ROR Comedy Wrestling 3 Results
report from Ring of Rebirth’s Comedy Wrestling 3 in Singapore, featuring NYC vs Tok Bomoh Mekong, Raga Ngada vs Lightsinger Normand, and the chaotic Eurasian Dragon vs Erfie semi-final that sets up the ROR Title Tournament Final between NYC and Erfie this December.
SHOW RESULTS
SEA Wrestling
11/18/20253 min read


Ring of Rebirth: Comedy Wrestling 3 Results
Apologies for the late results, it looks like IG doesn’t drop livestreams directly after recording anymore.
Ring of Rebirth returned with Comedy Wrestling 3, likely the penultimate show of the year, bringing a quirky mix of new and semi-new faces to the Singapore scene. While fans expected plenty of laughs and character work, the show was ultimately anchored by a hotly anticipated ROR Title Tournament Semi-Final, setting the tone for a major conclusion later this year.
Match 1: NYC vs. Tok Bomoh Mekong
The show opened with a strong presentation choice as host Bruce Mathieu conducted a pre-match interview with NYC, giving old-school TV vibes that immediately set the mood. The event also benefited from a very effective guest MC, who added personality throughout.
Tok Bomoh Mekong — Sayan from SPW with a new persona — entered with a supernatural-lore style character said to be over 200 years old, moving away from his previous Wolf Ram Cartel identity.
The match began with tight wristlocks and chain wrestling from NYC, showcasing clean fundamentals, but Mekong’s power advantage quickly shifted momentum. Heavy stomps landed hard, followed by a brutal sliding tackle to NYC’s knees which stood out as one of the most impactful early moments.
NYC fired back using fast strikes and multiple hidden blade shots, but Mekong repeatedly overpowered him. Things escalated when Mekong almost used his hat as a weapon, only for the referee to intervene, leading to a distraction that NYC nearly stole via roll-up.
The finish came when NYC executed a complex folding pin to secure the win.
A strong technical showcase for NYC, reinforcing his future title aspirations, while Mekong’s evolving character work and heavyweight arsenal offered promising new directions.
Nyc is always so smooth in the ring and an absolute joy to watch. I understand he is slowing down his career these days but I really do think he has one more good run around the region in him.
Match 2: Raga Ngada vs. Light Singa Noor
Raga entered accompanied by manager Tobias Frost, who delivered an introduction emphasising his client’s presence. Noor, now rebranded as Lightsinger Noormand, appeared with proper gear and a confident promo, signalling growth and refinement.
The early stages were dominated by Raga’s tight, relentless headlocks, keeping control and slowing Noor’s tempo. Noor eventually fought through with fighting-spirit-style chops and a stiff strike to the back of Raga’s head.
Meanwhile, Frost being stuck behind the ring area unintentionally created a hilarious ringside visual, fitting the comedic theme of the show.
Raga ended the match decisively with a Black Hole Slam-style finisher.
It functioned as a fair squash with clear developmental value — Raga remains very new, but pairing him with Frost gives him structure, identity, and presentation strength.
Main Event – ROR Title Tournament Semi-Final: Eurasian Dragon vs. Erfie
Before the bell, Eurasian Dragon addressed the audience, thanking them for their ongoing support..
Once underway, the match delivered classic World of Sport-style technical wrestling, as Dragon attempted to guide and control the match while his former protégé countered and reversed with surprising efficiency. Neither man held advantage early.
Momentum shifted when Erfie used the ropes for safety and fired off cheap shots, leading to stiff chops and grounded offence. Dragon responded with a double axe handle near-fall, followed by a snap suplex. From there, Erfie escalated, choking Dragon in the corner, eventually hitting a Russian leg sweep to regain control.
This soon broke down into full chaos as Frost and Ngada entered, assisting in a beatdown until Dragon fought back, including a scoop slam to Frost. Dragon battled physically and emotionally to regain control and nearly turned things around with a German suplex, but a referee bump turned everything unpredictable.
A running knee, more ref involvement, another slam, and a near-fall later, Mekong re-emerged and struck Dragon with the skull, setting up Erfie’s final blow — a jumping DDT — for the three count.
The finish was intentionally overbooked, chaotic, and dramatic, painting Dragon as fighting against the odds.
ROR Title Tournament Final: NYC vs. Erfie
The final is now confirmed: NYC vs. Erfie, scheduled for December and positioned as one of the most anticipated Ring of Rebirth matches to date.
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