In Your House
In Your House was a recurring pay-per-view (PPV) event series produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) from 1995 to 1999, consisting of 27 supplementary events held in months without the promotion's five major annual shows—Royal Rumble, WrestleMania, King of the Ring, SummerSlam, and Survivor Series.[1] These two-hour broadcasts were priced lower than standard PPVs to attract more viewers, featuring themed subtitles tied to ongoing storylines, such as "Beware of Dog" or "Canadian Stampede," and often included unique gimmicks like prize giveaways, including a house awarded to a fan at the inaugural event on May 14, 1995, in Syracuse, New York.[2][3] The series debuted amid the WWF's efforts to expand its PPV schedule during the mid-1990s Monday Night Wars competition with World Championship Wrestling (WCW), delivering high-profile matches involving top stars like Diesel, Shawn Michaels, Bret Hart, and The Undertaker.[1] Notable moments included the first-ever Hell in a Cell match at Badd Blood: In Your House in 1997, where The Undertaker faced Shawn Michaels, and the debut of Kane later that night.[2] Other standout events featured intense rivalries, such as the No Holds Barred WWF Championship bout between Michaels and Diesel at In Your House 7: Good Friends, Better Enemies in 1996, and the international flavor of In Your House 16: Canadian Stampede in 1997, pitting American wrestlers against a Canadian team led by Bret Hart.[1] Despite the WWF Championship rarely changing hands on these cards—none did across all events—the series showcased emerging talents and stipulation matches that influenced WWE's future programming.[4] In Your House was phased out in 1999 as WWE transitioned to a fully monthly PPV model with standalone event names like Fully Loaded and Judgment Day, which had previously carried the "In Your House" subtitle.[2] The brand was revived in 2020 as NXT TakeOver: In Your House, a WWE Network special for the NXT roster, honoring the original concept with matches from the NXT brand at Full Sail University; it was held annually as NXT TakeOver: In Your House in 2021 and NXT In Your House in 2022, with the latter being the final event as of 2025.[1][5][6] This revival paid homage to the event's legacy of accessible, action-packed wrestling during the COVID-19 pandemic era, featuring NXT stars like Karrion Kross and Adam Cole in title defenses.[5]Background and Concept
Origins in WWF Pay-Per-View Expansion
In the mid-1990s, the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) operated with a limited pay-per-view (PPV) schedule centered on its five major annual events—WrestleMania, Royal Rumble, King of the Ring, SummerSlam, and Survivor Series—which had been the cornerstone of its major revenue streams since the early 1980s (with King of the Ring established as a PPV in 1993).[7] However, by 1995, competitor World Championship Wrestling (WCW) began aggressively expanding its PPV calendar to monthly events, alongside the launch of WCW Monday Nitro, intensifying the Monday Night Wars and pressuring WWF to adapt or risk losing market share.[8] In response, WWF sought to fill calendar gaps with more frequent, affordable PPVs to maintain viewer engagement and boost overall revenue, marking a strategic pivot toward bi-monthly programming.[9] Vince McMahon, WWF's chairman, announced the In Your House concept in early 1995 as a series of interim PPVs designed to bridge the intervals between the major annual events, explicitly aiming to counter WCW's growing presence and provide consistent content for fans.[8] The initiative was part of broader planning to sustain WWF's position amid industry shifts, with the inaugural event scheduled for May 14, 1995, and subsequent shows positioned every other month.[9] This rollout tied directly into WWF's ongoing "New Generation" era, launched after Hulk Hogan's departure in 1993, which emphasized younger, athletic talents like Shawn Michaels and Diesel to refresh the product and appeal to a family-oriented audience transitioning from the Hulkamania boom.[10] Economic pressures further underscored the need for this expansion, as WWF grappled with declining live house show attendance—averaging around 2,900 fans per event in 1995, a sharp drop from prior years—and softening overall popularity during a period of creative and legal challenges.[11] To address these issues, In Your House events were priced accessibly at $14.95 for the debut, later increasing to $19.95–$24.95, positioning them as mid-tier offerings that encouraged broader household purchases without the premium cost of major PPVs.[7] This pricing strategy, combined with shorter two-hour runtimes, aimed to maximize buy rates and diversify revenue streams beyond live gates, helping WWF navigate the competitive landscape.[8]Purpose Within the WWF Event Schedule
