rank every episode of Doctor Who Series 3.

10 – The Lazarus Experiment

One of the things that distinguished Series 3 for me, is that even in episodes I consider bad, there’s usually a decent amount of elements that I liked. This episode is the one exception to that thought.

This entire episode really gives of “last minute” vibes. I’ve no idea what the situation was surrounding the writing of the episode, but everything just felt so rushed, and like the writer just needed to sit there for a while and think everything through and flesh it out a bit more. Even the CGI feels rushed, the visual of the Lazarus monster seems like it was supposed to be the rough render of the creature, but they just sent it out for broadcast instead.

Martha’s family are definitely the worst out of the domestic characters that we get to know throughout new who and I think that’s mostly because we never had any time to flesh them out. They’re in multiple episodes during this series, but this is the only episode where there’s any attempt at fleshing them out as people and unfortunately, it’s not a very good attempt. Martha’s mum is nagging and overprotective, her brother’s a bit too lax about life and her sister’s fairly useless but lucks herself into high-status roles. That’s pretty much all we get, not the mention her dad, who we get pretty much nothing on, other than he’s a bit of a player.

The bulk of the episode is pretty mindless running away from the monster, which isn’t always a bad thing, but I really think this episode needed more to it than that. The conclusion is pretty underwhelming too, with a chase scene that’s nothing special and The Doctor using sound waves to mess with Lazarus’ DNA, which works because…I honestly have no idea how that makes any sense.

The moment at the end of the episode where Martha puts her foot down about just “being a passenger” in the TARDIS was a nice development for the relationship between The Doctor and Martha, but other than that, it’s best to leave this one buried in the middle of the series.

9 – Daleks in Manhattan/Evolution of the Daleks

A little tip for you, don’t spend 3 quarters of the episode setting up a big mystery about who the big bad guys are when the word “Dalek” is literally in the title of the episode.

If you ignore the fact that the big reveal is given away in the title of the episode, the mystery is plotted out pretty well. We find out people are disappearing, we find out it’s linked to something in the sewers until we get the reveal of what’s happening to the people who go down there. The pig slaves are a bit of a weird one because they don’t really thematically make any sense if the Daleks can manipulate genetics to this level, why not create creatures far more useful?

Then there’s the main focus of the plot, which is Dalek Sec taking on a human form and evolving. This is a really interesting concept, that I wish had a bit more time to flourish. I loved the scenes were Sec was confused, but also amazed at some of these human concepts that he’d never experienced in his life and how they slowly affect him, unfortunately, this sort of stuff gets swept under the rug a bit too quickly in order to get to the Daleks murdering everything in sight.

One thing I’ve noticed looking back is that The Tenth Doctor’s attitude towards the Daleks is actually quite inconsistent. The Ninth Doctor pretty clearly wanted to wipe them all out, but it’s never really made clear how this incarnation of The Doctor feels about them. He obviously hates them, but specifically how much is made unclear. In Doomsday, he doesn’t seem to have a problem with getting rid of them all, but in this episode, he’s suddenly all emotional about not wanting to cause another genocide.

I understand that it’s largely because he just saw the human/Dalek hybrids murdered, but not enough weight was really put on that moment for me to actually get the feeling that something had changed in The Doctor’s mind; these are his greatest enemies, it should take longer than a few seconds for him to change his mind about killing them.

This is one of those episodes that I like the concept of, but don’t think the execution lived up to what I wanted from it. If the human Dalek thing had a bit more time to grow I think it could’ve been a lot better, but unfortunately, the second part didn’t spend as much time on it as I would’ve liked and it meant the whole thing just devolved into The Doctor fighting the Daleks yet again.

8 – The Shakespear Code

This episode doesn’t do anything to break the pattern of “historical figure” episodes, The Doctor spends most of it fawning over Shakespear, they mention the darker sides to the character and then they find a way to save the day. I really enjoyed all of the little jokes throughout about Shakespear stealing some of his most famous lines and it puts me in mind of that “Bootstrap Paradox” scene from Capaldi’s era.

The thing is, these episodes tend to live and die on how compelling the historical figure actually is and honestly, I wasn’t overly thrilled by Shakespear. He doesn’t really possess much of a will of its own it seems and I’m not just referring to that bit where the witches possessed him. Shakespeare himself doesn’t seem to serve to move the plot forward at all, everything just tends to happen around him and he goes along with it, he contributes very little of his own thoughts.

On top of that, I’m not really a fan of the Carrionites either. I know they’re cheesy and over the top by design to mirror Shakespear’s writings, but they don’t really fit in with the tone of the rest of the episode. Their powers are also really vaguely defined and I really don’t buy the idea that you can do magic just by saying the right words, not least because it decides to stop working when the plot finds it convenient. That’s just a step too far for me to suspend my disbelief.

Also in this episode, The Doctor and Martha’s relationship accelerates way too fast. That scene where they’re laying in bed in the hotel and Martha just stares at him like she’s already head over heels for him and lets out a sigh is way too much, way too fast. They’ve known each other for a little over a day at this point and sure, if a guy like The Doctor comes along, you’re bound to fall for him quicker than other people, but this was so heavy-handed in only their second episode together, it doesn’t sit right with me.

The climax was actually quite fun to watch though, the sense of terror ended up being delt on quite heavy as the witches emerged from the crystal ball and I love the touch of the red tint to the whirlwind it creates. Although I’ve railed on the idea of words being magic, the solution to the episode does at least work well using that logic, although I’m not the biggest fan of “expelliarmus” being the word to seal the deal. It capped the episode off with a nice fun climax that just about hit the right notes to redeem some of the problems I had with the episode up until that point.

7 – 42

This is another episode that feels pretty throwaway in the grand scheme of things, but I think it has a lot more excitement to it than The Lazarus Experiment. The concept is given to us very concisely in the cold open, broken down spaceship, vaguely defined monster aboard,  42 minutes until everyone dies. It’s simplistic but honestly, I think that’s better for the episode, as where this one falls down is when it tries to add the complexity.

I’ll start off with what I liked. I thought the tension in this episode was done pretty well, the monster tended to pop-up when you weren’t expecting it to and it made for some really good scenes as it slowly killed people. As far as secondary characters go, I thought the crew on the ship was quite good for one-offs, Kath had a decent backstory to her and for what little we got to see of her, I thought she was a pretty well-rounded person. The moment where Martha and Riley are ejected towards the sun and The Doctor shouting “I’ll save you!” but it’s silenced by the vastness of space was a beautifully shot moment and the eery calmness of the conversation Martha has with Riley as they hurtle to what they think is their death was a very touching moment.

There was also a lot of not so great stuff in this episode. The pub-quiz to override the security deadlocks seemed very contrived and all of the questions were conveniently centred around 20th & 21st Century trivia, it really felt like Chibnall desperately needed a reason for Martha to call her mother, and this was all he could come up with.

I also thought the reasoning as to why the monster was attacking the crew to be quite lacklustre. It was because they absorbed the heart of a living star as a heart, I mean…ok? It makes sense and fits in with the story, but it doesn’t explain how this star can possess people and just generally seems quite uninteresting of an explanation. It also means that all they have to do to escape is dump the fuel, which again, makes sense in context and you can see why no-one would’ve thought of that, but the episode didn’t centre around the mystery of “why?” it just centred around trying to get the ship working, which means that the solution doesn’t feel satisfying, because it ignores what the characters were trying to accomplish up until that point.

The concept for the monster is good though, and I liked the visual of the possessed men lifting their visor and evaporating people, but some of the core elements of this story don’t work for me and it really overwhelms the good.

6 – Gridlock

Gridlock is an example of an idea Doctor Who attempts every now and then that I really like to see, even if the execution wasn’t perfect, which is taking a really mundane idea (in this case, a traffic jam) and taking it to its logical extreme, and then having that be the whole episode.

The bulk of the episode spent in the traffic jam, I think has a lot of stuff to like about it. Once Martha gets kidnapped by the couple and you begin to learn about the motorway, it becomes a very tragic tale, the episode is able to change your mind very quickly on what kinds of people these are because they’re just looking out for their family. The scene where the whole motorway lights up with song is such a heartbreaking moment as well, as these people hold on to the little hope they have that someday they might be freed.

It also manages to fit in its fair share of fun and humour into the episode without compromising all of the tragedy around it, with The Doctor’s journey through endless cars on the motorway, seeing all kinds of people who are in these cars. It also gives a really good impression of exactly the situation their in, because it’s all well and good knowing these two cars very well, but seeing flashes of these people living their whole lives in these cars gives a great view of the exact scale of what’s going on.

Unfortunately, I found everything outside of what’s going on in the motorway to be a bit lacking and it suffers from a notable lack of focus when it comes to exactly why everything is going on. The Macra are a fine enough villain and really the only place they could possibly fit is in a story like this, where there’s just something at the bottom of the motorway that kills people. The problem is, it’s never explained how they got there, I understand that they feed off of pollution, so all of the exhaust smoke is the perfect living space, but how did they actually get there in the first place and breed to be able to cover the entire motorway, which as far we’re told covers the length of the whole planet?

Then there are the emotion patches, which are never explained at all. We know they can make you feel certain emotions, but they can also induce sleep and cause amnesia and that really seems like the kind of thing that needs explaining. All we ever get is the knowledge that they’re some kind of drug, so making them the main explanation as to why everything’s gone wrong seemed like an odd move. We’re told that a virus mutated in the “Bliss” drug, but that means absolutely nothing to us when we don’t understand how these patches work, how can a virus possibly mutate in something, that from the audience’s perspective, is just a magic sticker?

