ORIGINAL TAPES PART 13- WAR-W*ING
Lion Heart (Jericho) vs. Rio Lord Of The Jungle (Renegade). Jericho did a few good moves, but Rio brought nothing to the table. 1:33 shown
Ultimo Dragon vs. Koji Ishinriki. Ishinriki wasn't on the level. Still, the work was good. Unfortunately, it was way too short with the finish coming out of nowhere. **
WARgun vs. HanWARgun (anti war group) 5 single match series
Ashura Hara vs. King Haku. Brawl with a bunch of strikes back and forth, but they weren't stiff enough to make it much good. Still, considering how limited these two are, it was better than expected. *1/2
Yuji Yasuraoka vs. Gedo. Didn't seem to be any good, with Gedo appearing to do very little, but the editing really killed any flow it may have had. 5:17 shown
Nobukazu Hirai vs. Jado. Jado did a good job of playing heel here. Hirai was largely dominated, but would come close to getting flash pins. Unfortunately, when it came time for him to actually get the flash pin, he blew the spot and the finish looked terrible. *3/4
Masao Orihara vs. Arashi. Arashi is so unathletic that nothing he does looks good. He had a huge size advantage, so he didn't sell anything and just made Orihara look like a jobber. DUD
Takashi Ishikawa vs. Kim Duk. Duk attacked Ishikawa's injured shoulder, but then just up and left it to attack the leg. This set up the flash pin finish, but they could have just went to the flash pin from an an arm/shoulder submission, so it was goofy. *
Genichiru Tenryu & Koki Kitahara vs. Hiromichi Fuyuki & Super Strong Machine. The stiff, high impact stuff you'd expect from Tenryu & Kitahara. Fuyuki took the match down as you'd expect, but he wasn't too goofy and did try. **1/4
11/11/93 Tokyo Korakuen Hall
Genichiru Tenryu vs. Ashura Hara. This was the same style as the Hara vs. Haku match, except Tenryu is worlds better than Haku. Nothing flashy, but good old fashioned ass kicking. Hara was beat raw in the upper chest toward the shoulder. Tenryu was pretty nasty here, even delivering some hard blows to the throat. Hara took a big beating because he was largely dominated, but he got just enough offense in to keep you from writing him off. ***1/4
Jado & Gedo vs. Nobukazu Hirai & Masanobu Kurisu. Decent
Koki Kitahara vs. Kim Duk. 3 1/2 minutes shown. Poor.
Five 3-minute Rounds: Hiromichi Fuyuki vs. Arashi. Poor
Ultimo Dragon & Masao Orihara vs. The Great Sasuke & SATO (Michinoku Pro team). ****1/4
Super Strong Machine vs. Lion Heart. 1 minute shown.
King Haku vs. Mr. Hughes. 1 minute shown.
Koji Ishinriki vs. Koji Kitao. 1/2*
Genichiru Tenryu & Ashura Hara vs. Atsushi Onita & Tarzan Goto (FMW team). **1/2
Note: some matches are digested
Nobukazu Hirai vs. Yamato
Elimination Match: Takashi Ishikawa & Koki Kitahara & Ultimo Dragon & Masanobu Kurisu vs. Super Strong Machine & Jado & Gedo & Ricky Fuji
Mil Mascaras & Dos Caras vs. Koji Ishinriki & Lion Heart
Genichiru Tenryu vs. Arashi
Koji Kitao vs. King Haku
SUPER BATTLE of 6 MEN 1st Round
Ashura Hara & Earthquake John Tenta & Jinsei Shinzaki (Michinoku Pro) vs. Hiromichi Fuyuki & Jado & Gedo (Fuyuki-gun). These guys aren't very good, but they worked a fast pace and did all their spots. The fans going wild also helped the match seem better than it was. **1/2 range
Koki Kitahara & Takashi Ishikawa & Koji Ishinriki vs. Koji Kitao & Akio Kobayashi & Masaaki Mochizuki (Bukoh Dojo team). Kitao's team did the martial arts gimmick, but the WAR team didn't put it over when Kitao wasn't in the ring. Instead, the more than matched the kicks of Kitao's understudies. Kitahara & Mochizuki's strikes were very believable, but overall this wasn't much of a match. *1/2 range
