Bullet Club
Bullet Club is a professional wrestling stable founded in New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) on May 3, 2013, at Wrestling Dontaku in Fukuoka, Japan, initially comprising foreign wrestlers Prince Devitt (later known as Finn Bálor), Karl Anderson, Bad Luck Fale, and Tama Tonga, who aligned as a heel faction emphasizing anti-authority tactics and camaraderie among outsiders in the Japanese promotion.[1][2] The group quickly gained prominence through disruptive beatdowns, such as their debut assault on IWGP Heavyweight Champion Hiroshi Tanahashi, and innovative elements like the "Too Sweet" hand gesture and the Bone Soldier t-shirt design, which sold out within two hours of its introduction.[1][2] Over the years, Bullet Club evolved significantly, expanding its roster with high-profile additions including The Young Bucks in 2013, AJ Styles in 2014, who became its leader after Devitt's departure following a loss to Ryusuke Taguchi at Invasion Attack; Kenny Omega in 2014, who led from 2016 to 2018 and won multiple championships like the IWGP Heavyweight title at Dominion 2018; and later members such as Cody Rhodes in 2016, Jay White from 2018 to 2023, and as of 2025 leader David Finlay, who assumed control in March 2023 at the NJPW 51st Anniversary Show, leading the War Dogs subgroup.[3][1] Notable internal shifts included the 2016 exodus of Styles, Anderson, and Doc Gallows to WWE after Wrestle Kingdom 10, the 2018 departure of Omega and The Elite (including the Young Bucks and Cody) to help form All Elite Wrestling (AEW), and the 2020 split where EVIL formed the House of Torture subgroup after winning the IWGP Heavyweight and Intercontinental titles at Dominion.[3] Bullet Club's influence extended globally, branching into promotions like Impact Wrestling in 2021 with members Chris Bey and Ace Austin, and AEW since 2023 via Bullet Club Gold led by Jay White, inspiring modern wrestling factions through its blend of real-life friendships, social media presence (e.g., the Being the Elite series), and success in elevating NJPW's international profile, with members collectively holding numerous IWGP titles and boosting the promotion's viewership.[1][3]Overview
Concept and Origins
Bullet Club is a professional wrestling stable founded in New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) in 2013, established as a dominant heel faction comprising primarily international wrestlers who portrayed themselves as foreign invaders challenging the Japanese wrestling establishment.[1][2] The group emerged during a period when NJPW sought to refresh its junior heavyweight and heavyweight divisions by introducing aggressive, anti-authority storylines that contrasted with the promotion's traditional babyface dominance.[4] The origins of Bullet Club trace directly to Irish wrestler Prince Devitt's heel turn at NJPW's Wrestling Dontaku event on May 3, 2013, in Fukuoka, Japan, where he teamed with Bad Luck Fale to defeat his longtime tag team partner Ryusuke Taguchi and Captain New Japan.[2][4] This heel turn solidified Devitt's alignment with Fale, a towering Samoan enforcer, and set the stage for the faction's formal debut later that night when Devitt, Fale, American wrestler Karl Anderson, and Tama Tonga ambushed popular NJPW ace Hiroshi Tanahashi following his successful title defense.[1][2] Devitt, positioned as the inaugural leader, drew from his "Real Shooter" persona and Anderson's "Machine Gun" nickname to coin the group's name, "Bullet Club," evoking imagery of precise, unrelenting attacks.[2] At its inception, Bullet Club embodied a core theme of rebellion against NJPW's hierarchical structure, using motifs of defiance and disruption to position its members as outsiders intent on dismantling the promotion's homegrown stars and customs.[1][4] The faction quickly focused on recruiting additional international talent, such as Anderson's fellow American wrestlers and other gaijin (foreign) performers, to assert control over both the junior heavyweight and heavyweight divisions through coordinated assaults and championship pursuits.[2] This approach not only heightened inter-promotional tensions but also amplified Bullet Club's role as a disruptive force in NJPW's ecosystem.[1]Characteristics and Symbolism
Bullet Club's visual identity is defined by its predominant use of black attire, including t-shirts, jackets, and ring gear emblazoned with the group's signature skull logo featuring bullet motifs that evoke themes of aggression and invincibility. This "Bone Soldier" design, introduced early in the faction's history, quickly became a merchandising staple, with initial shirts selling out rapidly and reinforcing the stable's outlaw aesthetic inspired by American wrestling heels. The bullet elements tie directly to founding member Prince Devitt's "Real Shooter" persona and Karl Anderson's "Machine Gun" nickname, symbolizing precision strikes and unrelenting force within the group dynamic.[2][5] Performative elements further cement Bullet Club's rebellious symbolism, most notably the "Too Sweet" hand gesture, which originated as a revival of the 1990s Kliq wolfpack sign by Devitt and Anderson during their time at NJPW's LA Dojo and was popularized globally by The Young Bucks upon their 2014 recruitment. This gesture—typically formed by extending the thumb, index, and pinky fingers while folding the middle and ring fingers—serves as a sign of brotherhood, often exchanged among members during entrances, celebrations, or to mock defeated opponents, blending camaraderie with provocation. Complementing this are thematic catchphrases like "Bulletproof," emphasizing the faction's resilient, untouchable ethos, and entrance music such as the custom track "Shot 'Em" by [Q]Brick, which amplifies their gun-slinging bravado with lyrics about firing shots and running the scene.