I did like the classic Doctor Who twist at the end though where it’s revealed that trapping people in the motorway was actually an act of heroism, not villainy, whenever Doctor Who pulls something like that it always gives me a nice feeling inside, because I always like to think Doctor Who as a show that gives the attitude that humans are flawed but ultimately good.

The core idea of Gridlock hits the mark really well, and if the episode had focused on it a little more and cut some of the pointless guff, it probably would’ve ranked a lot higher. Unfortunately, the lack of focus at either end of the episode takes away from the impact of everything a bit and leaves me feeling unsatisfied when the episode reaches a conclusion.

5 – The Runaway Bride

This is quite the rarity for Doctor Who since we actually get to meet a future companion, a season out from them actually joining the TARDIS. However, at the time, this was intended as a one-off appearance for Donna, so I’ll be treating it as such.

As with most Christmas specials, there isn’t a lot to them in the way of grand plots or introspective narratives because it’s designed to be a healthy dose of fun for the family on Christmas Day, not to mention this didn’t have any heavy lifting to do in terms of establishing a new Doctor or companion which I personally think works to its benefit. The cliffhanger from the end of Series 2 was a great way to ensure that we could get into the whimsy of this episode quite easily, as there was a risk of everything being dragged down by The Doctor being mopey about Rose, but luckily Davies was able to avoid too much of that in this episode.

While this episode isn’t afraid to take it slow at certain points, it tends to keep it’s foot on the gas as much as it can, which would usually make for something quite boring, but I think the action here ends up being varied enough to keep the fun in it. The scene where The Doctor has to fly the TARDIS along the motorway while trying to convince Donna to jump is a joy to watch back, it hits the action, the fun and the small dose of emotion it throws in in just the right way to make it a great scene to watch.

I’m not a big fan of the Racnoss though. The spaceship looked very nice and the idea of a Christmas star made out of spider webs is something I like, my problem with the Racnoss however mostly comes from the queen herself. For one thing, it’s so obvious she was struggling to talk through the mouthpiece she had in and while they did try to make it into more of a style, I can’t help but hear someone who’s struggling to talk properly.

On top of that, the fact that she’s so stationary is really jarring when her torso upwards moves about a lot. I understand why that was the decision, of course, it would’ve been very expensive indeed to make the giant base move, but it creates such a disconnect when the part that is actually the actress is sitting there swaying around on the spot and being extremely animated, while the base just sits there lifeless. Then we get to the Racnoss’ plan, which at the very least makes sense, but I’m not sure it’s all that compelling, not least because most of it happens off-screen or in flashbacks.

I think there would’ve been something to be had in starting the episode with about 5-10 minutes of Donna going about her job and meeting Lance before hitting the wedding and reaching the cliffhanger point. I think it would’ve made the whole thing be woven into the story a lot better because it sticks out pretty hard when Donna has to explain it in the middle of the episode, not least because the whole thing just stops dead in order to let her tell it.

Overall, The Runaway Bride is a good episode to watch if you’re looking for a bit of lite fun from your Doctor Who, which is ultimately what Christmas episodes are designed for after all. That said, if you’re looking for something a bit deeper, then you’re best looking elsewhere in the series.

4 – Smith and Jones

I’ll be honest, this one landed higher than I thought it would.

This episode has so many moving pieces to it, that you almost wouldn’t think it was the first episode in a series, since they normally focus almost exclusively on establishing whatever new stuff needs to be established (in this case, Martha Jones) however, instead of specifically focusing on Martha the whole way through the episode, we only focus in on her for the first 10-15 minutes, before letting the plot and The Doctor take over, which actually does a better job establishing Martha than I think focusing solely on her would do.

Instead of making the episode about her, like Rose did, or anything involving Clara would later do, the episode instead makes sure we’ve got a rough idea of who she is and then just throws her into the thick of it to see how she’ll cope. That scene between her and The Doctor as they step onto the balcony of the hospital, looking out at the moon is brilliant. The way Martha just can’t quite take it all in, but still does her best to keep her cool and instead just starts talking to The Doctor about her family instead.

Not to mention, we also have a number of other trainees at the hospital around the place to better exemplify why Martha is the one that The Doctor gravitates towards. You have the woman who Martha is with for most of the first act, who acts panicked and clearly isn’t thinking straight given what’s going on. The way she panics when Martha goes to open the window, thinking they’ll lose the air even though the windows aren’t air-tight anyway, it shows someone who can’t keep calm in a crisis, which is someone who would be awful at travelling in the TARDIS. Then we’ve got the male trainee who spends most of it toadying to the Judoon and acts like he has things under control when actually he’s got no say in the matter, only to take credit for the whole thing after the fact. It’s always important in episodes where we’re introduced to a new companion to allow us to understand exactly why The Doctor picks them over anyone else and characters like the ones I’ve mentioned are the best way to make Martha look great.

The plot itself is pretty solid. Given the actual role of the Judoon in the universe of Doctor Who I do find it odd that they’re totally fine with potentially murdering everyone in the hospital just to find one alien, not to mention, surely if they have the technology to transport a specified piece of a planet to the moon, they’d also have the technology to provide enough Oxygen. I quite like the Plasmavore as a villain though, it has a genuinely scary concept behind it and the idea of someone sucking all of the blood out of your body is quite horrific when you think about it. The solution to the episode was quite clever, even if it was rather sudden and it keeps to The Doctor’s general ethos of out-thinking the villain.

Like most introduction episodes, it’s not the strongest overall product, but it’s very good at what it needs to do, in this case establishing Martha as the next companion.

3 – Human Nature/The Family of Blood

You know, I’m starting to think it isn’t a coincidence that these late-series two-parters keep landing so high on these lists.

There’s so much to this story that I couldn’t even begin to cover all of it, so I’m just going to cover the highlights. First off, is the performance of John Smith, it’s absolutely amazing how both the writing and the performance involved int his episode genuinely makes John Smith feel like a completely different character from The Doctor. I know that’s the point but given that it’s the same actor playing the role you’d expect they’d feel somewhat similar but they really don’t.

On top of that, because John Smith feels so different to The Doctor I find myself actually getting invested in him over the course of the story as a completely separate character. I want to see his romance work out with Joan, I want to see him discover the mysteries of these strange dreams he has and honestly I think there’d be some entertainment in watching him go about his day-to-day life in the school and interacting with the boys; and it’s exactly that sort of investment that makes the climax to this episode so heartwrenching.

The thing is, as much as I’d love to see this character grow and see his stories resolved, we never can, because we need The Doctor and that scene in the cottage where John, Joan and Martha are talking with him and arguing over whether or not John wants to sacrifice himself for the greater good is so emotional. What makes it sting the most though is having Joan there as a way to frame it all, because if she wasn’t there then as the audience I think we’d all just want The Doctor to hurry up and come back to get it over with, but keeping Joan there is such a brilliant way to tear the audience’s emotions and that scene after The Doctor returns where Joan asks him “Can you change back”, he tells her “Yes”, but when she asks “Will you?” He has to say “No” and it’s truly heartbreaking.

The Doctor as a human could’ve ended up being such a rubbish gimmick for an episode, but so much care was put into getting every detail just right that it actually ended up being one of the better Doctor Who stories to come out of the modern series. It’s an episode that my appreciation for grows every time I re-watch it and I’ll not tear up at the climax.

2 – Blink

I’m sure everyone’s very annoyed that this isn’t number 1, but my list, my rules.

It’s very rare that I actually find an episode of Doctor Who legitimately scary these days (of course, when I was a kid, it was easy) and the thing is, I don’t think there’s anything inherently scary about the Weeping Angels, in fact I think many of the later Angel stories proved that it’s very easy for them not to be scary, so what makes this episode so damn terrifying?

Simply put, this episode is a master at controlling the feeling of tension. For one thing, our protagonist is someone we’ve never met before, which instantly means anything can happen. We know that The Doctor or Martha would never be in any real danger if it were them because we’re only part-way through the season, but Sally Sparrow? She could easily die at any moment which means we’ve instantly got a protagonist that can actually be in extreme danger.

On top of that, the visual and sound direction in this episode is absolutely phenomenal, every time an angel moves and the camera cuts with an audio sting it sends chills down my spine. On top of that, throughout so much of the episode it’s always framed so that the angel is never in the foreground, which is brilliant at hiding the mystery early on and then once the audience knows what’s going on, the trick becomes a fantastic method of creating tension, because you know that something’s about to go down the moment you notice one in the background.

On top of that, the episode is great at slowly revealing it’s mystery to you, as Sally’s friends slowly disappear, first getting a letter and Sally being in total denial about it, only to come to that tragic scene where she finds an old Billy in the hospital, not an hour after having a conversation with the young version of him. Then you’ve got the elements of The Doctor having the conversation already written out in front of him for the DVD that ends up fitting everything The Doctor says, it even creates that nice timey-wimey loop of Larry writing a transcript of the conversation from The Doctor on the DVD, only for Sally to give it to him so he can say it on the DVD, so who originally wrote it?

This is an episode that manages to nail making you think and throw you through a loop with the mystery, while still nailing the horror aspect of it and creating an iconic monster in the process.