The In Your House series was designed as a series of supplementary pay-per-view events positioned between the WWF's five major annual shows—WrestleMania, Royal Rumble, King of the Ring, SummerSlam, and Survivor Series—typically occurring every four to six weeks to fill scheduling gaps and maintain consistent programming momentum.[12] These events functioned as narrative bridges, allowing ongoing storylines and interim feuds to progress and conclude without overshadowing the prestige or high-stakes focus of the flagship PPVs.[13] A key aspect of their integration into the WWF schedule was an emphasis on affordability and accessibility, with In Your House priced lower than standard PPVs—often around $19.95 compared to $29.95 for major events—to encourage broader fan participation and build long-term loyalty.[12] Marketed explicitly as bringing the energetic, unpredictable vibe of traditional house shows into viewers' homes via pay-per-view, the concept aimed to simulate the intimate, live-event atmosphere while expanding the promotion's reach beyond arena audiences.[14] Strategically, these shows provided a testing ground for mid-card talent and emerging angles, enabling the WWF to evaluate performer potential and storyline viability in a lower-pressure environment before promoting them to the larger platforms of the major annual events.[13] Examples included developing feuds featuring wrestlers like The Undertaker and Shawn Michaels, where initial confrontations and character dynamics could be refined based on crowd responses.[13] Over time, the frequency evolved from an initial bimonthly cadence in 1995 to a near-monthly occurrence by 1997, aligning with the WWF's broader pay-per-view expansion to counter the increasing number of events offered by rival World Championship Wrestling, which had ramped up to nine PPVs annually.[14] This shift helped sustain viewer interest year-round and supported the promotion's competitive positioning in the Monday Night Wars era.[13]Event Format and Production
Standard Event Structure
In Your House events typically ran for 2 to 3 hours, providing a more concise pay-per-view experience compared to the promotion's major annual spectacles.[15][16] This runtime allowed for a focused card that built momentum through a structured progression, beginning with undercard bouts featuring tag team contests and mid-card singles matches to warm up the audience and establish ongoing storylines. These opening segments often involved rising stars or established mid-tier talent, setting the stage for escalating drama toward the semi-main events and climactic main event, usually centered on a championship defense or high-stakes rivalry payoff.[17] The cards generally included 8 to 10 matches in total, encompassing dark matches before the live broadcast, the main pay-per-view lineup of 6 to 8 contests, and occasional post-main event angles. To distinguish these events from weekly free television programming, a significant portion of the bouts incorporated gimmick stipulations, such as steel cage matches to prevent interference or ladder matches requiring competitors to retrieve a suspended prize for victory. Examples include the steel cage main event at In Your House 6: Rage in the Cage and the WWF Intercontinental Championship ladder match at In Your House 2: Lumberjack. These specialized formats heightened the spectacle and emphasized physicality, often resolving feuds that had simmered on syndicated shows. Pre-show programming enhanced accessibility with the Free for All, a 30-minute opener broadcast on channels like the USA Network, featuring an exclusive non-televised match, wrestler interviews, and hype segments to build anticipation. Following the main event, events concluded with backstage interviews or confrontational segments involving key participants, extending the narrative without additional matches. Post-main event content, such as victor celebrations or rival ambushes, typically lasted 5 to 10 minutes to provide closure.[18][17] Production elements contributed to the immersive atmosphere, opening with pyrotechnics to signal the start of live action and accompanied by video packages recapping pivotal feuds through dramatic montages of prior encounters. Commentary was handled by a core team, most notably Vince McMahon providing play-by-play analysis alongside color commentator Jerry Lawler, whose heel persona added banter and insider insights; Jim Ross occasionally joined for triple-man booths on select cards. This setup ensured energetic narration that guided viewers through the event's emotional arcs while highlighting in-ring psychology.[19][17]Themed Naming and Special Elements