[2][6][7] As a heel stable, Bullet Club employs underhanded tactics that prioritize chaos and dominance, including rampant outside interference from non-competing members to sway match outcomes, the covert use of weapons like eye pokes, low blows, or removed turnbuckle pads, and elaborate post-match celebrations—such as group "Too Sweets" over fallen rivals—to deliberately antagonize audiences and draw heat. These methods, less common in traditional Japanese strong-style wrestling, import a Western sports entertainment flair that heightens their role as disruptors.[2][8] The symbolism of Bullet Club has evolved significantly since its inception as a gaijin-led insurgency railing against NJPW's Japanese establishment and cultural norms, positioning foreign wrestlers as invaders challenging local dominance through controversial antics and promos. By the mid-2010s, it transformed into a global brand influencing multiple promotions, with splinter groups like The Elite preserving core elements such as the black attire, skull logo, and "Too Sweet" gesture while expanding the faction's reach beyond Japan. Into the 2020s, the group continued to adapt through successive leadership changes—including Jay White from 2018 to 2023 and David Finlay from 2023 onward—and internal conflicts, such as the formation of the House of Torture subgroup in 2020 and the second Bullet Club Civil War in 2025 involving the War Dogs, House of Torture, and original members. This ongoing evolution has maintained the original anti-authority essence but adapted it to a more inclusive, merchandise-driven phenomenon that resonated worldwide.[9][2][10][11][12]History
Formation and Prince Devitt's Leadership (2013–2014)
The Bullet Club stable was formed on May 3, 2013, during New Japan Pro-Wrestling's (NJPW) Wrestling Dontaku event at Fukuoka Kokusai Center. In the aftermath of a tag team match where Prince Devitt and Ryusuke Taguchi lost to IWGP Heavyweight Champion Hiroshi Tanahashi and Tool Box member Yuto Nakamura, Devitt turned on his longtime partner Taguchi, attacking him with a steel chair. Devitt then aligned with fellow foreigners Karl Anderson and Bad Luck Fale, who joined the assault on Taguchi and Tanahashi, marking the group's debut as a heel faction of international invaders challenging NJPW's establishment. Devitt, the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion at the time, named the group Bullet Club, drawing inspiration from a sense of cool, outlaw camaraderie among the members.[1][2] Tama Tonga, who had returned to NJPW in early 2013 following a developmental stint in WWE's Florida Championship Wrestling, was unveiled as the fourth founding member during the same post-match beatdown at Wrestling Dontaku. Tonga, son of wrestling legend Haku, added a familial tie to the group through his connections with Anderson and Fale from the LA Dojo training system. Shortly after formation, Bullet Club launched its first major storyline rivalry against the CHAOS stable, targeting leader Kazuchika Okada and his allies. This feud escalated when Devitt, backed by his new stablemates, defeated Tanahashi on June 22, 2013, at Dominion 6.22 to earn an IWGP Heavyweight Championship challenge against Okada, whom he faced and lost to on July 20, 2013, at Kizuna Road 2013—highlighting the group's aggressive push into NJPW's heavyweight division despite their junior heavyweight roots.[13][2][14] During 2013 and 2014 under Devitt's guidance, Bullet Club established dominance in NJPW's junior heavyweight division through persistent pursuits of key titles. Devitt solidified his status by winning the 2013 Best of the Super Juniors tournament, the first foreigner to do so, with an undefeated 8-0 record in Block A before defeating Alex Shelley in the finals on June 9, 2013, at Ryogoku Kokugikan. As IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion—a title he held from August 2012 until April 2014—Devitt defended it successfully multiple times with Bullet Club interference, including against challengers like Kota Ibushi and Low Ki. The stable also aggressively chased the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championship, with teams like Anderson and Tonga competing in high-profile matches, contributing to the group's reputation for disrupting junior division hierarchies and capturing three of the four major junior tournaments that year.[1][2][15] Prince Devitt led Bullet Club as its charismatic founder, emphasizing a heel persona rooted in international recruitment and brazen invasions of NJPW events to promote a global, anti-authority ethos. Drawing from his experiences as the first non-Japanese graduate of the NJPW dojo system, Devitt positioned the group as a brotherhood of elite foreigners—primarily from the U.S. and New Zealand—challenging the promotion's Japanese-centric traditions through coordinated attacks and promos that mocked rivals. This style not only unified the core four members through shared dojo bonds but also set the template for future expansions, fostering an aura of untouchable invaders that drew international attention to NJPW.[1][2]A.J. Styles's Leadership (2014–2016)
