The WCW Invasion was a disaster. The WWF in 1993 was a creative wasteland. The Montreal Screwjob rewired the entire industry. Everybody knows what went wrong — the harder question is what should have happened instead, and the answer requires more than a hot take on a message board. Six separate eras get torn down to the studs and rebuilt from scratch, week by week, using the real rosters, the real backstage politics, and the real limitations that actual bookers had to deal with. Austin, Rock, Bret, Triple H, Lesnar, the ECW originals, the ROH locker room — every name gets slotted into storylines that escalate logically and pay off at reimagined cards stacked with matches fans would have killed to see. One chapter even flips the whole concept on its head by taking a roster of talented wrestlers and deliberately booking them into the ground, WWE-style, just to see how bad it can get. These aren't loose "I would have done it differently" rants. Each scenario plays out like you're watching the shows unfold in real time — the feuds build, the turns land, the undercards matter, and the WrestleMania lineups actually make sense. The writing moves at the pace of a guy holding court who knows his stuff cold and doesn't waste your time getting to the point. If you've ever spent an hour arguing about whether Bret should have dropped the belt or how Jericho's first title reign got wasted, you already know the itch. This scratches it hard, across multiple decades and three different promotions, and it'll probably start a few new arguments along the way.