The In Your House series employed a consistent strategy of assigning unique subtitles to each of its 27 pay-per-view events, enhancing their individual marketability and distinguishing them from the WWF's major annual shows. These themes often drew inspiration from pop culture references, seasonal holidays, or elements tied to prominent wrestler personas, creating a sense of variety and thematic cohesion within the brand. For instance, the inaugural event was subtitled "Premiere" to signify its debut status, while later installments included "Beware of Dog," evoking a playful warning tied to canine imagery in wrestling narratives, and "Mind Games," which highlighted psychological warfare in ongoing feuds.[20][21][22] This convention of theming every event, from "Great White North" referencing Canadian locales to "Seasons Beatings" playing on holiday puns, allowed the WWF to position each In Your House as a standalone spectacle rather than a generic filler.[23][24][25] Special elements were integral to amplifying these themes, often introducing novel match stipulations or formats tailored to the event's concept for added intrigue and replay value. The 1996 "Buried Alive" event featured the debut of the Buried Alive match type, where the winner had to bury their opponent in a gravesite, directly embodying the morbid theme in the main event between The Undertaker and Mankind. Similarly, the 1997 "Final Four" installment centered on a four-way elimination tournament for the WWF Championship, pitting top contenders in a high-stakes bracket that aligned with the event's competitive motif. These innovations not only created buzz but also extended the series' appeal beyond standard wrestling bouts.[26][27][28] Marketing efforts leveraged these themes through targeted tie-ins, including custom merchandise like event-specific posters and T-shirts, as well as promotional vignettes aired on WWF programming to build anticipation. A notable example was the inaugural "Premiere" event's house giveaway sweepstakes, where viewers could win a new home in Orlando, Florida, tying directly into the "In Your House" branding to emphasize accessibility and excitement; over 340,000 entries were received, culminating in an 11-year-old winner announced live.[3] Such promotions boosted buy rates by framing the events as must-see entertainment.[25] Themes also shaped card construction, guiding the selection and positioning of matches to reinforce the narrative focus. In "International Incident," the lineup emphasized global rivalries, spotlighting international stars like Vader and The British Bulldog in prominent bouts against American counterparts, including a main event six-man tag pitting them against Shawn Michaels, Ahmed Johnson, and Sycho Sid. Likewise, events with family-oriented angles, such as those amplifying the Hart family dynamics, incorporated intra-family conflicts—like Bret Hart's defenses against relatives—to heighten emotional stakes and align with relational themes akin to a "Family Feud" structure. This approach ensured each card felt thematically unified, enhancing storytelling immersion.[21][29]Historical Development
Launch and Initial Events (1995)
The In Your House series debuted on May 14, 1995, at the Onondaga County War Memorial in Syracuse, New York, marking the World Wrestling Federation's (WWF) effort to expand its pay-per-view schedule with more frequent, lower-priced events positioned between major spectacles like WrestleMania and SummerSlam. The inaugural event, retroactively titled In Your House 1, drew an attendance of approximately 7,000 and was headlined by WWF Champion Diesel defending his title against Sycho Sid in a hard-hitting main event that Diesel won via pinfall after a powerbomb, solidifying the challenger's role as a dominant force while retaining the championship for Diesel. Other notable bouts included Bret Hart defeating Hakushi in a submission match and Razor Ramon overcoming a two-on-one handicap scenario against Jeff Jarrett and The Roadie, contributing to a card that emphasized established rivalries and introduced the series' intimate, house-show-like atmosphere to a broader audience via pay-per-view.