Kendo Nagasaki (NOW) & Masashi Aoyagi & Arashi vs. Animal Hamaguchi & Nobukazu Hirai & Shoichi Funaki (PWFG). The good thing about this show was that everyone was fired up because it was a major interpromotional show. The bad thing is guys like Kendo Nagasaki suck even when they are into it. Funaki & surprisingly Aoyagi were pretty good here. *
Warlord (WWF) & Vampiro (Mexico) & Lion Heart vs. Genichiru Tenryu & Atsushi Onita (FMW) & Crusher Bam Bam Bigelow (WWF). Jericho vs. Tenryu was pretty good, but no one else made any kind of contribution. Onita tried to work a totally straight match, so he was so incredibly bad. Onita was incredibly over thought, but this match didn't have as much heat as I expected, probably because the outcome was never in doubt. *3/4
SUPER BATTLE of 6 MEN Semifinals
Kitahara & Ishikawa & Ishinriki vs. Hara & Tenta & Shinzaki. They didn't play anything up here, so the match just meandered along as a slow, plodding, 80's WWF style match. 3/4*
Tenryu & Onita & Bigelow vs. Nagasaki & Aoyagi & Arashi. Tenryu worked hard to make this good. They played up Onita vs. Aoyagi since they had a lot of history together, and they had another rematch coming up. This had more brawling, including Kendo throwing row after row of chairs onto Tenryu until Onita made the save. Also, Onita bladed here. **1/4
UWA World Middleweight Title
Ultimo Dragon vs. The Great Sasuke. Incredible match to watch, as both men were in full suicidal mode. They pretty much threw sanity out the window and just did whatever it took to pull off their breathtaking aerial moves. ****3/4
SUPER BATTLE of 6 MEN Final
Tenryu & Onita & Bigelow vs. Hara & Tenta & Shinzaki. Long boring match with no spectacular moves and not much of a story. *1/4
*Note several matches are heavily edited
International Junior Championship Tournament Round 1
Gedo vs. Yuji Yasuraoka
Negro Casas vs. 1-2-3 Kid
Masao Orihara vs. Lion Heart (Jericho)
Ultimo Dragon vs. Ultimate Dragon (Brett Como). Como does his shooting star press off the top rope to the floor! Perhaps the most awesome and insane spot I've ever seen.
Round 2
1-2-3 Kid vs. Gedo
Lion Heart vs. Ultimo
Osamu Tachihikari & Hiroshi Itakura & Missing Link vs. Ryuma Go & Nobukazu Hirai & Masanobu Kurisu
Arashi vs. Jado
Koki Kitahara vs. Death Mask (Bradshaw)
Junior Championship Final (winner becomes first International
Junior Champion)
Lion Heart vs. Gedo
Riki Choshu & Animal Hamaguchi vs. Tatsutoshi Goto & Michiyoshi Ohara
Genichiru Tenryu vs. Yokozuna
Shiro Koshinaka & Kengo Kimura vs. Hiromichi Fuyuki & Masahiro Chono

Highlights of matches from 6/4/95 Tokyo Korakuen Hall: Shiro Koshinaki & Akitoshi Saito vs. Hiromichi Fuyuki & Nobutaka Araya, Lion Heart winning the International Junior Heavykyu Senshuken from Gedo, Genichiru Tenryu & Arashi vs. Koji Kitao & Big Titan
Osamu Tachikiari & Hiroshi Itakura & Yuji Yasuraoka vs. Masayoshi Motegi & Kamikaze & Fukumentaro. 3:55 shown.
Nobutaka Araya vs. Nobukazu Hirai. 3:47 shown.
BATTLE OF KT: Koki Kitahara vs. Arashi. 4:17 shown.
International Junior Heavykyu Senshukenjiai: Lion Heart vs. Ultimo Dragon. Really a tremendous performance by Dragon because he got a "match of the year" out of a guy that was sloppy and wasn't smooth. Dragon has had matches that were better worked because Jericho wasn't on the level, but what made this special is they did one cool spot after another. The crowd was really reacting to the moves, so the match was dramatic even though there wasn't any great build or selling to make the moves meaningful. This is the kind of match you can show anyone because they don't need to know any background and will almost surely be impressed by the tremendous display of athleticism. Read Review. ****1/4
Eliminators & Hector Garza vs. Mil Mascaras & Bob Backlund & Hector Garza. The legends totally dominated, doing all their famous moves. 5:10 shown.
