If Monday Night Raw was chaos, Judgment Day was the storm cloud hovering over it—and Penta just brought the thunder.
WWE’s Glasgow crowd got a match, a mugging, and a moral dilemma all in one as Penta challenged Bron Breakker for the Intercontinental Championship. It was the kind of main event that had everything: high-flying flips, spine-snapping spears, and masked men being offered steel chairs like it was a mob initiation.
Penta, WWE’s lucha-libre firestarter and undefeated marvel, gave Breakker a run for his protein shakes. He ate an early flurry of offense but rebounded with Superkicks so spicy they should’ve come with a health warning. A Mexican Destroyer nearly sealed the deal, until Breakker went full military-grade linebacker to halt momentum.
Enter: The Judgment Day, aka the world’s most violent boy band. Dominik Mysterio and Carlito swaggered down to ringside early, oozing trouble and fashionably poor intentions. Balor arrived later with a steel chair, because nothing says “friendly recruitment” like weaponized aluminum.
Mysterio made it clear—he wanted Penta to join the purple cult. Offered him the chair. Offered him the spot. Offered him the Judgment lifestyle.
Penta declined. Emphatically. With foot-to-face delivery.
He tossed the chair right back at Mysterio like, “I don’t accept unsolicited offers,” then kicked Dom so hard his father probably flinched. Judgment Day responded like you’d expect: by jumping him in a very unfair 3-on-1 beatdown to close the show.
Breakker technically retained the IC title via DQ, which is like saying your house didn’t burn down because the fire stayed in the garage. But the real story? Penta made a choice. And now he’s got three purple-clad problems on his hands.