[30][31] Following the premiere, the series quickly established a monthly cadence with four additional events in 1995, each building on the foundational format of five to six matches aired live on pay-per-view. In Your House 2: The Lumberjacks on July 23, 1995, at the Nashville Municipal Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee, featured Shawn Michaels capturing the WWF Intercontinental Championship from Jeff Jarrett in a singles match praised for its high-energy pacing and Michaels' athletic showcase, which helped elevate the event's undercard appeal. Subsequent shows included In Your House 3: Triple Header on September 24, 1995, at the Saginaw Civic Center in Saginaw, Michigan, where a tag team main event put the WWF and Intercontinental Championships at stake as champions Diesel and Michaels defeated Yokozuna and the British Bulldog (subbing for Owen Hart), with Diesel pinning Bulldog to retain; In Your House 4: Great White North on October 22, 1995, at the Winnipeg Arena in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada—the first In Your House held outside the United States—headlined by WWF Champion Diesel defending against the British Bulldog, with Diesel retaining via disqualification; and In Your House 5: Season's Beatings on December 17, 1995, at the Hersheypark Arena in Hershey, Pennsylvania, headlined by a steel cage match where Bret Hart retained the WWF Championship against the British Bulldog in a personal family rivalry bout. These events averaged attendances of 5,000 to 10,000, with the Canadian outing drawing a sold-out crowd of 10,339.[32][33] Initial reception for the 1995 In Your House events was positive among fans and critics for introducing fresh matchups and stipulations that refreshed ongoing storylines, such as Michaels' Intercontinental title win, which was lauded as one of the year's standout performances for its blend of technical skill and crowd interaction, though the series' pay-per-view buy rates hovered modestly between 100,000 and 280,000 households—lower than the WWF's "Big Four" events but sufficient to justify the expansion strategy. For instance, the debut drew around 180,000 worldwide buys at a 0.83 domestic buyrate, while In Your House 2 peaked at approximately 280,000, reflecting steady interest in the affordable $14.95 pricing model aimed at home viewers. Despite these successes, the WWF faced challenges in differentiating the series from larger pay-per-views amid growing competition from World Championship Wrestling (WCW), prompting quick adaptations like themed naming and multi-title main events to sustain viewer momentum and prevent audience fatigue in a crowded monthly schedule.[7][34]Growth and Evolution (1996–1997)
In 1996, the In Your House series expanded to seven events, marking a period of increased frequency that solidified its role as a key component of the WWF's pay-per-view schedule during the New Generation era, beginning with In Your House 6: Rage in the Cage on February 18, 1996, in Louisville, Kentucky, headlined by Bret Hart defeating Diesel in a steel cage match for the WWF Championship. These included Good Friends, Better Enemies on April 28, which drew a buy rate of 0.65 and attendance of 9,563 at the Omaha Civic Auditorium; Beware of Dog on May 26, with 6,000 attendees and a 0.45 buy rate at the Florence Civic Center; International Incident on July 21, attracting 14,804 fans to General Motors Place; Mind Games on September 22, with 13,000 in attendance and a 0.48 buy rate at the CoreStates Center; Buried Alive on October 20, headlined by The Undertaker versus Mankind in a Buried Alive stipulation match, drawing 9,649 to the Market Square Arena; and It's Time on December 15, which featured Sycho Sid defending the WWF Championship against Bret Hart and had 5,708 attendees at the West Palm Beach Auditorium. Buy rates for the year's events generally ranged from 90,000 to 160,000 households, with peaks reflecting strong interest in championship defenses and emerging rivalries involving stars like Shawn Michaels and Mankind.