Thirty years of controlled chaos, and most of what you think you know about the Undertaker barely scratches the surface. Behind the gong, the lightning, and the slow walk to the ring sits a career built on creative gambles that should have failed, feuds that pushed the boundaries of good taste, and a performer who somehow made all of it work. The Wrestlemania winning streak didn't start as a grand plan — it was a statistic nobody noticed for years until it became the most coveted prize in professional wrestling. The matches that built it ranged from forgettable squashes to all-time classics, and the behind-the-scenes decisions about who would challenge, who would come close, and who would finally break it reveal a story far stranger and more calculated than the mythology suggests. Then there are the storylines WWE would probably rather you forget. Ritual sacrifices on live television. A stalker angle that made nobody look good. A casket rigged with a camera so a "dead" wrestler could deliver a monologue before levitating to the ceiling. A sacred urn melted into the ugliest gold chain ever worn on national TV. The creative disasters are as much a part of the legacy as the triumphs, and the fact that one man survived all of it says more about his talent than any highlight reel ever could. From a blood-soaked Hell in a Cell that nearly killed Mick Foley to back-to-back Wrestlemania wars with Shawn Michaels that redefined what a dream match could be, the rivalries covered here shaped entire eras of the business. This is the full picture — the victories, the absurdity, and the epic battles that turned a character dressed as an undead mortician into the most enduring figure professional wrestling has ever produced.