1 – Utopia/The Sound of Drums/The Last of the Time Lords

This version of The Master is one that tends to divide opinion and it really depends what you want from your villains. If you prefer more serious menacing villains then this definitely won’t be for you, but if you’re more like me and prefer watching off-kilter psychopaths going around being psychopathic, then this is the best version of The Master there is.

As it stands, I think this was the right version of The Master to go with, not just because it’s the kind of villain I prefer, but because it’s the most interesting type of character to go up against Tennant’s Doctor. Tennant is a Doctor that often relies on being over the top with hyperactivity, making quips and bouncing off the walls while thinking his way out of problems, so I love the idea of a villain like this version of The Master, who forces The Doctor to act more seriously, while the villain himself is being rediculous all over the place. Not that I don’t see the appeal in a Master on the level of Anthony Head’s performance in School Reunion, but I think this one works best for the story being told.

First off, Utopia is an amazing episode all on its own. Derek Jacobi’s performance as Yana is absolutely inspired, the way he plays the confused old man that gives off the same vibes as The Doctor, only to suddenly turn into a menacing villain and nail that too is absolutely incredible to watch. The mystery builds so slowly and brilliantly, so when it finally hits the climax and everything goes bombastic it feels HUGE and the cliffhanger at the end of Utopia is my favourite cliffhanger in TV history.

Then we get into Sound of Drums and this is electric. Any time The Doctor and The Master are talking in some way it’s rivetting. The Doctor needs to stop The Master, but he still wants to hold on to the one part of Galifrey that wasn’t destroyed. More so than that, the chemistry Tennant and Simms have together is absolutely unstoppable, just listening to the two of them go back and forth weaves such a brilliant tapestry in the story that it really feels like these are two people who have known each other for centuries.

All three parts also do a great job of pushing Martha to her limits as a character, The Sounds of Drums systematically tears her life apart, taking away her family, her home and eventually even The Doctor, which is what makes The Last of the Time Lords so compelling to watch.

In The Last of the Time Lords, we’re not watching the crew attempt to stop something horrible from happening, The Master’s already won and has ruled over the Earth for a year. So we’re instead seeing a bunch of people who have nothing, try to build themselves back up take down The Master. It’s so clear that despite what Martha’s been doing for the year we didn’t see, she can’t forget the horror of what The Master did to the world and there’s also the worry that her family might not even be alive when she finally gets there.

This episode is what truly defines Martha as a character for me, because sure, The Doctor told her what to do and she undoubtedly had help from various people along the way, she travelled the war-torn world all on her own and became a totally different person because of it. No longer is she afraid to stare The Master in the eyes, or laugh in his face as he points his laser screwdriver at her. She spent so much time spreading this message around the world and it’s clear that all this time she was telling it, she started to believe in it too and became a better person because of it.

Say what you want about Tennant gaining Jesus powers as the solution to the episode, but I think it worked for the story. Setting up the archangel network as the downfall of the human race in the Sound of Drums, only for it to be the solution in The Last of the Time Lords was a very clever twist and I like the symbolism in the whole world being the ones to cause The Master’s downfall.

What’s even more compelling to watch is The Master’s breakdown once he knows he’s lost. Refusing to accept The Doctor’s forgiveness, threatening the Black Hole converters, only to realise that would be an incredibly stupid thing to do until finally beating The Doctor at his own game, be taking away the one thing he wanted more than anything else, another Time Lord. The Earth is safe and all the good guys survived, but in refusing to regenerate, The Master is causing The Doctor more pain than any death ever could and the moment where The Doctor is completely inconsolable as he holds The Master’s corpse in his arms is genuinely heartbreaking.

Everything in this finale pulls together so perfectly, all of the important characters get complete arches over the course of the three parts and by the end of it, you can clearly see the impact on each of them. Nothing is left as a loose end and there’s not a second wasted in terms of what’s shown on screen, it’s exactly what a series finale should be.

Every Octopath Traveler Protagonist Ranked

2021 UPDATE: Since I’ve got nothing better to do, I’ve decided to start streaming over on twitch.tv/strongstylesmark. At 2PM GMT Tuesdays & Thursdays I’ll be trying out indie games I’ve never played before, and at 6PM GMT on Saturdays, I’ll be playing games I love. I’ll be starting Saturday 16th January, so please come over and give me a follow to be notified when I go live!

Well, this is one I’ve been dreading…

As of July 13th, Octopath Traveler has been out in the world for a whole year. I absolutely adore this game and as of last week I just finished my second full playthrough on the PC version and I’m still as in love with it now as I was when I played it the first time around.

As I mentioned in my review of the game, one of the main things that makes this game so special is the characters, specifically the 8 travelers who you follow along their respective journeys; I only called them protagonists in the title because “Octopath Traveler Traveler” is a stupid title for stupid people, but I digress.

Design, personality, story, voice acting, gameplay; I’ll be taking all of these factors into account when making my rankings.

Before I rank these travelers, I will say that I love every single one of them, I think they are all well-written characters that I connect to in one way or another, however naturally I’m going to connect with some more than others. Moreso than perhaps any list I’ve ever done, this is VERY subjective, by the nature of the game, everyone will have had a different experience during their playthroughs with what characters they used the most, so I don’t expect this list to look even remotely similar to anyone else’s (especially number 1).

Now I’ve preemptively defended myself, let’s do this, here’s my ranked list of all 8 travelers in Octopath Traveler from worst to best.

…well that was a much better way of phrasing it.

Note: SPOILERS ahead for each of the traveler’s stories.

8 – Alfyn Greengrass

“Let me see to any bumps or scrapes, ya hear?”

I know. Honestly, if I could, I wouldn’t have put anyone last, but the only way to do that would be to not write this list.

Alfyn is a lovely guy, he’ll cure whatever it is that ales you and won’t charge you a leaf, but boy does he seem like a guy I’d get bored of if I knew him in real life.

Alfyn is a character who is extremely well versed in a single aspect of life, but terribly naive about everything else in the world around him. He gives off the vibe of a 10-year-old who’s trying really hard to be an adult but clearly doesn’t have the hang of it yet. His whole attitude to everyone and everything in the game gives off vibes of “Aw shucks, I’m just happy to be here” and while it’s adorable in its way, it doesn’t make for the most compelling of narratives.

Alfyn’s whole story seems to lack direction until the final chapter if you ask me. He encounters a few people, mostly Ogen, who challenge the way he views the world, but for the most part, he seems to just brush them off, almost arrogantly thinking he knows better. Don’t get me wrong, it’s refreshing to see a character who is pure and pure can be, but I can’t help but think things would’ve been a bit more interesting if there was a darker side to him. Coming across someone like Vanessa didn’t really mean a great deal to Alfyn because there were no similarities to be drawn between the two of them, Vanessa used her knowledge for evil, but Alfyn wouldn’t dream of anything of the sort, wouldn’t it have been so much more interesting if Alfyn started slipping down the same road as Vanessa, but sees the extremes Vanessa goes to and waking up? It would’ve provided a lot more growth than what Alfyn actually gets.

As a party member, Alfyn can be incredibly useful. I never really cracked the knack of his “Concoct” skill, but the apothecary class is so incredibly useful with its skill that it doesn’t matter. Not only does it work wonderfully as a support class it has the good offensive coverage that a class like Dancer lacks, making it work for a primary class since Axes are strong melee weapons and seemingly almost every enemy in the game has a weakness to it. In my most recent playthrough of the game, I found combining Alfyn’s apothecary class with the secondary class of Dancer (and later Starseer) made for a fantastic support character that could still pack a punch in a pinch (alliteration is fun!).

Like I said at the top, Alfyn is a wonderful and pure boy who always makes me smile when he comes out with his unadulterated optimism and cheesy quips, but I really would’ve liked to see more growth to the character as his story unfolded. I just don’t feel like the Alfyn at the end of Chapter 4 is a different person to the Alfyn at the start of Chapter 1 and he’s the only traveler I can say that of too. I’d certainly buy him a mug of mead though.

7 – Primrose Azelhart

“May I have this dance?”

I never really warmed to Primrose a great deal and unfortunately, it’s got nothing to do with her story, but more her gameplay. The problem with the Dancer class is that, as great as it is as a secondary class, it’s awful as a primary one. As an almost entirely support based class it isn’t helpful when you’re trying to use the character as one of your main party members, especially in the early game, her Elemental Attack leaves a lot to be desired and the only time I could get any real damage out of her is when I gave her a ridiculously OP dagger for that point in the game. I know that the dancer class isn’t designed to deal damage, but to have one of your four party members be completely defenceless is a pain in the arse early on so I never really kept her in the party for long.

From a personality standpoint, it’s also a little difficult to warm to a character who actively tries to shut herself off from everyone around her. Her whole MO is that she’s out for herself and that’s pretty much it, you get the sense that there’s a softer, kinder side to her in various travel banter scenes and perhaps that comes out of the character more once she’s avenged her father’s death and made peace, but we don’t get to see that part of the story, so we’ll never know.

While I don’t warm to Primrose as a person, I respect her as an individual. As she says at different points in her story, she dances for herself and herself alone, she’s easily had the toughest life of any of the travelers, yet she gives the impression of someone who hasn’t let it get to her all that much. She has her moments of weakness like anyone would in her situation, but she uses her tough life to bolster her motivations and stand stronger than she did before. Those looks back to her as an innocent child growing up in a wealthy household give a depressing window into what kind of a person she could’ve become because it contrasts so heavily to the Primrose we see on her journey.