[35][36][26][37] By 1997, In Your House shifted to a near-monthly cadence, hosting seven events that further integrated with major WWF storylines, including the escalating tensions between Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels leading toward the Survivor Series. Notable installments included Final Four on February 16, featuring a four-way elimination match for the vacant WWF Championship won by Bret Hart, with 6,399 attendees at the UTC Arena in Chattanooga; Revenge of the 'Taker on April 20, drawing 11,477 to the Rochester Community War Memorial; A Cold Day in Hell on May 11, which headlined The Undertaker versus Stone Cold Steve Austin for the WWF Championship and attracted 14,381 fans at the Richmond Coliseum; Canadian Stampede on July 6, emphasizing Hart family rivalries with 12,151 in attendance at the Canadian Airlines Saddledome; Ground Zero on September 7 in Louisville, Kentucky; Badd Blood on October 5 in St. Louis, Missouri, introducing the Hell in a Cell match between The Undertaker and Shawn Michaels; and D-Generation X on December 7 in Springfield, Massachusetts, with Shawn Michaels defending the WWF Championship against Ken Shamrock. These events captured the era's narrative momentum, such as Hart's title pursuits and Austin's rising anti-hero persona, amid the broader buildup to pivotal moments like the Montreal Screwjob. Buy rates hovered around 140,000 to 170,000 for select shows, underscoring sustained viewer investment.[38][39] Production enhancements during this period introduced more stipulation matches to differentiate In Your House from standard programming, such as the Buried Alive bout's unique grave-ending mechanic and Final Four's multi-competitor elimination format, which added drama and replay value to ongoing feuds. Cross-promotions with WWF Superstars TV became routine, with episodes often taped directly from event arenas— for instance, Superstars aired live from the empty UTC Arena following Final Four on February 16—to extend storyline continuity and hype upcoming cards. Attendance figures grew to an average of 10,000 to 15,000 per event, exemplified by higher draws like International Incident and A Cold Day in Hell, signaling robust fan engagement amid key developments such as Shawn Michaels' heel turn after SummerSlam, which intensified rivalries and boosted live crowd energy.[40][41]Challenges and Conclusion (1998–1999)
In 1998, the In Your House series produced seven events amid the WWF's shift to the Attitude Era, a period marked by edgier content and heightened rivalry with WCW during the Monday Night Wars. These included No Way Out of Texas on February 15 in Houston, Texas; Unforgiven on April 26 in Greensboro, North Carolina; Over the Edge on May 31 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, headlined by Stone Cold Steve Austin defending the WWF Championship against Dude Love; Fully Loaded on July 26 in Fresno, California; Breakdown on September 27 in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; Judgment Day on October 18 in Rosemont, Illinois; and Rock Bottom on December 13 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.[42] Buy rates for these events varied, with No Way Out drawing 150,000 buys, Unforgiven 300,000, Over the Edge 203,000, Fully Loaded 240,000, Breakdown 250,000, Judgment Day 180,000, and Rock Bottom 345,000, reflecting the growing popularity of WWF's new direction despite WCW Monday Nitro's ratings dominance earlier in the year.[43] Following the peak growth of the series in 1996–1997, 1999 saw the In Your House branding conclude with two final events as WWF expanded its pay-per-view schedule. St. Valentine's Day Massacre took place on February 14 in Memphis, Tennessee, featuring a Steel Cage match for the WWF Championship between champion Stone Cold Steve Austin and Vince McMahon, with Austin retaining, drawing 425,000 buys.[44] Backlash: In Your House followed on April 25 in Providence, Rhode Island, headlined by Austin defending the WWF Championship against The Rock with Shane McMahon as special guest referee, achieving 460,000 buys and serving as the series' finale.[44][43] The discontinuation of the In Your House subtitle stemmed from internal strategic shifts, as WWF committed to producing 12 full-fledged monthly pay-per-views with permanent, standalone names to strengthen branding and capitalize on surging popularity during the Attitude Era.[45] This move eliminated the "filler" concept originally designed for In Your House events between the major "big four" pay-per-views (Royal Rumble, WrestleMania, SummerSlam, and Survivor Series), allowing all events to carry equal prestige without subtitles. External pressures from WCW's aggressive expansion and Nitro's early 1998 ratings lead contributed to the urgency for innovation, though WWF's buy rates had rebounded strongly by late 1998 and into 1999. No official announcement marked the series' end at the time; instead, the transition occurred seamlessly, with the subsequent Over the Edge event in May 1999 dropping the In Your House branding entirely and bridging directly into the new structure leading toward Survivor Series.[45]Events Overview
