[4.0] "Some good matches . Most of the matches contained get sections only to succumb to unwieldiness as can on occasion happy in Joshi . Matches worth watching : Aoi Kizuki & Moeka Haruhi vs. Kaori Yoneyama & Tsubasa Kuragaki , Hana Kimura & Kyoko Kimura vs. Meiko Satomura & Mika Iwata and my top match was Aja Kong, Amazing Kong & Ayako Hamada vs. Chihiro Hashimoto, Hiroyo Matsumoto & Rina Yamashita ."
[6.0] "If only I would teach myself to understand Japanese... this show's format saw the anniversaree A Kong preface each match discussing each, as well as the competitors within. Most, if not all of, the matches were in edited or even worse in digest fashion. The opener was an opp for Kuragaki to bully the younger, more feminine competitors. I very much enjoyed the dynamic of the 'ten woman' as the first ten minutes of the twenty minute draw was conceived as five 2-minute singles matches. My faves among the five were the dynamic and potentiality of a Kansai-Yoshiko feud and the nimble workrate of the spunky-cute Kobayashi and Leon. Overall, Kagetsu carried the workrate for her team. The purpose of the third tag was for the continued toughen-her-up maturation of H Kimura... , this time Satomura being the bully. The fourth and fifth matches worked in-tandem with each other, and involved storylines incomprehensible to this viewer due to product ignorance. Ya see... Ozaki's crew are the heels with their own ref, and policeman, Ohka serves as a dominatrix and S Akai is the elitist model type, and they're fighting well-seasoned up-and-comer faces. Interference reached a new scale in the 'Openweight Title match that saw vengeance for the losing ladies of the 4th match as well as S Akai's about-face. The main event was A Hamada fighting three women with the Kong's briefly entering to do their thang... but credit to A Kong for a double-leg pick-up slam bump that couldn't have felt good."