Under A.J. Styles's leadership, Bullet Club transitioned from a junior heavyweight-focused stable to a dominant force spanning multiple divisions in New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). Styles joined the group on April 6, 2014, at Invasion Attack 2014, immediately after Prince Devitt's departure following his loss to Ryusuke Taguchi in a loser-leaves-NJPW match; Styles made his in-ring debut by attacking IWGP Heavyweight Champion Kazuchika Okada post-match, signaling his alignment with the faction and positioning himself as its new figurehead.[16] Styles's rapid ascent solidified Bullet Club's main event presence. On May 3, 2014, at Wrestling Dontaku 2014, he defeated Okada to capture the IWGP Heavyweight Championship in his first singles match for NJPW, aided by Yujiro Takahashi's betrayal of his Chaos ally Okada, marking Takahashi's recruitment as Bullet Club's inaugural Japanese member.[17] Doc Gallows, paired with Karl Anderson as the tag team K.E.S., had already bolstered the group's heavyweight tag division earlier in 2014, contributing to their IWGP Tag Team Championship reign that began in February.[18] Styles's first successful title defense came on October 13, 2014, at King of Pro-Wrestling against Okada, retaining via disqualification after interference from Bullet Club members, which underscored the stable's growing reliance on numbers to maintain dominance. In 2015, Bullet Club expanded its influence across weight classes, with the junior heavyweight contingent led by The Young Bucks—Matt and Nick Jackson—securing multiple IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championship reigns, including victories on February 11, 2015, at The New Beginning in Osaka and May 3, 2015, at Wrestling Dontaku. The faction's incursions blurred divisional lines, as heavyweight members like Styles and Anderson interfered in junior title matches, while junior stars such as the Bucks targeted heavyweight contenders, fostering storylines of unchecked aggression against NJPW's established order. Styles lost the IWGP Heavyweight Championship to Hiroshi Tanahashi on January 4, 2015, at Wrestle Kingdom 9, ending his 246-day reign, but he continued leading challenges into the heavyweight elite.[19] Styles's tenure elevated Bullet Club to unprecedented main event status, with the group collectively holding multiple championships and drawing international attention through high-profile feuds. Despite dropping the IWGP Heavyweight title, Styles pursued it relentlessly, facing Okada in a rematch on July 5, 2015, at Dominion 7.5, where he fell short but reinforced the stable's threat level through post-match assaults involving Anderson and the Bucks. By late 2015, Bullet Club's roster depth allowed for sustained invasions, such as Kenny Omega's recruitment on November 8, 2014, at Power Struggle, adding a versatile performer who bridged junior and heavyweight dynamics.[20] This period under Styles transformed the faction into NJPW's premier heel unit, setting the stage for prolonged title pursuits and divisional dominance until his ousting on January 5, 2016, at New Year's Dash!!.[21]Kenny Omega's Leadership and The Elite (2016–2018)
In the aftermath of Wrestle Kingdom 10 on January 4, 2016, Kenny Omega solidified his position as the new leader of Bullet Club the following night during a New Japan Pro-Wrestling event, where he, alongside The Young Bucks (Matt and Nick Jackson), ambushed departing leader A.J. Styles in a brutal post-match attack, signaling a shift toward a more international, gaijin-dominated faction dynamic.[22][23] Under Omega's guidance, Bullet Club emphasized high-profile recruitment and creative innovation, beginning with the addition of Adam "Hangman" Page on May 9, 2016, during the inaugural War of the Worlds crossover tour with Ring of Honor, where Page turned on his partner Colt Cabana to align with the group.[24] Later that year, on December 10, 2016, Cody Rhodes joined as a marquee signing, debuting his allegiance in a video package aired during an NJPW event, further bolstering the faction's Western appeal.[25] Omega's leadership era marked a creative peak for Bullet Club from 2016 to 2017, highlighted by his personal accolades and the group's expanding global footprint. In 2016, Omega captured the G1 Climax tournament for the first time as a foreigner, defeating Hiroshi Tanahashi in the final and earning a high-profile Wrestle Kingdom main event slot against champion Kazuchika Okada, which elevated Bullet Club's status as a dominant force.[26] Complementing this, the faction launched "Being The Elite," a groundbreaking YouTube web series on May 5, 2016, produced by Omega and The Young Bucks, which chronicled their behind-the-scenes antics and blurred the lines between kayfabe and reality, amassing a dedicated international fanbase and influencing modern wrestling storytelling.[27] International tours, such as the 2017 War of the Worlds events co-promoted with ROH, showcased Bullet Club's crossover potential, planting early seeds for "Forbidden Door" concepts by integrating NJPW talent with American promotions and drawing record crowds for collaborative shows.