Primrose is a character who keeps her emotions under wraps as much as possible and soldiers on no matter what awful things are happening to her, unfortunately, that makes a character that is hard to connect with, even though they are a very deep person when you view their life as a whole.

6 – Olberic Eisenberg

“My blade is UNBENDING!”

Olberic is the closest thing to a celebrity we encounter in Ocopath Traveler (not counting royalty), but he never acts stuck up or arrogant because of it, in fact for the most part he tries to hide his identity.

While at face value, Obleric’s story is one of vengeance, as it unfolds you slowly see that it’s more about an identity crisis. A warrior like Olberic associated his identity so heavily with the king and country he wields his sword in protection of, so without that, what is he supposed to do with himself? While he does seek out Erhardt for revenge, he also seeks him out for answers, to understand why he did what he did, the tournament was a great way to bring this identity crisis to Olberic’s attention, he sees each man he fights is fighting for something or someone and it takes a while for Olberic to realise what that reason is for him.

Olberic’s story ends with him in the same place as he started and he’s not necessarily changed a great deal as a person, except for one key difference, he understands who he is now and he knows what he wants to spend the rest of his life doing. The Olberic we saw at the start sees living in Cobbleston as a stop-gap until he can discover Erhardt’s whereabouts, but the Olberic that returns to Cobbleston at the end sees it as a home with a duty to protect those who live there.

When it comes to gameplay, the Warrior is definitely the best offensive non-advanced class. The sword strike are powerful and have the option to target one or all foes, along with lance attacks that provide great coverage for weaknesses, combined with the Hunter class (or eventually Warmaster) you have an all-out power character that can also tank a decent amount of damage to boot.

So, I’ve done nothing but praise Olberic in this entry, so why is he so low? Well honestly, it’s because I’ve never really played with him in my party very often, in fact, he’s the only character that’s never spent an extended amount of time in the party over my two playthroughs. Both times I started far away from Olberic on the world map, so by the time I got to him, I already had other characters that filled his roll so he was a bit redundant. With more time I’m sure I’d grow a larger fondness for Olberic, but as it stands, I haven’t had much time to get to know the guy.

5 – Therion

“Come on, I’ve got better things to do.”

Unlike most of the other travelers, we never find out Therion’s surname, which in a weird way adds to his character. Therion is a man who had tried very hard to build an aura of mystique around him, he works alone, doesn’t make friends and simply does the job he needs to do. He has a very bad attitude towards other people, which is why it was key to his story to strip away that aura so we could see the man that lies beneath.

While it would be so easy to dismiss Therion as an edgelord who just wants people to see how cool he is, there’s so much more to it than that. Finding out about Darius’ betrayal is a key point to this story because watching all of the flashbacks you realise that the Therion before Darius betrayed him, is almost unrecognisable from the Therion after the fact. That betrayal changed him into a cold, untrusting man who believes the whole world is out to get him, and really the first couple of chapters of his story seem to confirm that belief.

He’s baited into a trap by Heathcote and Cordelia and then blackmailed to go on a journey he couldn’t be bothered with, before being shown multiple examples of friends and brothers turning their backs on each other for one reason or another. The whole world seems to be reaffirming Therion’s idea that no-one is to be trusted, which is what makes Cordelia such a key character to Therion’s story. Here we have someone who suffered a similar betrayal to Therion and yet is still just as open and trust as ever and watching Therion try to deal with it makes for such a good story. He just can’t comprehend how someone could still believe in other people after what she’d gone through and while we don’t see him fully open up and trust people again in his story, it’s clear the attitude of Cordelia has wormed its way into his mind and you get the impression that he’s going to slowly change his ways.

The Thief class is surprisingly versatile, there are abilities like Armour Corrosive that are great at assisting others in their striking capabilities, but skills like HP/SP Theif and Aeber’s Reckoning still pack quite a mighty punch. I’m not sure what secondary classes work best, although I had some success with both Merchant and Runelord, nothing has quite lept out at me as a perfect fit for the class just yet; not to mention, the fact that you need Therion to open purple chests means he pretty much has a reserved slot in the party.

Therion is a guy who’s exceptionally closed off and moody, but unlike Primrose, the story goes to great lengths to strip that away and show us the soft person that lives underneath that armour. He’s a fascinating look at what can happen to people who try to be something they’re not, but God I wish I could be even half as cool as him.

4 – Cyrus Albright

“Now the true lesson begins!”

Cyrus is my kind of guy, someone who is unabashedly obsessed with something and that passion for it comes out in every single word he says. Cyrus could quite happily sit in the library studying tomes for days just to translate a single sentence of ancient text and he wouldn’t have a care in the world about how much time has passed.

When Cyrus speaks about how he believes knowledge is something to be shared and passed on, not hoarded I truly believe in his sentiments because of vigour with which he says them. His confrontation with Lucia is absolutely perfect at framing this, the debate those two have over how knowledge is supposed to be treated is honestly one of the most rivetting cutscenes in the whole game because of just how well performed both parts are, it genuinely felt like two opposing ideologies clashing in a major way.

Cyrus’ dedication to his studies does, however, lead to a lot of unintentional comedy at his expense however since he seems to be totally oblivious to everything else in life. I normally don’t care for every female character in sight swooning over a guy, but the fact that it’s Cyrus, who probably doesn’t even notice a difference between men and women, makes it absolutely hilarious. I can’t help but smile at scenes like his one with Ophilia where he just doesn’t understand what the problem is with stating a woman’s beauty in the flowery, over-flattering way that he does, to him it’s just a fact and facts must be shared with others, it’s adorable and I wouldn’t want him any other way.

The scholar class is an interesting one, it’s very useful early on in the game, but once you have the Sorcerer advanced class it becomes pretty useless since it’s entirely focused on elemental attacks, which Sorcerer does much better, although Cyrus’ talent that instantly reveals a weakness of an enemy is very useful indeed.

Cyrus is a man who is driven by his passion for knowledge and the desire to be able to pass that knowledge on, while his relative naivete about many other aspects of his life makes for a character that always makes me smile whenever he talks.

3 – Tressa Colzione

“Now to seal the deal!”

Tressa is everything about the joy of youth captured in a character. Almost nothing gets Tressa down, even in her lowest moments, it doesn’t take her long to pick herself up off of the ground and push forward full of determination. She takes the time to find the joy in everything she does and as she rambles on about all of her passions and travels, I can hear the smile in her voice.

Having her as a merchant was a very interesting idea for the character too, because it means she’s very smart and savvy – she doesn’t let much get by her – but she’s also still got that level of naivete that comes with being that young. She does all she can to see the best in people, sometimes to her detriment but she refuses to let any bad experiences sour her view on the world. She meets someone like Ali who totally undercuts her profits, which she’s salty about, but when he needs help, she won’t hesitate to lend a hand because the joy in her life comes from the people around her and bringing the smiles and joy out them; be that through being a good friend or selling them something they’ll truly treasure, it’s what makes her tick.

There’s not a great deal of complexity there, but there doesn’t really need to be. In her journey, she has her view on the world challenged, but she sticks true to herself and finds exactly what she was looking for out of her time away from home; she knows what she wants, and she keeps going until she finds it. Tressa doesn’t change as a person all that much in her story, but that’s because her story is about her changing everyone around her. She gets a softer, more sensitive side out of Ali and inspires Noa to stay strong and go on a journey of her own, despite her condition.

On top of that, the Merchant class is a deceivingly powerful one. The Transfer Rune & Sidestep combo is well known by now of course, but you’ve also got the invaluable skills of Donate BP which is always useful and Hired Help which can be extremely powerful if you have the cash to spare.

I always like a character that is unabashedly happy and joyous all the time, but the difference between Tressa and Alfyn is that Alfyn’s happiness seems a little forced and like nothing ever phases him, but with Tressa that happiness is built into her character and absolutely flows out of her whenever she’s on-screen.

2 – Ophilia Clement

“The flame guides us true.”

Ophilia is quite simply the purest human to ever live.

From her flowing blonde hair to her pure white robes, everything about Ophilia is clean, soft and elegant. Every single one of her actions in her story is motivated by doing kindness for other people: She takes on the kindling so Lianna can stay with the dying archbishop; the only reason anything happens in her Chapter 2 story is simply because she wanted to chat with some children and help them out; She puts herself in harms way to rescue the Bishop’s daughter in Goldshore and she does everything she can to pull Lianna out of the pit of despair she falls into.

Nothing sways Ophilia from her belief that the is kindness in every living creature, no matter how bleak things look for her. The irony in the way Ophilia acts is that it’s motivated by an incredibly traumatic childhood, she lost her parents and was taken into a family that she could never truly call her own, even when they welcomed her with open arms. She can never bring herself to call the archbishop “father” because it just doesn’t feel right to her and yet at the same time she’s dedicated herself to expressing the kindness to everyone else that these people have shown to her.

What’s more, is she’s willing to stand up and fight for those beliefs when they’re challenged. I feel that emotion in her voice as refuses to let Mattias get the better of her, as she defends her belief that kindness and love will always win over the darkness, she refuses to be moved because the highs and lows in her life have made her so much stronger than anyone could imagine.

Not only is she a wonderful person, but she’s an extremely strong party member to boot. Cleric is a fantastic class with widespread healing, reflective counters and powerful elemental attacks, I find Ophilia tends to have the most powerful elemental offence of anyone on my team, especially when she’s given the Sorceror class, she’s an absolute mainstay of my team.

