Oriental Wrestling Entertainment

[4] On May 7, Cima announced that he, T-Hawk, El Lindaman and Takehiro Yamamura were all leaving Dragon Gate, relocating from Japan to China to be involved with OWE.

Cima and several OWE students also appeared for other promotions, such as the Australasian Wrestling Federation (AWF),[6] Wrestle-1,[7] and DDT Pro-Wrestling shows.

[9][10] In January 2019, Mexican based The Crash Lucha Libre promotion announced that they had reached a deal with OWE to collaborate on wrestling events in the future.

[14] The first night of the show was broadcast by Japanese television network Fighting TV Samurai and featured wrestlers from Wrestle-1, whom OWE as a working relationship.

During events the commentary is broadcast over the public address system in the arena, helping guide the fans on whom to cheer for and so on.

[2] As a result of the cultural restrictions and in an effort to present a more "Chinese" product OWE focuses on the culture of Chinese martial arts and spreading awareness on a global scale, presenting wrestling angles, storylines and in ring characters very differently and more sedate compared to western companies such as WWE.

[22][23] Domestic: International: Worldwide: OWE has a permanent roster of 35 Chinese wrestlers[Note 1] who are all under a 10-year contract and are provided training facilities and accommodations in the same vein as C-pop groups backed by record labels.

OWE head coach Cima