Key Events and Milestones
The In Your House series featured several milestone matches that elevated WWF's in-ring storytelling and introduced iconic stipulations. One early highlight was the ongoing rivalry between Shawn Michaels and Razor Ramon, whose ladder match encounters—beginning with their groundbreaking Intercontinental Championship bout at WrestleMania X, continuing with a rematch at SummerSlam 1995, and including a third at In Your House 4: Great White North—served as a precursor to the high-stakes, athletic spectacles that defined the IYH era's buildup, influencing event narratives during the 1995 launch period.[46][47] A pivotal innovation came in 1996 with the debut of the Buried Alive match at In Your House 11, where The Undertaker defeated Mankind by entombing him in a graveside brawl, marking the first use of this no-holds-barred stipulation and intensifying The Undertaker's supernatural persona amid his feud with the deranged Mankind.[48][49] The series reached a narrative peak at In Your House: Badd Blood in 1997, when The Undertaker faced Shawn Michaels in the inaugural Hell in a Cell match, a brutal cage-enclosed war that Michaels won with interference from the debuting Kane, forever altering WWF's match structure and propelling Michaels toward the WWF Championship at Survivor Series.[50][51] In 1998, In Your House: Judgment Day showcased a brother-vs.-brother clash for the vacant WWF Championship between The Undertaker and Kane, refereed by "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, who ultimately declared himself the winner after stunning both competitors, underscoring the chaotic corporate interference in WWF titles and boosting Austin's anti-authority arc.[52][53] Buy rates for In Your House events varied, but Over the Edge in 1998 stood out with approximately 203,000 purchases, driven by the surging popularity of Steve Austin's WWF Championship defense against Dude Love amid his escalating feud with Vince McMahon.[43] Thematic advancements were evident at In Your House: Ground Zero in 1997, held shortly after SummerSlam, where D-Generation X's interference in the main event Shawn Michaels vs. The Undertaker match solidified the group's rebellious heel dynamic, advancing their anti-establishment storylines with Hunter Hearst Helmsley and solidifying DX as a cornerstone of the Attitude Era transition.[54][55]Complete Chronological List
The In Your House series comprised 28 pay-per-view events produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) from May 1995 to February 1999, serving as interim shows between the promotion's major annual events. This chronological list summarizes all events, highlighting key details such as dates, locations, venues, attendance, and main events, drawn from historical records of the series. Anomalies include the double-taping of Beware of Dog I and II due to a power outage at the initial event, resulting in a rescheduled second show two days later, and It's Time, which was formatted as a holiday-themed special.[56]| Event Number/Name | Date | City/Venue | Attendance | Main Event |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1: Premiere | May 14, 1995 | Syracuse, NY / Onondaga County War Memorial | 7,000 | Diesel (c) vs. Sycho Sid for the WWF Championship[16] |
| 2: The Lumberjacks | July 23, 1995 | Nashville, TN / Nashville Municipal Auditorium | 6,482 | Diesel (c) vs. Sycho Sid in a lumberjack match for the WWF Championship[57][56] |
| 3: Triple Header | September 24, 1995 | Saginaw, MI / Saginaw Civic Center | 7,500 | Diesel & Shawn Michaels vs. Yokozuna & The British Bulldog in a Winners Take All match for the WWF Championship and WWF Tag Team Championship[56] |
| 4: Great White North | October 22, 1995 | Winnipeg, MB, Canada / Winnipeg Arena | 10,339 | Diesel (c) vs. The British Bulldog for the WWF Championship[58][56] |