Ophilia is a character with many layers to her past and her motivations as to why she does what she does and she stands firm when those motivations are challenged or called into question. No character in the game is kinder or purer than Ophilia, but you’d also be hard-pressed to find anyone mentally stronger than her.

1 – H’aanit

“Standest thou against me? Then be hunted!”

Thy may speakest liken a twat, but goddamnest I loven everything abouted thou.

I did consider writing like that for the whole thing, but that one sentence took 5 minutes so sod it.

H’aanit was the first traveler I picked when starting up the game, so I don’t think it’s that surprising that I like her as much as I do, since across my two full playthroughs there’s literally never been a time when she wasn’t in my party and that’s the kind of thing that tends to endear you to a character.

I know most people hate how she speaks, but I find it pretty cute. It’s so unnecessary that I can’t help but wonder how such a speaking pattern evolved in S’warkii. Did one guy just start doing it one day and everyone caught on? Did they just never move on from a time where it was commonplace? Either way, I think it helps exemplify who H’aanit is a character, someone who doesn’t quite fit in with the world around her.

She’s a respected village member in S’warkii of course, but I always got the impression that she didn’t have a close connection with anyone there other than Z’aanta. Immediately the story takes away the only person she had a real connection with in the world and it makes it so interesting to watch her try to fit in with all of the other characters in the world because you can tell she feels a bit out of her depth, yet soldiers on anyway.

Even things like the travel banter with the other travelers shows us that she doesn’t understand a great deal about the world outside her village, constantly asking questions to understand why many of the other travelers do what they do in their stories. Even when she starts to understand, she can’t help but draw parallels to hunting, because that’s all she really knows, it’s the only context she has with which to understand the world and I can’t help but find a character like that extremely endearing.

The changes in her at the end of heE story are subtle, but when you think about them, they’ll make a huge impact on her life. In her early chapters, it often feels like she’s feigning confidence in unfamiliar situations and towns and there’s always that small sense of nervous energy to her, but by the final chapter that’s gone; it’s not fake confidence anymore, it’s the real deal. H’aanit was forced to experience the world without the one person she could rely on to teach her and it’s made her an infinitely better-rounded person. Saying she “becomes the master” is a bit of a stretch, but I definitely get the feeling that she’s got a new outlook on both the world and herself by the time her story comes to an end. It’s so subtle and yet so powerful.

Looking at the gameplay side of things, H’aanit is an absolute powerhouse if you build her correctly. Combining her abilities with that of the Warrior job makes for an extremely powerful physical attacker that can buff the rest of the party in the process; not to mention Leghold Trap is one of the most vital skills in the whole game. In the late game, giving her the Warmaster skill makes her pretty much unstoppable, easily being able to deal out over 50K damage per hit with WinnehIlds Battle Cry. I don’t know where I’d be without her on my team.

H’aanit is a character that I feel like very few people like as much as I do and I can see why, but my personal experiences with the character have made me connect with her so much that I can’t help but draw myself towards her whenever I can.

Oh and also, she has a Snow Leopard that’s one of the most beautiful animals I’ve ever seen, so shove it.

So that’s it! Those are my rankings of every traveler in Octopath Traveler. Thank you very much for taking the time to read this article, let me know what travelers you like best either in the comments below on Twitter @10ryawoo. Make sure to come back next weekend, where we’ll be going back to the world of Doctor Who!

10 Best Tracks from Octopath Traveler

WARNING: This list will contain major SPOILERS for several traveler’s stories and post-game content.

Yes, I know I’m one week late to celebrate the 1 year anniversary of Octopath Traveler’s release, but there was a WWE Pay-Per-View on, so I had to cover that instead. Regardless, I’m making it up to you with not just one, but two articles all about Octopath Traveler this weekend, one today and one on Sunday.

The first of these is the part of a game that always sticks with me the longest. Moreso than the story, the characters or even the gameplay, what sticks with me for the longest time after I’m finished with a game is the music. With each passing year, my Spotify playlist is becoming more and more filled with game OST’s and Octopath Traveler’s soundtrack is most definitely my overall favourite.

The soundtrack has just about everything you could want, there are touching slow tracks, exhilaratingly fast tracks and just about everything in between and as of right now, it’s the only game soundtrack that I own a physical CD of, I love it that much.

Naturally, picking 10 tracks was always going to be a tricky task that led to me leaving some great tracks off of the list like H’annit, the Hunter; A Settlement in the Red Bluffs and Battle II, which are all honourable mentions. Also, I know it’s obvious, but this is the internet so I still need to stress that these are my opinions. Music is one of the most subjective things out there in the world and naturally, this list will revolve around my tastes (loud and fast over soft and slow, generally) so don’t feel insulted if I left off a track you really like.

Anyway, let’s get on with it, shall we?

10 – Tressa, the Merchant

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The traveler’s themes were an absolute stroke of genius by the composer of this soundtrack, Yasunori Nishiki. The idea of having an instrument to represent each of the travelers is such a great idea and I think they nailed which instrument should be used for each traveler.

In Tressa’s case, we have the harmonica, which seemed odd to me at first, but I realised how well it fits a travelling merchant. A harmonica is the kind of instrument you can fit in your pocket and, as far as instruments go, it’s one of the easier ones to get a base level understanding off, which is exactly the kind of oddity a travelling merchant might pick up in their journeys. On top of that, it strikes in me feelings of youth an innocent and since Tressa is the youngest of the travelers, it’s perfect.

The melody encapsulates who Tressa is so well, there’s the chimes and violin in the background that hint at her inquisitive and slightly cheeky nature, with the harmonica there going through highs and lows to convey her desire to break free of the small little town she’s in and see the world. Even when the harmonica sinks into those lower notes, there’s still this cheerful tone to it, Tressa would love to get out of her little town but she’s still happy living there and is determined to make the most of every day and get the best deal possible.

This track invokes those feelings of optimism in me and brings out that cheerful and cheeky side that so often gets dragged down in life.

9 – They Who Govern Reason

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I’ll level with you, a lot of this list is going to be battle themes.

The advanced job bosses were definitely my favourite battles in the whole game, they struck that perfect level of challenge where, even when I was over-levelled, I had to go in with a strategy and change it on the fly when things went wrong, not to mention the rewards were so great that I wanted to get them as soon as possible, so I was usually under-levelled instead.

This music fits the idea of these battles so well, the track can almost be split into two halves, the first half with the violins seems almost jovial, with how the melody bounces along, which makes sense in a way. These beings aren’t threatening to destroy the world, or even trying to kill you, they’re just testing you to see if you’re worthy of wielding the power they’re going to bestow upon you.

Then all of a sudden the track flips and becomes a lot more threatening and sinister as the drums and deep trumpets come in to remind you that, though they may not be out to get you, these beings your fighting are still Gods of some description, they’re not going to go down easy even in a situation like this.

This track manages to cut a great balance between bringing both the fun and the intensity of the battles that it plays in and it’s able to switch between the two so seamlessly to boot.

8 – Olberic, the Warrior

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Olberic is an inherently tragic character, not quite as tragic as Primrose admittedly, but he’s still a man with a past that troubles him, with failures he feels he’s responsible for.

This track is able to capture that sense of tragedy that lies in Olberic’s character, the whole thing has an innate sadness to the whole track mostly thanks to the violins that start off the track, they create this very downtrodden picture in my mind of that deserted battlefield where Olberic met his downfall. Then the trumpets start playing alongside the violin the image changes.

The violins swell into much higher notes as those trumpets kick in and I can just see Olberic staring out over that long-dead battlefield that he used to call home.  Those trumpets then become the main focus of the melody, representing Olberic as he stands tall, living to fight another day. Olberic is someone who takes a lot of pride in wielding his blade and I get that attitude when I listen to the trumpets in this song. They’re mighty and strong, but flawed and there’s this underlying sadness to them that hits me every time I hear this track.

7 – Battle III

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The random encounter themes in Octopath are all brilliant, but this is the one that stands out the most to me. Each one of the “Battle” tracks does such a good job of building and adding to the previous ones. The melodies aren’t the same of course, but the intensity and scale of the tracks slowly increase as you get into higher and higher levelled areas, culminating in this adrenaline fuelled piece of music.

First of all, the opening is my favourite opening to any track on the album, the quick lead in with the drums, the little taste of the main melody on the violins before everything stops so the trumpets can do their bit and then we’re right into the battle. The pace in this track is a mile a minute, which is exactly what it should be, because when you get to these high-level areas you start coming across some crazy enemies and you should have your strongest attacks to unleash by this point, meaning this is exactly what these battles feel like.

Not only that, but the track also does a good job of mimicking the ebb and flow of a battle through its melody. By the very nature of the turn-based combat, these fights have a lot of back and forth to them and I can feel that in the way the violins behave here. They’ll burst forth with energy for a few seconds before taking a quick breather and coming back in just as strong. I didn’t flee from many encounters while playing Octopath, and this music is one of the biggest reasons why.

6 – Cyrus, the Scholar

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Cyrus is an incredibly grandiose and joyous character. He’s bold and grand in everything he does, but he also takes a great deal of fun out of all of his work that’s exactly the emotions this tracks conveys to me.

I can imagine Cyrus standing there at the head of his class while this music plays, excitedly spouting all of the knowledge he’s gained over the years to these young people that sit before him because that’s what he loves to do. There’s an elegance to the track that completely fits with how I imagine Cyrus carries himself when teaching, how I imagine he reads and writes for days on end, buried in his studies so deeply that he barely even notices the passage of time.