Jado & Gedo vs. Tarzan Goto & Mr. Gannosuke. Everyone worked hard. Good heated action with a real sense of desperation. Gedo bled. ***1/4
BATTLE OF I-SHI-N: Riki Choshu & Animal Hamaguchi vs. Tatsutoshi Goto & Michiyoshi Ohara. Dull match with a bunch of kicking and punching. *1/4
Hiromichi Fuyuki vs. Shiro Koshinaka. Koshinaka did his best, but Fuyuki is still Fuyuki. Shiro bled. **1/4
REVENGE 3 minutes 10 rounds: Genichiru Tenryu vs. Koji Kitao. A big nothing. Fuyuki broke a bottle over Tenryu's head, and Tenryu put it over huge. The problem was that Kitao is god-awful and Tenryu couldn't find a way to hide that. DUD
*Special price $18 or 23.50 COOP*

SUPER HEAVY-WAR Ikkaisen
Arashi & Osamu Tachihikari vs. Nobutaka Araya & Nobukazu Hirai. Real indy looking. 5:14 shown.
Jado & Gedo vs. Koki Kitahara & Masaaki Mochizuki. Kitahara & Mochizuki's stiff kicks against Jado & Gedo's heel tactics. Mochizuki was impressive here, but Jado & Gedo dragged it down. **1/2
Typhoon & The Great Shinja vs. Koji Kitao & El Gigante. I didn't think it was possible to find guys so awful that Kitao could be the best of the bunch in a tag match. -**
Genichiru Tenryu & Ultimo Dragon vs. Hiromichi Fuyuki & Shinobu Kandori. Kandori & Dragon were taken seriously here. Aside from Kandori no selling Dragon's reverse low blow to break out of a waistlock, it was like there were four guys in the ring. ***
SUPER HEAVY-WAR Junkessho
Jado & Gedo vs. Nobutaka Araya & Nobukazu Hirai. Match was adequate, but I was suprised at how dominant Jado & Gedo were. **
Genichiru Tenryu & Ultimo Dragon vs. Typhoon & The Great Shinja. Typhoon & Shinja were crap and Tenryu didn't even try. *
Tokubetsu Jiai (special match): Lion Heart vs. Lance Storm. Lion gave one of his best performances in carrying Storm to one of his best matches. The near falls were really dramatic because Lion would do one of his best moves after he said he was ending it, but Storm would kick out at the last fraction of a second.
SUPER HEAVY-WAR Kesshosen: Genichiru Tenryu & Ultimo Dragon vs. Jado & Gedo. What they did was good, but it was just too short. At least Tenryu finally showed up. **

Tournament 1st Round
Damien (Mexico) vs. Gran Naniwa (Michinoku Pro)
Shinjiro Otani (NJ) vs. Masaaki Mochizuki (Bukoh Dojo)
Ultimo Dragon (WAR) vs. Shoichi Funaki (PWFG)
Gedo (WAR Fuyuki-gun) vs. Masayoshi Motegi (Wrestle Yume Factory)
El Samurai (NJ) vs. Dos Caras (Mexico)
Lion Heart (Jericho, WAR Fuyuki-gun) vs. Hanzo Nakajima (Michinoku Pro)
Tournament 2nd Round
Jushin Thunder Liger (NJ) vs. Gran Naniwa
Wild Pegasus (NJ) vs. Lion Heart
Shinjiro Otani vs. Ultimo Dragon
Gedo vs. Dos Caras
Tournament Semifinal
Jushin Thunder Liger vs. Ultimo Dragon
Wild Pegasus vs. Gedo
Non Tournament
Rey Misterio Jr. vs. Psicosis
Tournament Final
Jushin Thunder Liger vs. Gedo
*Special Price two T-160's for $40 or $51 COOP (2 unique)*

WELCOME W.A.R! OPENING MATCH: Nobukazu Hirai & Ultimo Dragon vs. Big Tido & Liondo 1:25 of 15:19. After classic anniversary show matches with The Great Sasuke & Chris Jericho, the best they could do for Dragon was the kind of tag match that could be meaningless on any house show? Dragon & Jericho did a nice finishing sequence where whoever initiated came out on the wrong end, but unfortunately that was about all that made the tape.
