The Beast meets the Ruler of NXT
It is Monday, March 30, 2026, and while the sickos are currently refreshing their feeds for any scrap of news coming out of Kansas City before AEW Dynasty kicks off, WWE decided to remind everyone who owns the big-fight feel. The rumors have been swirling for weeks, but as WrestleTalk reported, the plans are locked in. Brock Lesnar is coming back to face Oba Femi at WrestleMania in Las Vegas. We have exactly three episodes of Monday Night Raw left to build this, and the internet is already a chaotic wasteland of conflicting opinions.
For the uninitiated, Oba Femi has been treated like a cheat code in NXT. He is a mountain of a man with a Nigerian accent that makes every promo sound like a decree from a conquering king. Brock Lesnar, meanwhile, is... well, he is Brock Lesnar. He is the ultimate gatekeeper of the main event. This is not a match about workrate or forty-five minute technical masterpieces. This is about two massive humans trying to find out whose skeletal structure collapses first under the weight of a vertical suplex.
The Meat-Heads are rejoicing
If you spend any time on r/SquaredCircle or the darker corners of wrestling Twitter, you know there is a vocal contingent of fans who are tired of the 'kick-pad' era. They want the hosses. They want the big boys. For this group, Oba Femi vs Brock Lesnar is the holy grail. It is the spiritual successor to those 1980s clashes where the ring felt too small for the egos and the muscles involved.
Brock Lesnar is set to face Oba Femi in a highly anticipated showdown at the WWE WrestleMania premium live event.
The hype for this is centered on the idea of the 'passing of the torch.' Fans are looking at Oba as the first person since a prime Goldberg who actually looks like they could give Brock a physical problem. We are only 20 days away from Night 1 in Vegas, and the anticipation for their first face-to-face confrontation is reaching a fever pitch. If Brock shows up and Oba doesn't blink, we are in for something special.
The Internet's Divided Camp
As with anything involving a part-timer and a developmental standout, the reactions are split right down the middle. You have the optimists who see this as a star-making moment, and the cynics who have been burned by Brock's lightning-fast squashes in the past. Here is a look at what the digital front lines are saying about this collision.
The 'Passing the Torch' Diehards
"u/HossLover99: Look, I love the technical stuff, but sometimes I just want to see two guys who look like they were carved out of granite try to murder each other. Oba Femi is the real deal. If he hits that pop-up powerbomb on Lesnar at the Allegiant Stadium, the roof might actually fly off into the desert. This is how you make a superstar in one night."
These fans argue that Oba has nothing left to prove in NXT. He has dominated the North American title scene and looked like a grown man wrestling children for over a year. Putting him against Brock is the ultimate stress test. It signals that Triple H and the creative team believe Oba is the future of the heavyweight division, someone who can eventually fill the void when the Roman Reigns and Cody Rhodes era eventually winds down.
The 'Brock is Lazy' Contrarians
"@WorkrateWanda: Are we really doing this again? We are going to build this up for three weeks, only for Brock to hit two Germans, an F5, and win in six minutes. Why are we sacrificing the hottest prospect in NXT to a guy who only shows up four times a year? Oba deserves a long, competitive match to show what he can do, not a squash match designed to make Brock look like a monster for the ten-thousandth time."
This is the valid concern. We have seen Brock phone it in before. When he is motivated—think AJ Styles at Survivor Series or Daniel Bryan—he is the best in the world. When he is just there for the check—think the Dean Ambrose disaster at WM32—it is a soul-crushing experience for everyone involved. The fear is that Oba is still too green to 'command' the respect of a veteran like Brock, leading to a match that feels more like a rehearsal than a war.
The Booking Nerds and Strategy Analysts
"ForumUser_77: The key is the first five minutes. If Oba gets a sustained period of offense and actually puts Brock on his back, he wins even if he loses. But if it is just a suplex-city loop, his momentum dies. He needs to show that his 270 pounds of muscle can't be tossed around like a cruiserweight. Anything less than a ten-minute war is a failure of booking."
These fans are looking at the logistics. They are analyzing the Raw segments. They want to see Oba cut a promo on the main roster that proves he can hang with the big dogs. There is a lot of chatter about whether this should have been saved for SummerSlam to give Oba more time to breathe on the main roster, but with WrestleMania being in Vegas, the 'spectacle' factor clearly won out over the slow-burn approach.
Why this match needs to be a car crash
Let's be honest with ourselves for a second. Nobody wants to see Brock Lesnar trade wrist-locks with Oba Femi. We want to see the barricades break. We want to see a table get destroyed by a man being thrown like a sack of potatoes. The charm of Oba Femi is his 'Ruler' persona—the idea that he is physically superior to everyone he encounters. If he encounters the Beast and gets treated like a jobber, that aura evaporates instantly.
The risk here is massive. Brock is 48 years old. He has been doing this forever. There is a very real possibility that he sees Oba as just another 'big guy' to move past. But if Brock is actually invested in the future of the business, he will give Oba everything. He will let himself get rag-dolled a few times. He will sell the power of the younger man. That is how you create a legacy that lasts longer than a highlight reel.
One critical observation that the 'everything is great' crowd is missing: Oba Femi's conditioning hasn't really been tested in long-form matches on the main stage. NXT matches are often shorter, high-impact sprints. If this match goes long, we might see the cracks in the Nigerian giant's game. Brock is a freak of nature who can go for twenty minutes if he wants to, but Oba might find himself gassing out under the pressure of the bright Vegas lights. It is a gamble that could pay off spectacularly or leave Oba looking like he wasn't ready for the jump.
The Final Verdict
Despite the skepticism, I am siding with the 'Meat-Heads' on this one. Wrestling is at its best when it feels visceral and dangerous. Brock Lesnar vs Oba Femi feels dangerous. It feels like a match where the referee is actually worried about his own safety. We have seen Cody Rhodes finish his story and we are seeing John Cena start his farewell tour, but we also need to see the next generation of monsters take their place at the table.
If the creative team is smart, they will let these two iterate on the Goldberg vs Lesnar formula from WrestleMania 33. Short, explosive, and devastating. No rest holds. No playing to the crowd. Just seven times the normal amount of testosterone in one ring. If Oba Femi leaves that stadium with the respect of the Beast, he becomes an instant main-eventer. And if he doesn't? Well, at least we got to see a few minutes of glorious, high-impact carnage before the desert sun comes up on Monday morning.
Vegas is the perfect place for a high-stakes gamble like this. The Allegiant Stadium crowd is going to be rowdy, and they aren't going to accept a placeholder match. They want a moment they can tell their friends about on the flight home. Brock and Oba have the chance to deliver the most talked-about match of the weekend, provided they both decide to show up and actually work. Let the big boys eat.