[28] Central to Omega's tenure was the formation of The Elite, initially established in January 2016 as a creative subgroup within Bullet Club comprising Omega and The Young Bucks, who adopted a more polished, entertainment-focused persona while retaining the faction's heel tactics.[27] This core expanded organically through 2016–2018, incorporating Cody, Page, and later Marty Scurll, evolving into Bullet Club's de facto leadership unit responsible for innovative storylines and merchandise-driven popularity. The Elite's dynamic gradually leaned toward babyface sympathies despite their heel affiliation, as their high-flying athleticism and relatable web content garnered widespread acclaim from Japanese and Western audiences alike, contrasting with the group's traditional villainy.[27] By late 2017 into 2018, under Omega's direction, Bullet Club's growth introduced internal tensions, particularly as the faction ballooned in size with strategic additions like Scurll, who joined on May 12, 2017, at War of the Worlds by famously "snapping" Adam Cole's fingers and replacing him under Omega's decree, infusing a darker, more theatrical edge.[28] Omega's in-ring defenses further highlighted these strains, as he navigated challenges from established Japanese stars to assert Bullet Club's dominance; for instance, after winning the IWGP Heavyweight Championship from Okada on June 9, 2018, at Dominion in a grueling two-out-of-three falls match, Omega successfully retained against Kota Ibushi in a three-way bout with Cody on November 3, 2018, at Power Struggle, showcasing the leader's resilience amid the group's expanding roster and shifting alliances.[29][30] These high-stakes encounters against homegrown talent like Ibushi underscored Omega's role in bridging Bullet Club's international ambitions with NJPW's core traditions, though the faction's rapid evolution began to strain its unity.[30]Bullet Club Civil War (2018)
The Bullet Club Civil War of 2018 was an internal power struggle that fractured the stable, pitting leader Kenny Omega and his allies in The Elite against challenger Cody Rhodes and later the original members known as the Bullet Club OGs. Tensions ignited shortly after Wrestle Kingdom 12, with Cody positioning himself as a rival to Omega's authority. On January 5, 2018, at New Year's Dash!!, Cody attempted to assault Kota Ibushi, but Omega intervened to protect his former tag partner, exposing early rifts within the group.[11] The feud intensified through February and March across NJPW and Ring of Honor events, as Cody openly challenged Omega's leadership and sought to reshape the stable's direction.[31] Planning for the independent All In pay-per-view event in September 2018, announced in May by Cody and The Young Bucks, further highlighted divisions, as the initiative emphasized autonomy from NJPW and strained relations with Omega, who was deeply embedded in the promotion as IWGP United States Heavyweight Champion.[32] The conflict reached a boiling point on April 7, 2018, at ROH's Supercard of Honor XII, where Cody defeated Omega in a non-title match billed as a fight for Bullet Club leadership; the Young Bucks' interference backfired, accidentally superkicking Omega and allowing Cody to secure the pin with Cross Rhodes.[33] Cody's brief reign as leader alienated traditionalists, leading Omega to expel him from the group and reclaim dominance by invoking his status as IWGP Heavyweight Championship contender.[34] The expulsion ignited a broader war when Tama Tonga and Tanga Loa, loyal to the Bullet Club's founding ethos, turned on Omega immediately after his July 7, 2018, victory over Cody at G1 Special in San Francisco for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship; the Guerrillas of Destiny attacked Omega alongside Bad Luck Fale, declaring the formation of the Firing Squad to restore "original" control and rejecting The Elite's influence.[35] This betrayal escalated the civil war, with The Elite—now including Omega, the Bucks, Hangman Page, and a reconciled Cody—clashing against the Firing Squad loyalists. Key confrontations included a six-man tag team match at Dominion 6.9 on June 9, 2018, where Omega and Kota Ibushi (as the Golden Lovers) joined Hiroshi Tanahashi to defeat Fale, Tonga, and Tanga Loa by pinfall, temporarily asserting Elite dominance.[36] The strife persisted through the summer, featuring intra-stable bouts at events like Sakura Genesis and Wrestling Dontaku, where sub-members like Chase Owens and Yujiro Takahashi faced Elite representatives in tag matches to symbolize the broader divide.[31] Resolution came at King of Pro-Wrestling on October 8, 2018, in an eight-man tag where the Firing Squad (Fale, Tonga, Tanga Loa, and new recruit Taiji Ishimori) defeated Elite members (the Bucks, Page, and Owens) via pinfall, underscoring the OGs' resurgence; though Omega retained nominal leadership as champion, the victory highlighted the irreparable splintering.[37] In the aftermath, the ongoing fractures prompted The Elite—Kenny Omega, Cody Rhodes, The Young Bucks, and Hangman Page—to depart Bullet Club on October 24, 2018, via social media announcements, effectively ending their involvement and allowing the stable to refocus on its core Japanese and OG elements under evolving stewardship.[38] This exodus directly facilitated the founding of All Elite Wrestling in January 2019, marking a pivotal shift in professional wrestling dynamics.[13]Jay White's Leadership (2018–2023)