The passion, the wisdom, the charm. Everything that makes Cyrus who he is is there in this track, elegantly gliding about the stage as the violins swell into those high notes, mimicking Cyrus’ many passionate (and slightly over the top) speeches he makes throughout the game of the value of knowledge and his desire to pass all his knowledge on to others.

Personally, I don’t think any of the other traveler themes capture the essence of who the character is quite as well as Cyrus’ track does here. Whenever this track hits my ears, I instantly think Cyrus and it makes the picture of him in my mind very clear.

5 – Daughter of the Dark God

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It was always going to be an opera singer, wasn’t it?

The final boss of Octopath Traveler always felt like a huge deal to me, after 50+ hours of bringing these travelers through to the conclusions of their journey’s, we’re faced with what all of the loose ends were drawing to, fighting the long-sealed away God of darkness Galdera.

As Lyblac steps into the darkness to unleash Galdera, I got that sense that everything had been building up this and what better music to back up this fight for the ages. That almost heavenly voice of the opera singer feels like it’s the soul of Galdera finally breaking free and being able to show the world it’s true power. I don’t know what the lyrics are, but I know there are words like “death” and “annihilation” scattered in there, it gives that sense of foreboding that this is Galdera’s time to shine, not yours, you’re just standing in their way.

Then, once the opera singer has finished the track moves into an epic crescendo, that is exactly what imagined the final boss battle of this game to sound like. The way those violins hit those high notes is that force of the travelers and their will to stop Galdera from wreaking havoc upon the world, only for the singer to come back in and the two fight each other for dominance in the track, mimicking the battle for the fate of the world you’re currently engaged in.

This is by far the toughest battle in the whole game and this music does a great job of capturing the menace of what stands before you, but keeping that sense of hope there throughout the fight.

4 – Decisive Battle II

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Decisive Battle II is a track that wastes no time in getting you pumped up for the boss battle ahead. While Decisive Battle I focuses more on being menacing, edition II of the track tries to intimidate you through sheer power and speed.

The track immediately hits you with sharp violin notes backed up by trumpets and cymbals, which is such a great intro for some of the boss battles in the game, it gets you straight in the mood for action while also being a shock to the system and somewhat intimidating. Then the orchestra kicks into full gear and we get another battle theme that is able to capture the ebb and flow of a battle, the main melody pushes back and forth between high and low notes so smoothly you can feel when the tide in the battle turns thanks to the movements.

Ever now and then the trumpets will kick back in, signalling those big power moves you can bust out in Octopath that do a crazy amount of damage. There’s also a slight elegance to the melody in between the grand moments with the trumpets, that I think really helps me picture what these battles would actually look like in real-time were this a film instead.

Decisive Battle II is a track that’s not afraid to go very big, very fast in order to capture the epic scale of some of the boss battles you face in Octopath, while still keeping a level of nuance in there that makes this soundtrack so great to listen to.

3 – Determination

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This track is most definitely the one that gets the strongest level of emotion out of me.

That’s partly thanks to how it generally plays during the most emotionally charged scenes of the stories, specifically when low characters are picking themselves up at long last. The melody is so simple and yet I find it incredibly powerful, the way the oboe slowly rises it’s notes until it transitions into the violins that carry on the melody as drums, and trumpets start to come in and back it up.

When it comes in at moments like when Primrose is standing on that stage, confronting Simeon I can’t help but well up as she makes her stand, not letting this horrible man put her down again and again. Drawing comparisons to movies, I can absolutely see this playing in the background as the protagonist makes their rousing speech to huge cheers from the audience.

I talk so much about how much I connected with the characters and stories in Octopath, but I don’t think I could’ve connected anywhere near as much without tracks like this.

2 – Main Theme

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This is the kind of track that I probably wouldn’t care that much for under any other circumstances, but the amount of emotion and connection that I now have thanks to this song makes it so wonderful to hear.

It starts off so peaceful and slow with the lone flute and the violins softly in the background and the whole thing slowly but surely builds up, looping the main melody three times throughout the track, but each time adding more and more to the orchestra, making everything feel so much grander, it almost mimics the pattern on the character’s journey. They start out on their own, setting off from their quiet home town, before slowly going out there and exploring the vast world, meeting so many new people and facing tougher challenges along the way.

Not only that, but I think this is the track that best encapsulates what the Octopath Traveler soundtrack is like, because as the track progresses and more and more instruments get added it really does seem to have a bit of everything. I remember listening to this music reach a climax as the credits rolled on my first playthrough of the game and it genuinely brought a tear to my eye.

This is the track that most resembles Octopath Traveler in my mind and listening to it brings back all these wonderful memories of the times I’ve had Orsterra.

1 – Battle at Journey’s End

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When Battle at Journey’s End begins to play emotions are always at the highest, this is the final battle, everything this traveler has suffered through in their journey has led up to this battle here where it’s all on the line (especially if you forgot to save beforehand), so these battles really needed a piece of music that captured that level of emotion so here we are.

Battle at Journey’s End is a closest a track from a video game comes to flawless if you ask me. The quick grand hits from the orchestra to start off the track gets us straight into the heat of things and then the violins that carry the melody instil the flow of the battle into the music while the bass guitar and drums in the background keep everything feeling extremely intense.

Then when the next section of the track hits, I always tear up because the raw power of the emotion behind this section is so strong that I can’t help but cry. The melody of the flute and trumpets as they reach their high notes click so well with me and when that melody repeats for a third time, with the lone flute hitting as high notes as are humanly possible as the drums and bass guitar in the background serve to emphasise it, I feel all of the emotions I’ve built up over the course of the journey pour out of me.

The track does an amazing job of capturing that sense of the final step in a journey, it’s always the toughest step of all, but it’s also the best one. This track manages to make the final battle feel epic, high stakes and threatening while keeping the emotions of everything that’s happened up until that point running high, truely investing me, in the journey’s end.

So that’s it! Those are my favourite tracks from the Octopath Traveler soundtrack. Thank you very much for taking the time to read this article and let me know what some of your favourite tracks are, either in the comments below or on Twitter @10ryawoo.

Make sure you come back this time on Sunday when I’ll be continuing the celebration by ranking all 8 travelers!

Ranking Every Former NXT Champion Since Their Main Roster Debut (Part 3)

Read part 1 here.
Read part 2 here.

Now we enter the final five. These are the NXT alumni who have done pretty darn well for themselves since coming to the main roster and is a nice reminder that sometimes, WWE doesn’t mess everything up.

5 – Sasha Banks

Days as NXT Women’s Champion: 191
Called Up On: Raw 7/13/15
Best Match Since Callup: vs CharlotteFlair vs Becky Lynch at     Wrestlemania 32
Championships Since Callup: 4x Raw Women’s Championship, 1x Women’s Tag Team Championship

Given what’s currently going on with Sasha Banks, it made her a little harder to place on the list, but that doesn’t take away from what she’s already achieved.

Sasha Banks debuted alongside Charlotte Flair and Becky Lynch during Stephanie McMahon’s announcement that they were going to stop treating women’s wrestling like shit on your shoe (my words, not theirs). She was paired with Naomi and Tamina to form “Team B.A.D” or “Beautiful and Dangerous”, with Naomi being “Beautiful”, Sasha being “Dangerous” and Tamina being “And”.

Unfortunately for the team, the main crux of the feud ended up being between The Bellas and Charlotte, so Team B.A.D were very quickly swept to one side and didn’t really get a chance to do a whole lot of anything. Banks would soon strike out on her own, interfering in a Divas Championship match between Charlotte and Becky at the 2016 Royal Rumble, declaring herself to no longer be part of the group.

This lead to 2016 where Sasha Banks was always somewhere in the women’s title scene. After being unsuccessful at Wrestlemania 32, she would disappear from TV for a couple of months, until she eventually returned to launch into her memorable feud with Charlotte, during which she would win, and subsequently lose the Raw Women’s Championship 3 times over roughly 6 months. Many worried whether the constant “hot-potatoing” of the Women’s Championship was devaluing it, but as we can see today, it didn’t hurt the title at all and did wonders for raising the stock of both women involved.

Banks remained around the Raw Women’s Title scene through Wrestlemania 33, where she was unsuccessful in the Fatal 4 Way match against Bayley, Charlotte and Nia Jax. Once Alexa Bliss was done destroying Bayley’s credibility after Wrestlemania, Sasha challenged her for the Raw Women’s Championship, failing at Great Balls of Fire, but succeeding at Summerslam, claiming her 4th singles championship on the main roster.

It wasn’t to last, however, as Sasha lost the title back to Alexa 8 days later and would quickly fade away from the title scene. Banks then wouldn’t do much of any consequence until the announcement of the Women’s Tag Team Championships, where Bayley and Sasha would be crowned the first ever champions.

This brings us to the awkward topic of Sasha’s current status in WWE which is…unknown. Reportedly she was extremely unhappy at having to lose the titles to the IIocnics at Wrestlemania as the pair were promised a lengthy reign, she was given time off to think about her future. This time off was supposed to end on the night of Money in the Bank, but she’s still not shown her face.

Whether she stays with WWE or goes elsewhere, Sasha Banks has been instrumental in the rise of women’s wrestling in WWE, she’s put on countless great matches over the years, and wherever she decides to go, I’m sure she’ll be putting on many more.