SUPER BATTLE 6 MEN ’96 1st Round:
Kazuo Yamazaki & Takashi Iizuka & Osamu Kido vs. Kodo Fuyuki & Jado & Gedo 11:53. All the heat was on Fuyuki vs. Yamazaki, with Yamazaki finding ways to make the match intriguing without having Fuyuki destroy it by playing a large role in the actual wrestling. Yamazaki always knows what has to be done, and goes about business putting the company over himself, even when it’s not his company. He had the shooter team, so he immediately set a serious and intense tone against Fuyuki, who would render Yamazaki’s team impotent by taking the match in the direction of clowning if given the opportunity. Fuyuki turned it into a brawl when he had the chance, resulting in Yamazaki taking it to him on the outside. Fuyuki, who wasn’t the legal man, broke up Yamazaki’s figure 4 when the ref was distracted. Gedo’s “smarts” were displayed when Iizuka still had an arm bar on the legal man Jado while Kido had his wakigatame on Fuyuki, who had come in to break up the triple submission on Jado. Gedo, of course, elbow drops Kido, leaving Jado to find his way to the ropes. Jado worked most of the way with Gedo making the hot tag and Yamazaki and Iizuka carrying them to good solid action. Finish was unfortunately early and abrupt. Yamazaki attacked Fuyuki after the match to build up the rivalry and get some heat back. **1/2
Riki Choshu & Satoshi Kojima & Osamu Nishimura vs. Yoji Anjo & Yoshihiro Takayama & 200% Machine 10:23. Dull match. Kojima showed fired, getting the crowd into the match, but outside of Choshu, who gets pops simply for being Choshu, their reactions were fairly minimal the rest of the time. The UWF-I team’s mix of shoot style and heel tactics is contradictory to the point of not really meshing. 200% gave his famed effort from the apron, so there was a heavy dose of Takayama, which in the ’90’s was never a good thing. Nishimura should have been good, but the size difference between he and Takayama made everything seem more awkward than typical Takayama. *1/2
Koji Kitao & Masaaki Mochizuki & Koki Kitahara vs. John Tenta & Arashi & Osamu Tachihikari 11:46. A showcase for Tenta, featuring slow and incompetent performances by several big men. Tenta only wanted to shark attack fellow sumo slug Kitao, which makes sense until you see them actually try to work with each other. Compared to loose and sloppy Kitao, who either misses his spot or makes it look wimpy, Tenta almost seems a good wrestler. Mochizuki & Kitahara had their moments, but as Tenta’s team lacks a decent worker even their best efforts rarely raised it to a level above passable. There were a few decent little man/big man spots such as Mochizuki throwing his knees until Arashi tossed him with a front suplex, but I’m really reaching for positives. *
Genichiro Tenryu & Nobutaku Araya & Tatsumi Fujinami vs. Nobuhiko Takada & Masahito Kakihara & Naoki Sano 16:40. Often the best way to sell an interpromotional singles match is to have a tag match that spikes the public’s pre-existing expectation. It’s hard to imagine less than a good match with this talent, but in WAR, even a match that will obviously make or break a heavyweight tournament is no given. Luckily, these guys were not only motivated but seemed to really enjoy working with one another, putting so much effort into putting over the opposite. The match could easily have been all about Tenryu vs. Takada, but everyone contributed with none of the veterans pulling rank. Takada did the old wise guy trick, offering Tenryu a handshake then pulling his hand away as Tenryu tried to grab it, prompting Araya to quickly decide not to give Tenryu the same opportunity with him. Though the worst worker in the match, Araya held his own here. Kakihara tried to kick and run from him early, but Araya pursued until he tackled him and got in some mount punches. Spunky Kakihara always stands out due to putting so much attitude and energy into everything. The fans went crazy when Fujinami caught Takada’s leg and Dragon screwed him, as it was shades of Takada vs. Muto. Tenryu vs. Takada heated up when Takada saved Sano from Tenryu’s half crab by blasting his prone nemesis with a kick. When Takada made a hot tag and was ready to put Araya away, Tenryu returned the favor breaking up Takada’s arm bar with an elbow drop and stomps. The ending seemed to come a bit soon, but the key was Sano holding Tenryu’s leg so he couldn’t get in to make the save. ***1/2
