When WWE announced its historic streaming deal with Netflix, it felt like the natural next step in the evolution of sports entertainment. But for fans in India, the second-largest WWE market, this shift from linear TV to OTT is more than just a platform switch. It’s a gamble. And WrestleMania 41 will be its first, and biggest, test.
For over two decades, Indian fans have grown up watching WWE on TV, on Ten Sports, Sony Ten, and more recently, on Sony Sports Network. It’s been part of the evening routine. Free to air for many. Easy to access. Flip the remote, tune in, and boom, Cena, Taker, Roman, all there.
Now, WWE is asking fans to stream it. On a paid platform. In a country where, despite rapid digital adoption, linear TV still dominates Tier-2 and Tier-3 households, this is no small ask. The reality? Viewership will dip in the first year. And not because the product isn’t exciting, but because the ecosystem around it isn’t ready yet.
Unlike the U.S., where cable is dying, Indian TV still thrives. And even among OTT subscribers, the overlap between WWE fans and Netflix users isn’t as big as it looks. Most WWE fans here are used to free highlights on YouTube and Hindi commentary on TV. Will they pay for premium content without ads? Some will. Most won’t, at least not right away.
Netflix India needs to treat WrestleMania 41 not as a grand launch but as an onboarding campaign. Reduce friction. Offer free trials for the WWE stream. Release behind-the-scenes content in regional languages. Maybe even allow non-subscribers to watch WrestleMania for free, just this once. Because if this shift feels like a paywall instead of progress, fans will walk away.
WrestleMania 41 may be the show of shows, but this year, it’s also a stress test, for loyalty, tech, pricing, and cultural understanding.
And Netflix better not botch the main event.