Following the Bullet Club Civil War, Jay White solidified his position as the faction's leader in late 2018. On October 8 at King of Pro-Wrestling, White aligned with the Bullet Club originals by attacking Kazuchika Okada during a post-match assault on Hiroshi Tanahashi, marking his full integration into the group with Gedo's explicit support.[39] This move came shortly after Kenny Omega's loss of the IWGP Heavyweight Championship to Chris Jericho in the main event, positioning White to capitalize on the power vacuum left by the departing Elite members. With Gedo's backing, White declared himself the new leader on October 17 during Road to Power Struggle, ushering in an era of opportunistic dominance focused on personal ambition over collective unity.[39] Under White's leadership from 2018 to 2019, Bullet Club expanded through strategic recruitment and title pursuits that elevated the group's influence. White recruited Taiji Ishimori, who had debuted as the "Bone Soldier" in May 2018 at Wrestling Dontaku but became a key enforcer under the new regime, capturing the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship on January 4, 2019, at Wrestle Kingdom 13.[40] Chase Owens, a longtime Bullet Club member since 2015, was elevated as a reliable midcard asset, often teaming with White and Gedo in tag matches to assert dominance. The faction's momentum peaked at Wrestle Kingdom 13 on January 4, 2019, where White defeated Okada to win the IWGP Heavyweight Championship, a victory that symbolized Bullet Club's resurgence and White's cunning heel persona.[41] The 2020–2021 period saw Bullet Club adapt to the COVID-19 pandemic through limited live events and a shift toward international outreach, while bolstering its roster with high-profile additions. EVIL joined the group on July 11, 2020, after winning the New Japan Cup and betraying Los Ingobernables de Japón leader Tetsuya Naito, immediately challenging for and capturing the IWGP Heavyweight and Intercontinental Championships at Dominion.[42] KENTA, who had aligned with Bullet Club in April 2019 by betraying Katsuyori Shibata at Sakura Genesis, became a cornerstone during this time, winning the IWGP United States Championship in May 2021 and feuding prominently with LIJ members like Naito and Shingo Takagi.[43] These additions fueled intense rivalries with Los Ingobernables de Japón, including multi-man tags and title defenses that highlighted Bullet Club's aggressive expansion, though pandemic restrictions limited crowd interactions and forced a focus on taped shows and smaller venues. By 2022–2023, internal fractures emerged within Bullet Club, culminating in subgroups and White's eventual departure. Tensions boiled over on February 20, 2022, at Impact Wrestling's No Surrender, where White betrayed the Guerrillas of Destiny (Tama Tonga and Tanga Loa) during a tag title match, aligning instead with The Good Brothers to reform a core Bullet Club unit and ousting GoD from the faction.[44] This split created rival subgroups—the Switchblade-led contingent emphasizing manipulation and titles, versus the displaced GoD—leading to on-screen clashes that diluted unity. White's multiple IWGP World Heavyweight Championship reigns, including defenses against rivals like Tomohiro Ishii and Eddie Kingston, ended with his loss to Okada at Wrestle Kingdom 17 on January 4, 2023. White exited New Japan Pro-Wrestling in March 2023 following a "Loser Leaves NJPW" stipulation loss to Hikuleo on February 11 at The New Beginning in Osaka, marking the close of his tenure as the faction's longest-serving leader.[45]David Finlay's Leadership and War Dogs (2023–2025)
In early 2023, following Jay White's departure from New Japan Pro-Wrestling after his "Loser Leaves NJPW" stipulation loss to Hikuleo at The New Beginning in Osaka on February 11, David Finlay began asserting himself as the new leader of Bullet Club. During the New Japan Cup tournament in March, Finlay publicly declared his leadership role after advancing in the bracket, positioning the faction under his aggressive vision. This shift marked a departure from White's strategic style, emphasizing Finlay's direct, confrontational approach to rebuild the group's dominance.[46][47] Finlay's authority was solidified at Sakura Genesis on April 8, 2023, where, after Bullet Club's victory in a six-man tag team match against Tama Tonga, Hikuleo, and Master Wato, he orchestrated an attack on El Phantasmo alongside KENTA and Gedo, expelling ELP from the group for questioning his command. This bold move quelled internal dissent and unified the remaining members under Finlay's rule, setting the stage for a restructured Bullet Club focused on ruthless expansion. The event highlighted Finlay's kayfabe respect within the faction, drawing comparisons to past leaders while carving his own path.[48][49] By June 2023, Finlay introduced the War Dogs subgroup at Dominion 6.4, comprising himself as leader, longtime advisor Gedo, and the young, hard-hitting talents Clark Connors, Gabe Kidd, Alex Coughlin, and Drilla Moloney. The War Dogs represented a fresh, violent iteration of Bullet Club, targeting underutilized wrestlers and promoting an "us against the world" mentality to inject new energy into the stable. This formation allowed Finlay to consolidate power while elevating the subgroup's members through high-stakes feuds and tag team opportunities.