Ring of Rebirth – Experience 10: Watch Report

A fast-paced Ring of Rebirth Experience 10 featuring standout opening and main event matches, rising Southeast Asian talent, and a chaotic championship triple threat.

SHOW RESULTS

SEA Wrestling

4/18/20264 min read

Ring of Rebirth – Experience 10: Watch Report

We’ve reached ten Experience shows in a remarkably short time, and once again the Goldpine Industrial Building in Singapore is packed to capacity. ROR fans are ready for another unpredictable night, featuring a mix of Southeast Asia’s rising talent and established Singaporean veterans.

Light Singha Noor opens the night with ring announcing duties, immediately setting the tone. His explanation of the crowd’s “one fall” chant is a highlight and gets the audience engaged early.

Nyc & Spider Pura vs Sabro & Tobias Frost

We start with the return of Nyc, who hasn’t been seen for a while—welcome back. He teams with Spider Pura, who has now definitively ended any suspicion that he might just be Noor in disguise. Across the ring: Tobias Frost and Sabro.

There’s also a new masked referee—luchador influence continues to spread.

The match begins with clean, technical exchanges. Nyc quickly sends Frost retreating and then transitions into a sharp sequence with Sabro. Frost cuts in at the right moment, bringing some showmanship, but he’s quickly humbled by a crisp dropkick from Nyc. Pura tags in and nearly secures a three-count off a leg takedown.

Frost regains control with surprisingly solid striking. A double team on Pura gets a close two, while Sabro makes plenty of noise—easily the loudest presence in the match.

Pura fires back with an arm drag, and the bout settles into a steady back-and-forth rhythm. Frost returns with basic but effective wrestling control, isolating Pura while Nyc grows increasingly frustrated on the apron.

The pace builds until Pura creates an opening, bringing Nyc back in for a burst of fast offense—only for Nyc to get caught with a Killswitch for a near fall.

A mistimed moment from Frost nearly costs him, and the match breaks down into an all-out brawl. It ends with a superb 450 splash from Nyc onto Frost for the win.

A strong ten-minute tag match built on fundamentals and a well-executed finish. Nyc, I appreciate has been around for a while but it's a shame that he doesn't take more region wide bookings. He certainly has a top level run in him.

Post-match, Spider Pura and Sabro share a handshake. Sabro offers the same to Nyc, but Nyc walks away. Interesting.

Friendship Match: Sayn RH vs The Eurasian Dragon

Sayn enters first, immediately complaining about the stipulation and promising to take out his frustration on whoever came up with it.

The rules: handshake at the start, no dirty tactics, and both competitors must say something nice about each other beforehand.

The match begins with clean fundamentals. Dragon shows early fire with a Russian leg sweep and maintains control with power offense. His attempts at sportsmanship visibly irritate Sayn.

Sayn eventually responds with a bodyslam of his own, but then introduces a chain and knocks down the referee. What follows is a strange but fitting sequence—despite the “friendship” rules, it’s the Eurasian Dragon who uses the chain while the referee is down to secure the win.

A fittingly ironic finish. The match feels exactly as intended: two veterans pushing each other and showing what they can do.

Fariz Bravo vs Alfred

Alfred returns to face newcomer Fariz Bravo, who wastes no time delivering some unpleasant words before the match. He then proceeds to dismantle Alfred in short order.

Fariz wrestles in street clothes this time which really helps show off his new attitude. Alfred does manage some offense, including a few new chops, but ultimately submits to a single-leg Boston crab.

After the match, the Eurasian Dragon confronts Fariz over his comments toward Alfred, who is Singapore’s only wrestler with disabilities, and challenges him immediately.

Fariz Bravo vs The Eurasian Dragon

Fariz holds his own at times against his trainer, but experience and power prevail. The Eurasian Dragon secures the win with a jumping rolling headlock takedown, putting the newcomer firmly in his place.

Main Event: Ring of Rebirth Championship
Erfie Blackheart (c) vs Ahmed Arif vs Top Bomoh Mekong

The main event starts at full speed, with all three men going at each other immediately. Bodies are flying within seconds.

The champion, Erfie Blackheart, spends much of the early match outside, letting the challengers wear each other down before picking his moments to strike.

Mekong delivers particularly heavy chops, and the match escalates into a sequence featuring multiple leg drops and corner attacks. Arif nearly wins after his five-star combination into a snapmare on Erfie, but Mekong breaks it up.

Momentum shifts constantly until Mekong eliminates one competitor and focuses on the remaining threat. Miscommunication between the ROR regulars leads to an opening—Arif hits a bodyslam but misses the follow-up elbow drop.

Mekong capitalizes, driving Arif into the mat with the “mystic coconut” and securing the pin to become the new champion.

A fast-paced, chaotic main event that rarely lets the audience breathe.

The show closes with a Q&A segment where wrestlers introduce themselves to the fans. However, the tone shifts sharply when Ahmed Arif snaps during his speech and viciously attacks Top Bomoh Mekong, ending the night on a tense note.

Overall a quality show full of a lot of action. The opener and the main event really bookended the show as a quality watch. the livestream is up on Instagram right now and hopefully the higher quality version on Youtube soon. If you are a SEA Wrestling fan and a real one...don't miss out.