4 – Finn Balor

Days as NXT Champion: 292
Called Up On: Smackdown 7/19/16
Best Match Since Callup: vs Seth Rollins vs The Miz at Wrestlemania 34
Championships Since Callup: 1x Universal Championship,                       2x Intercontinental Championship

In terms of debuts, you couldn’t ask for a much better sequence of events.

Finn Balor was called up on the night of the 2016 brand split, and was among the first 5 picks, up there with Seth Rollins, WWE Champion Dean Ambrose and AJ Styles, so it was clear he was going to be treated as a big deal. The next week, on Raw Balor, would win a Fatal 4 Way match, and then Roman Reigns 1 on 1 in the same night to win the chance to face Seth Rollins at Summerslam to crown the first ever Universal Champion.

Granted, it could be argued that Roman Reigns was still in the doghouse a little following his suspension, but whether that’s the case or not a clean, singles win over Roman Reigns is something not many people can say they’ve done in this era. More so than that, Finn ended up winning the match at Summerslam and became the first Universal Champion in WWE history which, no matter how much you hate that belt, is a big deal.

Unfortunately, this achievement wouldn’t last long as Balor suffered an injury in that match and the next night on Raw, was forced to vacate the Universal Championship and take 8 months off healing up. When Balor returned, there wasn’t really a lot going for him, Brock was now Universal Champion so he couldn’t get anywhere near that scene, he started a feud with Bray Wyatt going into the summer of 2017, and while Balor did win, the feud itself wasn’t overly interesting and was in danger of going into downright awful territory if the universe didn’t intervene and give Bray Wyatt the mumps, stopping their final match from happening.

Over the next year or so, Balor would have some standout moments, like a hard-fought victory over AJ Styles, lasting in the 2018 Royal Rumble for over an hour and one of the best matches on the Wrestlemania 34 card against Seth Rollins and The Miz, but it never felt like the company was ever going to get behind him as a big star like they did when he first debuted. Balor would spend most of the rest of 2018 in a boring feud with Baron Corbin until 2019 arrived and Balor’s fortunes changed once again.

Balor got the opportunity to fight Brock Lesnar for the Universal Championship at the Royal Rumble 2019 PPV, and he beat John Cena in order to get that opportunity in the first place. Balor wouldn’t come out victorious int hat encounter, but he took the beast to town for a large portion of the match, and he came out of the match looking better than when he went in. Then, in the build to Wrestlemania 35 this year, Balor feuded with Bobby Lashley, capturing the Intercontinental Championship from Lashley twice, at both Elimination Chamber and Wrestlemania, and he still holds the title to this day.

It’s undeniable that Balor’s time on main roster has had a lot of crap moments, but honestly, I’d struggle to find someone who hasn’t suffered that at some point in their careers. Balor has had more highlights than most in the WWE have had int he past few years, and he’s almost always taken full advantage of those opportunities and has made a big star of himself, that I’m sure will only get bigger over the coming decade.

3 – Kevin Owens

Days as NXT Champion: 142
Called Up On: 5/15/15
Best Match Since Callup: Kevin Owens at Elimination Chamber 2015
Championships Since Callup: 1x Universal Championship,                                      2x Intercontinental Championship, 3x United States Championship

I know I complimented Balor’s debut, but Owen’s debut is by far the best of anyone on this list.

Kevin Owens was the first former NXT Champion to really be treated like a big deal when he made his way to the main roster. At the time of his debut, Owens was actually still NXT Champion, and he came out to answer John Cena’s weekly open challenge for the US title, much like his former best friend Sami Zayn had done not too long ago. Owens didn’t come out to have a match though, instead, Owens cut a scathing promo on Cena, including a brilliant touch of Owens pointing out his 15 years of experience when Cena tried to give him some “veteran advice”.

This animosity boiled over to a full-blown feud, the first match of which took place at the Elimination Chamber 2015 PPV, wherein one of the most shocking results in recent memory, Kevin Owens pinned John Cena clean as a whistle. In later years this wouldn’t be as big of a deal, but in 2015 it was still an absolute shock to see Cena lose clean like that, and to a rookie in the debut match no less, it was clear big things were on the horizon for Owens. Following two straight losses to Cena of course.

Once Owens had moved on from Cena, he challenged and defeated Ryback for the Intercontinental Championship in what wouldn’t be a super long reign, but in this time he did get a high profile spot at Survivor Series, making it to the semi-finals of a tournament for the then vacant, WWE Championship. Owens would lose the IC title to Ambrose at the end of 2015 but would gain it back just before Fastlane 2016 and hold onto it until Wrestlemania 32.

After a few months of placeholder feuds, the 2016 brand split came about and did wonders for Kevin Owens, firstly it partnered him with Chris Jericho in what would become one of the most entertaining pairs on Raw for the rest of the year, and following Balor’s unfortunate injury, Owens was crowned Universal Champion. This title reign would be somewhat underwhelming, with most of his retentions coming through interference or disqualification, and he would constantly be made to look a fool in non-title matches, however it was a fairly long reign and he was always the main focus of Raw during that time, which is more than can be said for many champions.

After losing the title to Goldberg in humiliation, Owens went into a feud with Chris Jericho, whom he had turned on a couple of weeks prior at the excellent “Festival of Friendship” segment. Owens came out victorious at Wrestlemania and gain the United States Championship in the process and dub himself “The New Face of America”. Owens lost and quickly regained the title twice during this period, before eventually losing it for good to AJ Styles thanks to a surprise return from Chris Jericho. Owens’ feud with Styles was pretty heavily marred by wonky finishes and Shane McMahon getting involved at almost every opportunity, so this was quite the low point for Owens.

Owens then focused solely on Shane McMahon and the two would have a brutal feud, including a Hell in a Cell match where Owens would reunite with his former best friend Sami Zayn. At this point, the feud got quite confusing and boring, as Shane and General Manager Daniel Bryan were bickering over how blatantly biased Shane was against Owens and Zayn even though the story was still trying to present Shane as the good guy.

After several months and an awful feud with Styles where Owens and Zayn would lose to Styles despite having a 2 on 1 advantage, the feud would culminate when Daniel Bryan was medically cleared to compete after 3 years on the shelf and Bryan & Shane put Owens & Zayn away at Wrestlemania 34. Following Wrestlemania, Owens & Zayn were both moved to Raw and Owens wouldn’t do a whole lot of anything except for constantly being destroyed by Braun Strowman until he would sadly be taken out of action with an injury.

Owens would quickly recover upon returning though, as, in early 2019, he returned to Smackdown live as a babyface, replacing Kofi Kingston in the WWE title match at Fastlane in the process. That match would later become a triple threat including Mustafa Ali and it would be very good, although Daniel Bryan would end up retaining. Owens was left out of the Wrestlemania 35 card, but instantly was thrown back into the WWE title mix following the show of shows, turning heel on the New Day and challenging Kofi Kingston for the WWE Championship in a feud that doesn’t look like it’s going to end anytime soon.

As much as the negatives can make things seem a lot worse than they are, Owens has had a really good time of it on main roster. He’s almost always been in one of the major stories on whichever show he’s on and spent a good couple of years in contention for one title or another, and given what’s been going on since his 2019 return, it doesn’t look like that’s going to change anytime soon.

2 – Charlotte Flair

Days as NXT Women’s Champion: 258
Called Up On: Raw 7/13/15
Best Match Since Callup: vs Becky Lynch at Evolution 2018
Championships Since Callup: 4x Raw Women’s Championship,                       4x Smackdown Women’s Championship, 1x Divas Championship

It’s hard to argue that Charlotte isn’t one of, if not THE greatest female competitors in WWE history in terms of her overall career.

Charlotte Flair is perhaps the personification of how far women’s wrestling has come in the past 5-6 years. When she debuted alongside Sasha Banks and Becky Lynch that night on Raw, it was clear that Charlotte was going to be the one who had the biggest spotlight on them and that’s exactly what happened. In just a few months she had defeated Nikki Bella and won the Divas Championship for herself, defending it against all comers and turning heel in the process, Wrestlemania 32 rolled around and it was time to get rid of the last relic of the old era of women’s wrestling in WWE, that horrible looking Divas Championship.

So on that night Charlotte would defeat both Sasha and Becky in a Triple Threat match (with a little help from her father) and become the first holder of the new WWE Women’s Championship in a historic moment for the women’s evolution in WWE. Charlotte continued her run of dominance for almost a whole year, during which time the WWE Women’s Championship would become the Raw Women’s Championship in the 2016 brand split, where Charlotte lost and quickly regained the title from Sasha Banks on several occasions in lots of very good matches. Charlotte’s time with the Raw Women’s Championship eventually came to an end (for the time being) when Bayley defeated her in a surprise upset on a February episode of Raw and failed to regain the title at both Fastlane and Wrestlemania that year.

Following Wrestlemania 33, Charlotte was moved over to Smackdown in the Superstar shakeup where she’d be able to thrive as a face and against the whole host of new opponents. She took part in but was unsuccessful in the first-ever women’s Money in the Bank ladder match before losing to Natalya at Battleground causing her to miss Summerslam. She would also take some time off during this period to care for her Father who had a major health scare.

