X Club Wrestling Divapocalypse Site
A "Fashion File on a Pole" match. Yes, you read that correctly. Two competitors, and Masha the Mangler , had to climb a pole to retrieve a designer handbag. Inside the bag? A pair of brass knuckles and a live tarantula. Masha won when she used the tarantula to scare Chloe off the top rope. (Note: the tarantula was a beloved XCW mascot named "Mr. Snuggles," who survived the match.)
: X Club and ProStyle Fantasies often produce custom-ordered matches where fans can request specific pairings and outcomes.
“Labels,” the Divapocalypse sighed. “You’ll learn they taste the same when you’re devoured.”
And lying in the center of the ring was the microphone, a diamond division belt, and a pile of glitter that smelled faintly of Candi’s perfume. X Club Wrestling Divapocalypse
Lana looked down. The belt wasn’t just humming. It was singing. A low, guttural chant in a language that made the arena’s speakers pop and bleed static. Then the lights died.
A core component of the series is the focus on dominance and control, where the narrative emphasizes one competitor's ability to overwhelm their opponent both physically and through the rules of the match. Performers of the Series
In the niche but passionate world of custom wrestling entertainment, few promotions have carved out a legacy as enduring—or as controversial—as X Club Wrestling (XCW). For over a decade, XCW dominated the landscape of " fantasy wrestling," bridging the gap between athletic performance and cinematic storytelling. While the promotion produced hundreds of hours of content, one event stands out as the defining moment of its golden age: . A "Fashion File on a Pole" match
What set the Divapocalypse matches apart from standard XCW fare was the allowance for extreme violence. While XCW was never a "hardcore" promotion in the sense of barbed wire and light tubes (typically), they leaned heavily into the "No DQ" aspect.
The first to attack was Shotgun Sue, a six-foot brawler from Texas. She charged with a kendo stick, screaming a war cry. The Divapocalypse didn’t move. She simply exhaled. Sue froze mid-swing, her skin turning to mannequin plastic, her joints locking into a permanent pose—a living statue of a wrestler about to strike.
She threw the championship belt.
Traditionalists hated it. Dave Meltzer reportedly refused to rate the main event, calling it "an undefinable mess that mocks the sport." Several sponsors pulled out after the barbed wire Jell-O pool sent three wrestlers to the hospital with actual methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections.
Performers like August Ames, Cherie Deville, and Karlie Montana contributed to the series' high-profile events, particularly in major tag team matches. Narrative Focus
: The core of the "Divapocalypse" brand in this niche is the "battle of the sexes," emphasizing technical holds, pins, and competitive fantasy wrestling. Where to Find Content If you are looking for the latest releases or archives: Inside the bag
Riot Grrl Ruby set up a table painted to look like the XCW logo. As Jetta fought with Gigi on top of the cage, Hollywood Heidi Haze—hiding under the ring for 20 minutes—sprang out and hit Ruby with the most beautiful cutter of her career, sending both through the table. The ref counted both women out, eliminating them simultaneously.
is not the best wrestling show ever produced. It is not the most technical, nor the most coherent. But it is, without a doubt, the most unforgettable .