[50][51] Throughout 2023 and 2024, the War Dogs gained momentum with key achievements, including Finlay's victory in a three-way match against Jon Moxley and Will Ospreay to capture the inaugural IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship on January 4, 2024, at Wrestle Kingdom 18. This win, lasting 245 days until his loss to Yota Tsuji at Wrestle Kingdom 19 on January 4, 2025, symbolized the subgroup's rising status and Finlay's personal ascent as a top singles competitor. Finlay also competed in the G1 Climax tournaments of 2023 (finishing with 12 points in B Block), 2024 (10 points in A Block), and 2025 (where he advanced to semifinals before elimination). These performances underscored his endurance and strategic growth within the faction.[52][53][54] The subgroup faced setbacks in 2024, notably Alex Coughlin's retirement announcement on March 24 due to a debilitating injury sustained during training, ending his promising run as a core War Dog after matches at the New Japan Cup. To bolster their ranks, Jake Lee joined in April 2024, initially as a hired enforcer before fully aligning during the G1 Climax 34, bringing his heavyweight experience from Pro Wrestling Noah. Robbie X was added in October 2024, enhancing the junior heavyweight division with his high-flying style and pairing him in tags to expand the War Dogs' versatility. These additions helped maintain the group's aggressive identity amid evolving rivalries.[55][56][57] In early 2025, the War Dogs expanded further with the return of former Young Lions Oskar Leube and Yuto Nakashima from excursion on August 17 at the G1 Climax 35 finals, rebranded as the Knock Out Brothers (OSKAR and Yuto-Ice) and immediately aligning with the subgroup after attacking Taichi. This infusion of power strengthened their tag division, leading to successful defenses and positioning them as contenders for IWGP Tag Team Championship gold. However, Finlay's defeat to Yota Tsuji in a non-title singles match at Destruction in Kobe on September 28, 2025, intensified existing tensions, with subtle signs of discontent among members hinting at fracturing loyalties within the War Dogs.[58][59][60] The Bullet Club Civil War continued into late 2025, with ongoing clashes between the War Dogs and House of Torture. On July 5, 2025, at MLP Resurrection, The Good Brothers (Karl Anderson and Doc Gallows) faced the War Dogs tandem of David Finlay and Drilla Moloney in a tag team match amid the faction's internal strife. The rivalry extended to the Super Jr. Tag League in November 2025, where Bullet Club War Dogs (Robbie X and Taiji Ishimori) competed in the finals against House of Torture (DOUKI and SHO) on November 2, 2025, at Hiroshi Tanahashi's Final Homecoming event, further highlighting the persistent divisions as of November 2025.[61][62]Bullet Club Civil War II (2025)
The Bullet Club Civil War II erupted in early 2025 as a power struggle within the faction, pitting David Finlay's War Dogs against former members aligned with EVIL's House of Torture (HoT), leading to multiple betrayals, expulsions, and a reconfiguration of the group's structure. On February 11, 2025, at The New Beginning in Osaka, EVIL made a dramatic return to New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) after a contract hiatus, attacking War Dogs member Gabe Kidd and Yota Tsuji post-match. Accompanied by Dick Togo, EVIL seized a microphone to declare the War Dogs' expulsion from Bullet Club, effectively reforming House of Torture as a rival splinter faction intent on reclaiming dominance.[63] This move reignited tensions from prior Bullet Club schisms, positioning HoT as antagonists to Finlay's leadership.[64] The rivalry intensified through March and April, culminating at Sakura Genesis on April 5, where SANADA betrayed the War Dogs during their challenge for the NEVER Openweight 6-Man Tag Team Championship against HoT (EVIL, Ren Narita, and Yujiro Takahashi). SANADA, who had briefly aligned with the War Dogs earlier in the year, struck Drilla Moloney with a guitar, enabling HoT to retain the titles via disqualification. SANADA then officially joined HoT, marking a significant defection that weakened the War Dogs' momentum but fueled their resolve for retaliation.[65][66] In May, the War Dogs asserted control at Wrestling Dontaku on May 3 in a high-stakes Dog Pound Steel Cage Match against HoT, designed to settle the faction's future. The War Dogs (David Finlay, Gabe Kidd, Clark Connors, Drilla Moloney, and Taiji Ishimori) emerged victorious after a brutal encounter, highlighted by Kidd's piledriver of Ren Narita through a barbed-wire table, forcing HoT's expulsion from Bullet Club and solidifying the War Dogs' hold on the stable.[67] The infighting persisted into June at Dominion on June 15 in Osaka-jo Hall, where Bad Luck Fale and Chase Owens turned on their War Dogs teammates during an 8-man tag match against HoT. Fale and Owens attacked Finlay, Kidd, Connors, and Moloney, aligning with EVIL's group and further bolstering HoT. This double betrayal eliminated the last remnants of Bullet Club's founding era, leaving no original members in the faction and reducing the War Dogs to their core unit of David Finlay, Gabe Kidd, Clark Connors, Drilla Moloney, and Taiji Ishimori.[68][69]International Expansions
Involvement in Impact Wrestling and TNA (2014–2025)