International Junior Heavyweight Tag Title Match: Yuji Yasuraoka & Lance Storm vs. Jushin Thunder Liger & El Samurai 15:45. The WAR team is good, but not on the level with the opposition Liger & Samurai work with every night in New Japan, and thus have better chemistry with. The bigger problem is the WAR team wasn’t treated as if they were on the level. I thought they might get dominated then pull off a flash pin, but they got no such hope. It turned into something of a spectacular match after a slow start. Yasuraoka & Storm don’t have great moves, but have enough athleticism to make some more common junior moves look good. For instance, Yasuraoka has a really high plancha, partially because he has the most vertical body press around. Good action, but I expected a lot more. ***
SUPER BATTLE 6 MEN ’96 Semifinals:
Kodo Fuyuki & Jado & Gedo vs. Riki Choshu & Satoshi Kojima & Osamu Nishimura 11:23. Heated interpromotional match. I expected the Choshu vs. Fuyuki rivalry to be played up more, but was content to get some good wrestling from the Jado & Gedo vs. Kojima & Nishimura combos. Gedo was more prominent in this one, as he was stranded in the ring until Fuyuki lariated Kojima to give him time to tag Jado. Kojima is a good partner for Choshu, as in addition to being a good worker who can carry the load, he shows a lot of attitude. Well-worked if a bit short due to the tournament format. **1/2
Nobuhiko Takada & Masahito Kakihara & Naoki Sano vs. John Tenta & Arashi & Osamu Tachihikari 11:22. All about Takada vs. Tenta. Their interplay was good, but the lesser names had no real role or heat on them, so it was even less of a match than it sounds on paper. Takada didn’t give Arashi much respect, laughing him off as he blasted away with kicks and locked his arm bar, forcing Tenta to save. Takada came in and kicked Tachihikari hoping to break his clasp so Sano could lock his arm bar, challenging a worked up Tenta to follow him to the floor. Tenta preferred to wait and call Takada out in the ring, but it was Takada who got the big pop for body slamming him. *1/2
WWA World Welterweight Title: Juventud Guerrera vs. Rey Misterio Jr. 8:36. 1996 was the big year for these two, as they took their match around the world. Before Rey became Misteroid and Juvi discovered The Juice, no one could touch their match for spectacular athleticism choreographed with the utmost complexity. It’s not simply doing great flying moves, but doing them in sequence with perfect timing and remarkable speed. It was as if Shodai Tiger Mask got to wrestle himself with another move set. A great sprint, but their normal match that’s at least twice as long is obviously far more developed. Today they did wall to wall high spots, similar to Misterio’s WAR introduction against Psicosis at the 12/13/95 J CUP. It would take far less time to denote the moves where both remained on their feet, but for me the most impressive are Rey’s Frankensteiner off the apron because he takes off from the top rope and hooks his opponent midway down and Rey’s swandive style Frankensteiner off the top because he has to turn 180 degrees after slinging himself onto the top rope to pull off the Frankensteiner. A beautiful spotfest. ****
SUPER BATTLE 6 MEN ’96 Final: Nobuhiko Takada & Masahito Kakihara & Naoki Sano vs. Kodo Fuyuki & Jado & Gedo 12:35. I realize this isn’t the greatest matchup stylistically, but I expected more from the final. It wasn’t in any way bad, on the contrary quite competent, it was simply rather nondescript. Sano sold early with Fuyuki turning the match into a brawl, taking it to the floor where he hit Sano with a title belt. Gedo was once again the whipping boy for his team. The match picked up with the Dos getting Takada in trouble, connecting with their double vertical suplex and diving body press combo to set up Fuyuki putting Takada in the figure 4 ala Keiji Muto. But there was never any real drama, with Takada easily withstanding what was hardly the opposition’s best offensive before dispatching of their lowest rated wrestler Gedo. **1/4
*Special Price $23 or $28 COOP*
