[6.0] "The opener was very fun, with a light-hearted approach at first, then a BJ Whitmer rampage, and a final segment where Hy-Zaya & Alex Colon shined and battled to the victory in a very credible manner. McBride/Dragon was very boring, not at all a competitive or intriguing match with their sloppy offense looking especially bad against each other, seeming like it would never end. In contrast, Gulak/Gresham was fascinating, as they focused on flawless matwork and chained their stuff in a fluid and dynamic manner, so you had no time to get bored and the match flew by, giving the victor credibility that would sadly be wasted by him no-showing the Finals. Fox/Nation was a very athletic and very impressive match, with them manipulating their constrained environment in amazing fashion and delivering a fantastic sprint that puts over AR Fox immensely. Callihan/Hyde was fast and intense, making it seem like a breeze and building to a great ending, with Sami Callihan getting revenge on DJ Hyde and ready to face Adam Cole in a blow-off match. Airborne/Messiahs had a good pace and interesting action, but the overbooking of the last few minutes was nauseating, drowned the impact of the angle and ended with a visibly botched pinfall, erasing all their efforts and leaving behind a sour taste. The CZW World Heavyweight Championship Triple Threat Match used the local talent well, but ended up being quite average and shows just how shallow and exploitative Devon Moore's title reign really is. The main event satisfied the bloodthirst of the CZW crowd, but also took time to build up the violence as the elimination format helped a lot and made the bigger spots count more. The show had a very fun and athletic first half, but the second half felt overloaded and overbooked, hard to digest and giving so much that it felt more dizzying than rewarding, A good show certainly, but one that would have benefited from much tighter booking"