Bullet Club's involvement in Impact Wrestling (later rebranded as TNA) began in the mid-2010s through appearances by key members during crossover events and working relationships between promotions. In 2014, founding members Karl Anderson and Doc Gallows, who had previously competed in TNA as the tag team The Club, made select appearances billed under the Bullet Club banner following their official alignment with the stable in New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). At the TNA One Night Only: GFW Amped Anthology event on August 21, 2015—part of a co-promotion with Global Force Wrestling—they defeated the Killer Elite Squad (Lance Archer and Davey Boy Smith Jr.) to capture the GFW Tag Team Championship, marking an early incursion that highlighted the faction's expanding influence beyond NJPW.[70] These outings served as invasions, blending Bullet Club's heel persona with TNA's roster, though Anderson and Gallows departed TNA full-time later that year to focus on NJPW. AJ Styles, who joined Bullet Club in April 2014 shortly after leaving TNA in January, did not return for faction-specific angles during this period, but his TNA tenure as a top star indirectly bridged the promotions. The faction's presence in TNA grew more prominent from 2018 onward amid NJPW's partnerships with Impact, allowing former and active Bullet Club members to integrate into storylines. In 2018, Cody Rhodes, an active Bullet Club member and inaugural IWGP United States Champion, defended his newly won NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship on Impact television against TNA talent, showcasing Bullet Club's reach into American promotions. Kenny Omega, who had led Bullet Club until his 2018 departure, entered Impact in 2019 as a major signing, debuting at Slammiversary XVII on July 7 with a main event win over Sami Callihan for the Impact World Championship; his run through 2021 often evoked Bullet Club aesthetics, including tag team alliances with The Young Bucks (former Bullet Club members via The Elite subgroup) against TNA factions like The North. These appearances culminated in cross-promotional events, such as Omega's defenses blending NJPW and TNA talent, though no formal recruitment of TNA stars like Moose or Rich Swann into Bullet Club occurred—storylines instead positioned them as rivals, with Moose clashing with Omega over the Impact World Title at Hard to Kill in January 2021. Under Jay White's leadership starting in 2018, Bullet Club's TNA incursions intensified, beginning with White's unannounced debut at Slammiversary on July 17, 2021, where he attacked Impact World Champion Kenny Omega. In 2022, White, the IWGP World Heavyweight Champion, appeared on the February 17 episode amid ongoing storylines, positioning himself for a TNA World Championship challenge that built toward multi-man matches. At Sacrifice on March 5, White defeated his former trainer Alex Shelley in a highly acclaimed singles bout, advancing his heel agenda within TNA.[71] He followed with tag team action at Under Siege on May 7 alongside El Phantasmo and other Bullet Club members (including Tama Tonga), defeating Honor No More in a 10-man tag team match. At Slammiversary on June 19, White competed in a fatal four-way for the Impact World Championship against Moose, Josh Alexander, and Alex Hammerstone, but was eliminated early, ending his brief title pursuit.[72] White's final TNA outing came at Multiverse United 1 on March 18, 2023, participating in cross-promotional matches, though the focus shifted to emerging Bullet Club affiliates like ABC (Ace Austin and Chris Bey). From 2023 to 2025, Bullet Club's TNA footprint centered on the ABC subgroup, with sporadic NJPW crossovers amid reduced overall activity following White's transition to AEW in March 2023. At Multiverse United 2 on August 20, 2023—a joint NJPW-TNA event—Bullet Club fielded a powerhouse team of David Finlay, KENTA, Clark Connors, Alex Coughlin, Ace Austin, and Chris Bey, defeating a combined TNA/NJPW roster in a 12-man tag to assert faction supremacy.[73] ABC solidified their Bullet Club ties by winning the TNA World Tag Team Championship from The Rascalz (Zachary Wentz and Trey Miguel) at Bound for Glory on October 21, 2023, holding the titles until losing them to The System (Eddie Edwards and Brian Myers) at Sacrifice on March 8, 2024.[74] Bey's career was interrupted by a severe neck injury sustained during a TNA taping on October 26, 2024, resulting in temporary paralysis; he provided recovery updates through TNA, noting progress toward independence by October 2025, though no in-ring return timeline was set.[75] Post-White's departure, Bullet Club's TNA role diminished to occasional title pursuits by ABC, such as Austin's X Division contention in early 2025, while NJPW maintained licensing control over the name for cross-promotional use.[76]Bullet Club Gold and AEW Integration (2023–2025)
