Free Best: Wrestlewiki

The wrestlewiki.com version has a very specific focus on female submission wrestling. If you're researching mainstream wrestling history, WWE storylines, or major PPV events, this isn't the right tool. You'd be better served by Cagematch or Wikipedia's professional wrestling coverage.

The site operates on the MediaWiki engine—the same software that powers Wikipedia. However, WrestleWiki is not just a copy of Wikipedia; it is a curated database with a deep structure tailored to the wrestling niche. Here are the defining features you get for free:

In the vast digital landscape of professional wrestling fandom, finding a reliable, comprehensive, and completely free database can feel like searching for a needle in a haystack. Enter WrestleWiki—a fan-created wiki platform dedicated to collecting and preserving everything there is to know about professional wrestling. Unlike subscription-based services or fragmented fan sites, WrestleWiki stands as a freely accessible, collaboratively built encyclopedia that anyone can use—and contribute to—at no cost.

It means gratis (no money required) and libre (open to use). WrestleWiki is a free-to-read, free-to-contribute encyclopedia. You do not need to register to read articles, and you will never encounter a payment request to view match results or title histories.

The more mainstream version is hosted on Fandom at wrestle.fandom.com. This is a fan-created website about the WWE and other professional wrestling franchises. Like any wiki, this format allows anyone to create or edit articles, working collaboratively to collect everything there is to know about professional wrestling. This version covers major promotions like WWE, TNA, and ROH, and includes wrestling news, event coverage, and roster information.

A verified list of every title they’ve held across different promotions.

Here is everything you need to know about navigating the world of WrestleWiki without spending a dime. What is WrestleWiki?

In an era where wrestling journalism is locked behind paywalls, clickbait slideshows, and 15-minute YouTube ads, stands as the digital equivalent of a territorial brawl in a VFW hall: raw, unrestricted, and owned by the fans.