The Ring General has spoken and the smarks are losing their minds
When Gunther decides to put his stamp of approval on a prospect, the collective internet wrestling community usually pauses its usual schedule of grievances to listen. The Ring General recently went on record stating that Oba Femi has the ceiling to become one of the foundational pillars of the company. It is a massive endorsement from a man who usually treats his opponents like speed bumps on the road to another title defense.
We are watching a classic passing-of-the-torch moment unfold in real time. Femi has been tearing through the NXT roster with the kind of physical intensity that makes you check your own furniture for damage. Gunther, currently the gold standard for in-ring psychological brutality, clearly sees a mirror image of his own ruthless efficiency in the young heavyweight. As WrestlingNews.co reported, this isn't just polite locker room talk; it is a direct forecast for the future main event scene.
The skeptics are busy counting their chickens
Not everyone is ready to hand Femi the keys to the kingdom just yet. There is a vocal minority in the threads arguing that this serves more as a character building exercise for Gunther than a genuine launching pad for Femi. Some users are pointing out that being called a future pillar of the company often carries a distinct 'kiss of death' odor when it happens before a guy even hits the main roster rotation.
You can find the standard 'wait and see' crowd hiding in the shadows of every discussion. These folks argue that the jump from the NXT Performance Center to the main roster often turns potential champions into catering fodder. One user aptly noted that we have seen plenty of 'next big things' get lost in the shuffle once the creative team stops having a clear plan for the mid-card. It feels like every third prospect is labeled a future WrestleMania headliner until they disappear into the abyss of generic entrance music and short-lived pushes.
The optimists are ready to crown him now
The enthusiasts, however, are already measuring Femi for a world title gold. They point to the way he carries himself in the ring, noting the lack of wasted movement and the sheer impact of his power moves. When you watch his match flow, you don't see the usual 'indie-riffic' spot-fest nonsense. You see a guy who understands that keeping his opponent down is more important than wowing the crowd with flips.
The consensus among the believers is that Gunther’s word carries actual weight because he rarely misses on evaluation. If you look at the trajectory of the current roster, the main event is starting to feel slightly repetitive. Adding a fresh, high-impact powerhouse like Femi offers a necessary change of pace from the technical chain-wrestling matches that have dominated the marquee for the last eighteen months.
The verdict: It is time to trust the process
If you ask me, the skeptics are overthinking it. Talent like Oba Femi comes around once every few years, and you do not ignore that kind of raw presence simply because you have been burned by bad booking in the past. Gunther has built his entire persona on being the guy who kills hype, so the fact that he is actively building this hype shows just how special Femi actually is.
Is there a risk he ends up mid-carding on Speed while Vince’s old ghosts continue to haunt creative meetings? Sure. But betting against someone who moves with the intentional, heavy-hitting hostility that Femi displays is a sucker's game. This guy has the look, the presence, and now, he has the blessing of the most dominant champion of the modern era. If that doesn't put him in your sights, you might need to get your eyes checked.
We are currently looking at a 100% certainty that the company knows exactly what they have under the hood. They are not hiding this development; they are parading it. Whether Femi becomes the next major heel or a monster babyface doesn't matter yet. What matters is that he has the tools to make even the most cynical fans turn their heads. The transition to the main roster is always a gamble, but sometimes the cards are stacked in your favor right from the jump.