WWE: The 5 Biggest Feuds We’ve Still Never Had

WWE, Rhea Ripley Credit: WWE.com
WWE, Rhea Ripley Credit: WWE.com /
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Instead of repeating feuds that are in low demand, the WWE needs to give the fans fresh feuds that are in high demand.

Wild Card Rule! This rule clearly made the WWE brand split look meaningless and threw the entire roster and all of the main roster feuds into disarray. Now, due to current circumstances, it’s back and it needs to be implemented better one way or another.

Thanks to the Wild Card Rule, the first match announced was Drew McIntyre vs. King Corbin for Raw next week. This is not a match that will necessarily raise the ratings or persuade the WWE fans to tune in. Where’s the innovation? Where’s the oomph? Where’s the pizzazz? Where’s the unpredictability? Where’s the novelty? Where’s the contingency?

In order to ‘raise’ those ratings, the WWE even brought back Randy Orton and Edge prematurely even though the majority of fans would prefer if Edge battled new, upcoming superstars on the roster, rather than Randy Orton for the 457th time. They also brought AJ Styles back prematurely when he should be selling his burial by The Undertaker from WrestleMania’s Boneyard Match.

As can be indicated by WWE’s booking for the past 25 years, insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. If the Wild Card Rule will be effective, the WWE will have to stop booking predictable matches and reboots. The following will cover five of the biggest feuds we’ve still never had that are original, popular, and unpredictable.