If you’re deciding whether to wishlist or ignore the latest WWE-style wrestling game, Wrestling Revolution is worth a quick look—mainly because it’s positioned as a WWE 2K knockoff, spotted on the PlayStation Store with a July 15 release date and a cover using a knock-off version of Solo Sikoa. Here’s what’s currently known, what to watch for in the listing, and why the broader “shovelware clone” pattern matters.
What’s changed: a WWE 2K clone hits the PlayStation Store
A new wrestling title called Wrestling Revolution has appeared on storefronts including the PlayStation Store. The listing indicates a July 15 release date, and the game’s marketing leans hard on WWE branding by using a knock-off version of Solo Sikoa as its cover star. The title is presented as a “clone,” though the source notes that the definition of clone games can vary widely—some games are legitimate lookalikes, while others are cheaper imitations designed to trade on familiar IP.
Beyond the release date and the cover art choice, the PlayStation Store listing reportedly includes three screenshots. Those images show a character select-style screen with a roster view, a menu with an AI-generated-looking character model, and a match scene in an empty ring.
Who is affected: players, fans, and storefront quality
The cover star detail is the headline, but the source also frames the overall presentation as potentially AI-assisted and low-effort. The game is developed and published by GGMUKSINC and NXG Studio, studios described in the source as having relatively limited catalogs. Several of their games are characterized as simple and/or featuring AI-generated key art.
On the roster screen, the source claims the game appears to include around ten wrestlers and includes generic, AI-looking versions of known WWE names such as Roman Reigns and Christian (noted as Christian Cage in AEW). It also suggests the possibility of another recognizable wrestler appearing in a similarly generic costume style. The key point for players: this looks less like a polished wrestling sim and more like a storefront listing designed to attract attention through recognizable faces.
The source further places Wrestling Revolution within a wider storefront issue: shovelware. It describes shovelware as low-quality software pushed quickly to market, with clones often making up a large share of that problem—especially as generative AI lowers the barrier for producing marketing assets and basic content.
What comes next: watch the listing, and keep an eye on WWE 2K’s real releases
At the moment, Wrestling Revolution’s concrete details are limited to the PlayStation Store appearance, the July 15 release date, and the Solo Sikoa knock-off cover. The source also suggests that the cover art may not remain unchanged prior to release, implying it could be removed if it’s considered too aggressive as a marketing ploy.
For fans focused on the official WWE 2K pipeline, the source notes that Take-Two has confirmed WWE 2K27 is in development, while Visual Concepts is working on WWE 2K26. WWE 2K26 is described as not being the best-reviewed entry in the franchise, with hope that the next installment returns to the stride associated with WWE 2K22 through WWE 2K25.
What players should know
- Wrestling Revolution is listed on the PlayStation Store and shows a July 15 release date in the available info.
- Its cover uses a knock-off Solo Sikoa version, signaling a marketing-first approach rather than a true brand partnership.
- Only three screenshots are referenced, showing a generic character select/menu and a match in an empty ring.
- The source frames the game as part of the broader shovelware/clone problem seen across storefronts.
Expert View
Based on the available evidence, Wrestling Revolution reads like a classic storefront clone: recognizable WWE-adjacent visuals, limited screenshots, and a release date that’s already on the calendar. If you’re looking for a serious wrestling experience, the current signals point toward low-effort packaging rather than a quality alternative to WWE 2K. The safest approach is to treat it as a watchlist item at best—check how the listing evolves closer to July 15, especially around the cover art and any roster details.

