However, an ally could lift the opponent' feet off the ground first, making it an Aided DDT, a much more effective variation of the move.
This move is best known as being the finisher used by NJPW tag team and Bullet Club members Guerrillas of Destiny.
This move was popularized by the World's Greatest Tag Team (Charlie Haas and Shelton Benjamin).
This is a normal whiplash, but instead of having the opponent held in the air with the aid of the ring rope, they are kept in the elevated position by another wrestler.
This was also used by Rob Conway and Sylvain Grenier of La Résistance with this move being called "Au Revoir".
The move was famously used by the Brain Busters, the New Age Outlaws, and FTR, the latter of which dubbed it the "Mind Breaker".
Although it was initially used by ECW tag team The Pitbulls, The Dudley Boyz went on to popularize this move, usually by putting their adversaries through tables.
The partner then steps in front of both wrestlers and grabs the opponent's arms or shoulders and yanks them upward, just as the first attacker throws themself and the victim backwards in a wheelbarrow suplex.
This was the finishing move of the tag team known as Power and Glory (Hercules Hernandez and Paul Roma).
The wrestler on the top rope then performs a flying body splash, with their partner throwing them, thus increasing their range, height, and impact.
The partner then leaps upwards, grabbing the opponent from behind by the chin, and pulling them down into a double knee backbreaker while the first wrestler delivers the powerbomb.
This device variation sees one of the wrestlers lift the opponent onto their shoulders, into the powerbomb position, while standing with their back to the corner turnbuckles.
This was the finisher move of former WWE Tag Team The Prime Time Players calling it the "Ghetto Blaster".
One wrestler executes the legsweep while the other attempts a superkick making the opponent fall after impact of the combined maneuvers.
Another version is performed by The Beautiful People (Angelina Love and Velvet Sky), called the "Makeover".
Toxic Attraction members Gigi Dolin and Jacy Jayne use a variation where Dolin performs a low roundhouse kick while Jayne performs a running discus big boot at the same time, this particular variation is called the "Toxic Shock".
Matt would perform his "Twist of Fate", leaving the opponent prone to Jeff's "Swanton Bomb".
The Missile Dropkick variant was used by the former WWF Tag Team The Rockers calling this move the Rocker-Plex.
The variation can also be made with the attackers hitting the back of the opponent's feet to then force them fall to the mat or done by using an STO.
The Hardy Boyz innovated said maneuver and used it as a double-team signature move, usually utilizing the leg lariat as the attack.
Former WWE World Tag Team Champion Rated-RKO used this move briefly, as the cutter is member Randy Orton's finisher as the namesake RKO.
Another inverted triple-team variation known as "Ragnarok" was used by the Bruderschaft des Kreuzes in Chikara where Claudio Castagnoli and Tursas lift the opponent up by their arms, while Ares runs through and pushes their legs back so that they flip over into a double team iconoclasm by Castagnoli and Tursas.
This is similar to a normal double DDT only that they are in an inverted headlock and drop them in the back of the head.
This is a double team maneuver which involves two wrestlers hitting a variations of an elbow drop (standing, or flying) on one person at the same time.
These elbow drops are often preceded by some sort of dance/taunt or the joining of hands, or otherwise, with the specific wrestler's theatrics.
The move sees two wrestlers deliver simultaneous knee strikes to the head of a kneeling opponent.
A tandem attack where two wrestlers stand in front of an opponent and hit them in the face/head with a high side thrust kick, known as a superkick.
In a double vertical suplex, the move is the same except that when the opponent is in position, they are lifted and held upside-down before the wrestlers fall backwards.
The stable The Spirit Squad has been known to use this move, with anywhere in their number of attackers ranging from 2 to 5 wrestlers lifting up and slamming the one opponent.
This move, named after the tradition of pulling on a wishbone, sees two wrestlers each take hold of an opponent's leg (who is lying face up on the mat) and yank them in opposite directions, stretching out the groin area.