WWE tried switching gears with a nostalgia post—but fans still aren’t letting up about R-Truth and Carlito.

Hours after Triple H’s tweet congratulating El Hijo del Vikingo got hijacked by outraged fans, the official WWE account tried to promote a replay of Money in the Bank 2010 on WWE Vault. Instead of getting fans hyped for a throwback, the post immediately spiraled into another protest.

At 7PM, WWE tweeted: “🚨 STREAMING NOW! 🚨 Relive the first-ever #MITB event from 2010 on WWE Vault! Watch two Money in the Bank Ladder Matches, plus @JohnCena challenging WWE Champion @WWESheamus inside a Steel Cage!” The tweet featured a poster with Kofi Kingston, John Cena, and other stars—but the replies had zero interest in MITB nostalgia.

One fan shot back, “Bring back R-Truth #WeWantRTruth #BringBackRTruth.” Another wrote, “Won’t be watching. Bring back R-Truth and Carlito.” Dozens more echoed the same sentiment: “Bring back Truth and Carlito.” “So when are y’all gonna resign R-Truth?” “Don’t care. Resign R-Truth.”

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Some responses ditched words altogether, dropping GIFs of R-Truth smiling, dancing, or cutting promos—a not-so-subtle reminder of what fans feel WWE just threw away. One person summed up the mood: “Nah I’m good. Y’all done lost a lot of fans getting rid of R-Truth and Carlito. Don’t make no damn sense.”

Others used the platform to take shots at the content WWE was pushing: “Carlito and R-Truth are more entertaining than anything on that show, 2010 was the drizzling shits.”

Even comments like, “We Want Truth,” and “I learned from R-Truth and Carlito… Damn WWE…” made it clear—fans aren’t in a nostalgic mood unless it involves bringing back the two stars they feel never should’ve been cut.

What started as a quiet outrage is now a full-on revolt in WWE’s comment sections. And with no statement from the company and no response from leadership, every promotional tweet is turning into a battlefield.

Do you think WWE underestimated how much fans cared about R-Truth and Carlito? Please share your thoughts and feedback in the comment section below.

Steve Carrier is the founder of Ringside News and has been reporting on pro wrestling since 1997. His stories have been featured on TMZ, Forbes, Bleacher Report, and more.

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