| 5: Seasons Beatings | December 17, 1995 | Hershey, PA / Hersheypark Arena | 7,523 | Bret Hart (c) vs. The British Bulldog for the WWF Championship[56] |
| 6: Rage in the Cage | February 18, 1996 | Louisville, KY / Louisville Gardens | 4,835 | Bret Hart (c) vs. Diesel in a Steel Cage match for the WWF Championship[56] |
| 7: Good Friends, Better Enemies | April 28, 1996 | Omaha, NE / Omaha Civic Auditorium | 7,130 | Shawn Michaels (c) vs. Diesel in a No Holds Barred match for the WWF Championship[56] |
| 8: Beware of Dog I | May 26, 1996 | Florence, SC / Florence Civic Center | 4,200 | Shawn Michaels (c) vs. The British Bulldog for the WWF Championship (taped due to power outage; aired June 9, 1996)[56] |
| 9: Beware of Dog II | May 28, 1996 | North Charleston, SC / North Charleston Coliseum | 4,500 | Goldust (c) vs. The Undertaker in a Casket match for the WWF Intercontinental Championship (aired May 28, 1996)[56] |
| 10: International Incident | July 21, 1996 | Vancouver, BC, Canada / General Motors Place | 14,804 | Camp Cornette (Owen Hart, British Bulldog, Vader) vs. The People's Posse (Shawn Michaels, Ahmed Johnson, Sycho Sid) in a Flag match[59][56] |
| 11: Mind Games | September 22, 1996 | Philadelphia, PA / CoreStates Center | 13,000 | Shawn Michaels (c) vs. Mankind for the WWF Championship[60][56] |
| 12: Buried Alive | October 20, 1996 | Indianapolis, IN / Market Square Arena | 8,240 | The Undertaker vs. Mankind in a Buried Alive match[56] |
| 13: It's Time (holiday special) | December 15, 1996 | West Palm Beach, FL / West Palm Beach Auditorium | 5,708 | Sycho Sid (c) vs. Bret Hart for the WWF Championship[61][56] |
| 14: Final Four | February 16, 1997 | Chattanooga, TN / UTC Arena | 6,399 | Four-way elimination match for the vacant WWF Championship: Bret Hart vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker vs. Vader[62][56] |
| 15: Revenge of the 'Taker | April 20, 1997 | Rochester, NY / Rochester Community War Memorial | 7,909 | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Bret Hart for #1 contendership to the WWF Championship[56] |
| 16: A Cold Day in Hell | May 11, 1997 | Richmond, VA / Richmond Coliseum | 7,600 | The Undertaker (c) vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin for the WWF Championship[56] |
| 17: Canadian Stampede | July 6, 1997 | Calgary, AB, Canada / Olympic Saddledome | 17,092 | The Hart Foundation vs. Stone Cold Steve Austin, Ken Shamrock & others in a 10-man tag team match[56] |
| 18: Ground Zero | September 7, 1997 | Louisville, KY / Louisville Gardens | 4,963 | The Undertaker vs. Shawn Michaels[56] |
| 19: Badd Blood | October 5, 1997 | St. Louis, MO / Kiel Center | 21,151 | The Undertaker vs. Shawn Michaels in a Hell in a Cell match for #1 contendership to the WWF Championship[63][56] |
| 20: D-Generation X | December 7, 1997 | Springfield, MA / Springfield Civic Center | 6,358 | Shawn Michaels (c) vs. Ken Shamrock for the WWF Championship[64][56] |
| 21: No Way Out of Texas | February 15, 1998 | Houston, TX / The Summit | 16,056 | Stone Cold Steve Austin, Owen Hart & Cactus Jack vs. Triple H, Savio Vega & Jeff Jarrett in a six-man tag team match[56] |
| 22: Unforgiven | April 26, 1998 | Greensboro, NC / Greensboro Coliseum Complex | 12,375 | Stone Cold Steve Austin (c) vs. Dude Love for the WWF Championship[56] |
| 23: Over the Edge | May 31, 1998 | Milwaukee, WI / Milwaukee Auditorium | 9,822 | Stone Cold Steve Austin (c) vs. Dude Love for the WWF Championship (with Vince McMahon as special referee)[56] |
| 24: Fully Loaded | July 26, 1998 | Fresno, CA / Selland Arena | 9,711 | Kane & Mankind (c) vs. The Undertaker & Stone Cold Steve Austin for the WWF Tag Team Championship[56] |
| 25: Breakdown | September 27, 1998 | Hamilton, ON, Canada / Copps Coliseum | 17,405 | Stone Cold Steve Austin (c) vs. The Undertaker vs. Kane in a triple threat match for the WWF Championship[65][56] |
| 26: Judgment Day | October 18, 1998 | Rosemont, IL / Rosemont Horizon | 16,346 | The Undertaker vs. Kane for the vacant WWF Championship (with Stone Cold Steve Austin as special referee)[56] |
| 27: Rock Bottom | December 13, 1998 | Vancouver, BC, Canada / General Motors Place | 12,515 | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker in a Buried Alive match for the WWF Championship[56] |
| 28: St. Valentine's Day Massacre | February 14, 1999 | Memphis, TN / The Pyramid | 17,445 | Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. Vince McMahon in a Steel Cage match for control of the WWF[56] |