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WB270 Wrestlers Review: The New Kid in Session Wrestling Directories
So here’s a site that popped up in 2023 and is already making moves in a space that’s been dominated by one platform for over a decade. WB270Wrestlers.com is a session wrestling directory, meaning it’s where you go to find a real human being who will physically wrestle you for money. If that sentence just confused you, go read my SessionGirls review first because I’m not explaining the whole concept again. If you already know what session wrestling is and you’re wondering whether this newer directory is worth your time, stick around because I’ve got thoughts.
What’s WB270 Actually Doing Different
I’ll be honest, when I first landed on the site I nearly closed the tab. The homepage has blog posts about online casinos. In Dutch And German. There’s an article called “The Complete Manual to Genuine Cash Gambling Games” sitting right there on what’s supposed to be a session wrestling directory. It’s clearly paid spam that someone allowed onto the site for a few quid, and it looks absolutely terrible. Imagine walking into a martial arts gym and the first thing you see is a poster for online poker. That’s the vibe. Whoever is running this site needs to delete that garbage immediately because it’s the first thing visitors see and it makes the whole operation look amateur.
Now here’s the weird part. Once you get past that trainwreck of a homepage and start clicking through the actual directory features, the site is surprisingly well thought out. Whoever designed the functional parts of this platform clearly understands what the session wrestling community actually needs, even if their homepage content strategy involves letting anyone with a credit card publish casino articles on the front page.
The Features That Actually Impressed Me
The tour dates page is the best thing on this site and honestly it might be the best tour page I’ve seen on any session wrestling platform period. Wrestlers from around the world list their upcoming travel schedules broken down by region. Asia, Europe, Australia, North America, South America, all laid out with specific dates, specific cities, and direct email addresses. I’m scrolling through and Marina Redstar has dates in Hong Kong, Manila, Seoul, Taipei, Singapore, Jakarta, and Kuala Lumpur all mapped out weeks in advance. Madam Mysteria is hitting Cyprus, Prague, Berlin, Paris, Manchester, and Birmingham. Lisa Cross has London sessions booked months ahead.
If you don’t live in New York or London where session wrestlers are permanently based, this page is gold. Instead of emailing a dozen different wrestlers asking “hey are you ever coming to my city,” you just check the tour page and see who’s headed your way. That alone is worth bookmarking the site for.
Then there’s the blacklist. An actual public blacklist for clients who’ve crossed lines. Most session wrestling communities handle bad clients through private whisper networks where wrestlers warn each other behind closed doors. WB270 said forget that, we’re putting it on the website where everyone can see it. That takes guts and it sends a message that I genuinely respect. Act like an idiot with one of these wrestlers and your name goes on a list that the entire community can read. That kind of accountability protects wrestlers and it should scare the hell out of anyone thinking about misbehaving during a session.
The site also has a Studios/Mat Hire section which solves a problem nobody else seems to bother with. If you’ve booked a session but neither you nor the wrestler has a suitable venue, this page tells you where you can rent one. Sounds simple but it’s the kind of practical detail that makes the difference between a booking happening and a booking falling apart over logistics.
And they list male wrestlers too. That’s new for the session wrestling directory world where most platforms focus exclusively on female providers. Whether you’re a woman wanting to book a male wrestler, a guy looking for a same-sex grappling match, or anything else, having both options in one place just makes sense. I’m surprised it took this long for a directory to do it.
The Wrestler Profiles and What You’re Working With
The directory is split into Female Wrestlers, Male Wrestlers, and browsing by location. Each wrestler creates their own profile with photos, session types they offer, rates, location, travel plans, and contact information. Some profiles are detailed with multiple photos and thorough descriptions of what they offer. Others are bare minimum with a photo and an email address. That’s the reality of any directory where the wrestlers control their own listings. You’ll find some profiles that sell you on the person immediately and others that leave you wanting more information before reaching out.
The community standards section is thorough and clearly written. No harassment, no sharing private information about wrestlers or clients, no bullying, no defamation, no encouraging pile-ons against individuals. Break the rules and you end up on the blacklist even if you don’t have a profile on the site. It reads like it was written by someone who’s spent time in the session wrestling community and has seen first-hand what happens when platforms don’t have clear rules. I appreciate that.
WB270Wrestlers.com Final Verdict
There’s a genuinely smart platform buried under a homepage that desperately needs someone to take the car keys away from whoever is approving blog content. The tour dates, the blacklist, the male directory, the mat hire listings, and the community standards are all evidence that someone behind this site understands the session wrestling world and cares about building something useful for it. The gambling spam on the front page is evidence that someone else behind this site cares about making a quick buck from whatever content they can sell space for.