The deeper Leo dug, the more the fictional entries began overwriting real history — not just on the wiki, but in news articles, wrestling databases, and even official biographies.
Leo had never wrestled a day in his life. wrestlewiki.com
Leo closed his laptop. Then opened it again. And started editing. The deeper Leo dug, the more the fictional
One night, a mysterious user named began posting entries for matches that never happened. Hulk Hogan vs. El Santo at the Tokyo Dome in 1987. The Undertaker vs. a young Kazuchika Okada in a high school gym in 1999. And then — Leo’s own name, listed as a junior heavyweight champion in a defunct Florida promotion in 1994. Then opened it again
The final entry from simply read: "Wrestling is whatever we agree to remember. Long live WrestleWiki."
But the site’s traffic surged. Fans loved the "lost matches." Wrestling podcasts debated them. Even retired wrestlers swore they remembered some of the events.