Takashi Ishikawa & Benkei Daikokubo vs. Jun Kikuchi & Tomohiro Ishii
Kamikaze & Masakazu Fukuda vs. Takashi Okumura & Yoshikazu Taru
Doink & Chodensenshi Battle Ranger vs. Keisuke Yamada & Keizu Matsuda
Ryuma Go vs. Samurai MAX
Tatsuo Nakano vs. Satoshi Yoneyama
Arashi & Osamu Tachihikari vs. Bam Bam Bigelow & Nobukazu Hirai
Koki Kitahara & Nobutaku Araya vs. Kazuo Yamazaki & Takashi Iizuka
International Junior Heavykyu Tag Senshukenjiai: Yuji Yasuraoka & Lance Storm vs. Shodai Tiger Mask & Masaaki Mochizuki
J-Crown: Ultimo Dragon vs. Rey Misterio, Jr. ****
Genichiru Tenryu vs. Nobuhiko Takada
*Special price $23 or $28.50 COOP*
Note: some matches are digested
11/24/97 Kanagawa Yokohama Bunka Taiikukan
Tomohiro Ishii vs. Hidetomo Egawa
Yuji Yasuraoka vs. Masakazu Fukuda
Koki Kitahara & Osamu Tachihikari vs. Arashi & Jun Kikuchi
Nobutaka Araya vs. Nobukazu Hirai
Nippon J1 Senshuken Junkessho: Genichiru Tenryu vs. Koji Kitao
1/14/98 Tokyo Korakuen Hall
Tomohiro Ishii vs. Yoshikazu Taru
Arashi & Yuji Yasuraoka vs. Koki Kitahara & Masao Orihara
Nippon J1 Senshuken Kesshosen: Genichiru Tenryu vs. Nobutaka Araya
3/10/98 Tokyo Korakuen Hall
Arashi & Shoichi Ichinomiya vs. Osamu Tachihikari & Yoshikazu Taru
Tomohiro Ishii vs. Keisuke Yamada
Yuji Yasuraoka & Masaaki Mochizuki vs. Masakazu Fukuda & Hiroyoshi Kotsubo
Genichiru Tenryu & Shiro Koshinaka vs. Nobutaka Araya & Jun Kikuchi
3/20/93
Undercard highlights
No Rope Barbed Wire Net Tag Death Match: Mitsuhiro Matsunaga & Jason The Terrible vs. Leatherface & Freddy Kruegar. Few wrestling moves, but it delivers the weapons. Quinones kept yelling "scrape hs head (on the cage) like a lettuce." All things considered, it wasn't really that bloody though. Not really wrestling, just garbage.
5/5/93
Undercard highlights
Ishu Kakutogisen: The Winger vs. Jun Kikawada. Just awful because it was so fake looking. Winger's kicks were at 3/4 speed. 1/2 shown
Yukihiro Kanemura & Miguel Perez, Jr. & Jason The Terrible vs. Crash The Terminator & Bash The Terminator & Goliath El Gigante (Kurrgan). 3:51 shown
Texas Death Match: Mr. Pogo vs. Shoji Nakamaki. This was around the prime of their garbage careers, so it was actually pretty good. Nakamaki took almost all the big moves, as always. Pogo sandwhiched him between chairs and did a diving body press for a fall. Later he piledrove then bulldogged him on the chairs. 7:18 shown
W*ING Nintei Tag Oza Kettei Tournament Ikkaisen: Texano & Silver King vs. The Head Hunters. I really liked what I saw from this match because it was so stiff you could hear every blow. Unfortunately, it was edited to the point of not having any continuity. King bled. 5:11 shown
Spike Nail Death Match: Mitsuhiro Matsunaga vs. Leatherface. Matsunaga bled quickly. You could see Leatherface was looking to end the match quickly, which got the fans reacted to the early spike teases. Matsunaga's striking was pretty good at this point, so his offense was much more interesting than in later years. Leatherface displayed his usual level of "talent," mainly hitting Matsunaga with spike nail boards. After the match, we see a closeup of his stomach and it was legitimately full of punctures. The last few minutes were the best with the finisher being pretty nice in it's simple way that stayed in tone with the rest of the match. The previous two matrches seemed better though.
7/11/93 Digest includes Crypt Keeper vs. Shoji Nakamaki, CMLL World Lightheavyweight Title: Dr. Wagner Jr vs. The Winger, W*ING Tag Titles: Headhunters vs. Dick Murdock & Masked Superstar, W*ING World Heavyweight Title Decision Match: Goliath El Gigante vs. Crash the Terminator, War Games Cage: Freddy Krueger & Jado & Gedo vs. Mitsuhiro Matsunaga & Yukihiro Kanemura & Miguel Perez Jr
Scramble Bunkhouse Captain's Fall Elimination 10 Man Tag Match: Freddy Krueger & Jado & Gedo & Invader II & Invader IV vs. Crash The Terminator & Shoji Nakamaki & Ryo Miyake & Nobutaka Araya & Fukumentarof
Yukihiro Kanemura vs. Kevin Sullivan
Undertaker Death Match: Shoji Nakamaki vs. Crypt Keeper

Orito vs. Damiancito
Air Winger vs. Oriental
Boogie Man vs. Ryo Miyake
Sandman vs. Jason Knight
Public Enemy vs. Pitbulls
Coffin Match: Jason The Terrible vs. Grave Digger
*Special price $16 or $21.50 COOP*