In June 2023, following Jay White's departure from New Japan Pro-Wrestling, he and longtime Bullet Club associate Juice Robinson debuted in All Elite Wrestling (AEW) and established Bullet Club Gold as a new branch of the faction, emphasizing their signature "Too Sweet" gestures and black attire while adapting to the American promotion's style.[51] The group quickly expanded when Austin and Colten Gunn, known collectively as The Gunns and former AEW World Tag Team Champions, officially aligned with them on the July 1 episode of AEW Collision, adopting the "Bang Bang Gang" moniker to reflect their gunslinger theme and family ties to wrestling veteran Billy Gunn.[77] This formation positioned Bullet Club Gold as a heel stable focused on gold pursuits, operating semi-autonomously from the NJPW-based Bullet Club under David Finlay's War Dogs subgroup, with minimal cross-promotional interactions after White's full-time commitment to AEW. Throughout 2023 and into 2024, Bullet Club Gold engaged in high-profile feuds that highlighted their trios dominance, including a rivalry with FTR that culminated in a 2-out-of-3 falls match on AEW Collision in July 2023, where White and Robinson earned a tag title opportunity but fell short of dethroning the champions.[78] The group captured the ROH World Six-Man Tag Team Championship from the Mogul Embassy in January 2024 with assistance from an unlikely alliance involving The Acclaimed, setting the stage for unification efforts.[79] Their pursuit of the AEW World Trios Championship intensified, leading to a victory over The Acclaimed and Billy Gunn at AEW Dynasty on April 21, 2024, to become the inaugural Unified AEW and ROH World Trios Champions; they defended the titles against Death Triangle at Double or Nothing in May 2024, retaining via pinfall on Rey Fénix.[80][81] The reign ended abruptly on July 13, 2024, when the titles were vacated due to Juice Robinson's injury, preventing substitutions under AEW rules, though the group later competed in a fatal four-way ladder match at All In in August 2024 against the Blackpool Combat Club, The Patriarchy, and House of Black, where Claudio Castagnoli, PAC, and Wheeler Yuta emerged victorious.[82][83] By 2025, Bullet Club Gold, still branded as the Bang Bang Gang, continued as a prominent AEW act despite setbacks, including Colten Gunn's knee injury sustained during a four-way tag match on the July 19 episode of AEW Collision, which sidelined him and disrupted plans for The Gunns in the AEW World Tag Team Championship tournament.[84][85] The faction maintained visibility through recurring segments on AEW Dynamite and Collision, such as lounge-style promos and multi-man matches, including a win over MxM Collection on the November 1, 2025, episode of Collision.[86] In September 2025, Ace Austin, a former TNA World Champion and Bullet Club alumnus, joined the group on AEW Collision, introduced by Juice Robinson as a trusted ally amid injuries to White and Colten Gunn, bolstering their ranks with his high-flying offense and shared faction history.[87][88] This integration reinforced Bullet Club Gold's independent evolution within AEW, distinct from NJPW's Bullet Club activities, with no significant crossovers reported since White's 2023 transition.Members and Subgroups
Current Members and Structure
As of late 2025, Bullet Club operates under a decentralized structure, with David Finlay maintaining centralized leadership over the primary faction in New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) through the War Dogs subgroup, while Jay White leads an autonomous branch in All Elite Wrestling (AEW) known as the Bang Bang Gang.[89][90] This division reflects ongoing tensions from the 2025 Bullet Club Civil War, allowing regional autonomy but occasional cross-promotional alliances. In TNA Wrestling, Bullet Club's presence has significantly diminished, with no active full faction following the disbandment of its key subgroup in May 2025.[67][91]NJPW War Dogs Core
The core of Bullet Club in NJPW is the War Dogs, led by David Finlay since March 2023, emphasizing aggressive, street-fight tactics and loyalty to Finlay's vision of global dominance.[89] Key members include:- David Finlay (Leader): The faction's eighth overall leader, directing strategy and high-profile feuds.[92]
- Gedo (Manager): Provides tactical guidance and interference, a longstanding Bullet Club figure since 2013.[93]
- Clark Connors: A powerhouse brawler, integral to tag team and multi-man matches.[92]
- Gabe Kidd: Known for his volatile persona, often involved in brutal stipulation bouts.[92]
- Drilla Moloney: A technical striker, frequently partnering in tag divisions.[92]
- Taiji Ishimori: Joined the War Dogs in early 2025, bringing junior heavyweight expertise and Bone Soldier persona.[94]
- Jake Lee: Signed full-time with NJPW in September 2024 and aligned with War Dogs, contributing MMA-influenced grappling.[95][96]
- Robbie X: Joined in October 2024, a high-flyer active in junior heavyweight divisions and tag events like the Super Junior Tag League.
NJPW Associates
Beyond the core, Bullet Club maintains loose affiliations in NJPW with wrestlers who align opportunistically, often in multi-man tags or tournaments, without full integration into War Dogs activities. [No current associates listed as of November 2025; previous affiliations like SANADA ended with the 2025 expulsions.]AEW Bang Bang Gang
In AEW, the Bang Bang Gang functions independently under Jay White's leadership, blending Switchblade's cunning with cowboy-themed antics, and has been active in trios and tag divisions since rebranding from Bullet Club Gold around 2024.[90] Core members are:- Jay White (Leader): The strategist, sidelined by injury in late 2025 but directing from afar.[88]
- Juice Robinson: The enforcer, handling midcard feuds and tag matches.[90]
- Austin Gunn: A high-flyer, active in trios despite faction injuries.[90]
- Colten Gunn (Injured): Tag specialist, out since September 2025 but retained on the roster.[88]
- Ace Austin: Joined in September 2025, adding athleticism and TNA crossover appeal.[90][98]