Upon her September return, it didn’t take very long at all for Charlotte to catapult herself back up into the Smackdown Women’s title scene and won the blue brand’s title in November from Natalya. Charlotte then went on to face and defeat Raw Women’s Champion Alexa Bliss at Survivor Series that year before carrying her title into Wrestlemania 34 following defences against both Natalya and Ruby Riott. At Wrestlemania 34, Charlotte would once again make history, becoming the first person in WWE history to inflict a pinfall loss on Asuka, retaining her title in the process. Charlotte wouldn’t have long to dwell on this victory however, as the next night Carmella cashed in her Money in the Bank contract to take the title from her.

After an unsuccessful title defense Charlotte once again failed to capture the Money in the Bank contract and then went on hiatus for another few months to have surgery on a ruptured breast implant but would once again return and make her mark for Summerslam 2018, inserting herself into the Smackdown Women’s Title match between Carmella and Becky Lynch, only to win the title and cause Becky to lose her shit in what was supposed to be a heel turn, but the roles were reversed by the time their feud reached its climax. Charlotte had several matches with Becky, the best of which is the pair’s Last Woman Standing match at Evolution, although Charlotte was unsuccessful each time.

Charlotte would be unsuccessful one more time against both Becky and Asuka in a TLC Match at the TLC PPV where Ronda Rousey would cost both Charlotte and Becky the title. Charlotte was then the runner up in the 2019 women’s Royal Rumble match, losing to a surprise Becky Lynch, but found a way to weasel her way into the main event match between Becky and Ronda by having the surname Flair. In the build-up to this match, Charlotte would dispatch of Asuka just two weeks before Wrestlemania 35 and win her 3rd Smackdown Women’s Championship.

Charlotte lost at Wrestlemania, but that wouldn’t stop her pursuits, as most recently at Money in the Bank 2019 Charlotte took advantage of an exhausted Becky Lynch and a manipulated Lacey Evans to take back the Smackdown Women’s Championship – breaking the record for most titles won by a female competitor in WWE in the process at 9 – only to lose it moments later to Bayley who cashed in her Money in the Bank contract she won earlier that night to win the title.

Charlotte as a wrestler isn’t for everyone, many say she’s a boring character which I can see both sides of, but when she has the right opponent in the right story, Charlotte puts on some of the best women’s matches in company history. You can sit there all day moaning about how Charlotte is being shoved down our throats and is the “Roman Reigns of the women’s division” but the women’s evolution in WWE would not have gone anywhere near as smoothly if it wasn’t for someone as solid as Charlotte for WWE to get behind, and honestly I’d go as far as to say that she IS the greatest female competitor in WWE history.

1 – Seth Rollins

Days as NXT Women’s Champion: 133
Called Up On: Survivor Series 2012
Best Match Since Callup:vs John Cena vs Brock Lesnar at Royal Rumble 2015
Championships Since Callup: 2x WWE Championship, 2x Universal Championship, 2x Intercontinental Championship, 1x United States Championship, 4x Tag Team Championship

I mean come on, could it really be anyone else?

No matter what metric you want to use to measure it, number of championships, number of amazing matches, number of PPV main events, Seth Rollins runs away with this as the best former NXT Champion to grace the WWE main roster.

Rollins made his historic debut alongside Roman Reigns and Dean Ambrose the night of Survivor Series 2012, attacking Ryback and John Cena allowing CM Punk to retain his WWE Championship and forming The Shield in the process. The Shield would go on to become one of the greatest factions in WWE’s history, taking out everyone in their path. John Cena, Daniel Bryan, The Rock, The Undertaker, Evolution and so many more would taste The Shield’s brand of justice in many incredible matches, reminding everyone just how awesome 6 Man Tag Team matches can be in the process. During this time Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins also took out Team Hell No, for Rollins to win his first of many Tag Team Championships in WWE.

Good things can never last forever though and one fateful night in May of 2014, Seth Rollins would destroy The Shield, slamming a steel chair into Roman Reigns’ back and laying out Dean Ambrose. Rollins was then heralded as The Authority’s golden boy, labelled the future of WWE Rollins walked into Money in the Bank 2014 and handedly walked out as Mr Money in the Bank. Rollins spent most of 2014 feuding with his former Shield-brother Dean Ambrose, putting on multiple great matches month in and month out and always finding a way to come out the victor. Rollins would next get in the way of one, John Cena, as a match was set up for Survivor Series 2014 that saw Rollins’ benefactors in The Authority ousted from power.

Rollins went after Cena for this injustice, losing to him in a tables match at TLC, until Rollins took the opportunity one night on Raw to threaten Edge’s problematic neck, forcing Cena to reinstate The Authority. Rollins was rewarded with a spot in the WWE Championship match at the Royal Rumble, where he put on an absolutely incredible match, that I still love to go back and watch to this day. Then came Rollins’ crowning achievement at Wrestlemania 31. After he ate one of the most amazing looking RKO’s ever earlier on in the night, Rollins came sprinting down the ramp as the WWE Championship between Brock Lesnar and Roman Reigns was going on, cashing in his Money in the Bank contract and coming away with the title.

Rollins held the title all the way through till November due to an unfortunate injury he suffered, however during his title reign he once again went on a streak of constantly putting on brilliant matches against the likes of Dean Ambrose and John Cena, briefly picking up the United States Championship and becoming a double champion in the process. Unfortunately, as I mentioned, Rollins tore his ACL, MCL and meniscus at a live event in November that forced him to vacate the title and sit out 7 months of action.

The moment Rollins returned, he went right back into the thick of the action as he made a surprise appearance at the end of Extreme Rules 2016, to pedigree the WWE Champion Roman Reigns. The pair would have a great match at Money in the Bank the following month that resulted in Rollins reclaiming the title he never lost, unfortunately, it was very short lived as Rollins’ constant foil Dean Ambrose showed up with his newly won Money in the Bank briefcase to snatch the title away from Rollins. Over the next couple of months, Rollins would chase Ambrose for the title, including multiple singles matches and a triple threat between all 3 former members of The Shield, however, Rollins would come up short every time.

After being drafted to Monday Night Raw in the brand split, Rollins was one of the men who was picked to fight for the brand new Universal Championship against the newly debuted Finn Balor. The pair would put on a great match (even if the crowd didn’t seem to care), but Rollins would once again fail to capture title gold, this would happen again two weeks later in a fatal 4 way for the Universal title, because Triple H would shockingly turn on Rollins, turning the architect face in the process. Rollins spent the next couple of months taking on Kevin Owens for the Universal Championship but was thwarted at every turn by Chris Jericho.

Rollins would involve himself in fairly minor feuds until January rolled around, when Rollins refocused and set his sights on the man who turned on him a few months ago, Triple H. Rollins went on a warpath to get his hands on The Game, even going as far as to show up at NXT Takeover: San Antonio in order to call him out. After a minor knee injury threatened to jeopardise the whole story, Rollins thankfully recovered in time and the match was set for Wrestlemania 33. Rollins ended up defeating Triple H in what, for my money, was the best match that night, finally ridding himself of the stormcloud that had hovered over him for months.

Following Wrestlemania, Rollins wouldn’t do much of note for a few months, beating Samoa Joe and losing to Bray Wyatt in feuds that were fun to watch but not very consequential. That changed come summer time when Rollins set his sights on redeeming himself for his past sins and trying to reform The Shield, first winning over Dean Ambrose and winning the Raw Tag Team Championships, before later getting Roman Reigns on-side as well to take out The New Day at that year’s Survivor Series.

Once 2018 rolled around, business really picked up for Rollins. Following a brief run as tag team champions with Jason Jordan, Rollins walked into Wrestlemania 34 and came out of it as Intercontinental Champion. The rest of the year was filled with Rollins putting on fantastic singles matches every single week for the title against wrestlers like The Miz, Elias and Dolph Ziggler. Ziggler is especially noteworthy, as Rollins and Ziggler traded the title a couple of times thanks to Ziggler seeking aid from the debuting Drew Mcintyre until Rollins would get an ally of his own in a returning Dean Ambrose.

This led to one of the best matches of 2018, as Rollins & Ambrose would take on Drew & Dolph in a losing effort. Things took a turn for the worse during the autumn of 2018, as Roman Reigns would tragically announce the return of his leukaemia forcing him to take time off, this led to Ambrose & Rollins winning the tag titles later that night, only for Ambrose to shockingly turn on Rollins. This would come to a head at TLC 2018, where Ambrose defeated Rollins for his Intercontinental Championship.

Rollins bounced back pretty well though, as he won the 2019 men’s Royal Rumble match the next month, putting him on a collision course with Universal Champion Brock Lesnar at Wrestlemania 35. In shocking fashion, Rollins slew the beast at the start of Wrestlemania 35, nailing a low blow and 3 Curb Stomps to take Lesnar down and claim the Universal Championship for the first time, and his third world title overall. As of the time of writing, Rollins’ title reign is still going strong, defeating AJ Styles in a fantastic match at Money in the Bank and is currently embroiled in a feud with Baron Corbin that he seems destined to win.

No other former NXT Champion has seen anywhere near as much success as Seth Rollins had on the main roster. No-one in the past few years has been able to put on such consistently great matches in WWE every week he’s about, winning championships left right and centre, and almost always being in one of the major stories of whatever show he’s on. Rollins has very much become the face of the company in this generation of wrestlers and honestly, I don’t think there’s a better man for the job.

And that’s the list! Thank you very much for taking the time to read this, I know it was a long one and a share on social media would be greatly appreciated. You can also let me know what you thought of the list in the comments below or on Twitter @10ryawoo. I’ll see you on Friday for my predictions for Extreme Rules!