AEW rolled into Vancouver and lit up Rogers Arena for Dynasty on April 12, 2026, broadcasting on PPV and on MyAEW for fans internationally. Big fight energy from bell to bell. The headliner? MJF vs Kenny Omega. And a heavy-hitting showcase with Jon Moxley vs Will Ospreay anchoring the other marquee spot.
Putting MJF and Kenny Omega on top is AEW calling its shot. Two ring generals with totally different approaches, and both love stretching matches into those long, chess-match epics. Omega lives in the deep waters, chaining combos and finding that snap-trigger gear late. MJF flips the board, bends pace to his will, and drags you into the kind of grind where every rope break feels expensive. As a main event, it’s the kind of pairing that sells itself the second you read the graphic.
On the other side, Moxley vs Ospreay always feels like setting dynamite on opposite corners of the ring and seeing which fuse burns faster. Mox brings violence with purpose, makes everything look like it hurts twice. Ospreay answers with speed, timing, and those whip-crack counters that punish any lazy step. Different tools, same goal: leave the other guy staring at the lights. Every time they share a ring, you get that collision of willpower and gas tank that forces a sprint and a brawl at the same time.
Vancouver got the full AEW PPV presentation. Crisp production, big-match staging, and that hum in the building that only shows up when a card has multiple matches you’d happily main-event with. Dynasty leaned into that vibe. If you bought this show for one match, you wound up dialed into the rest of the night because AEW loves stacking the middle of the card with something for every taste.
About that lineup: AEW kept the focus tight around the top attractions. MJF vs Omega headlined, exactly the kind of generational clash fans talk up for months. Moxley vs Ospreay was the other spotlight match, more than just a styles clash—it’s a pride thing. Those two push opponents to prove they can live at their pace. By the time the second marquee bout wrapped, you felt the ripple through the rest of the show.
Dynasty carried that “anything can swing” energy across the night. AEW’s rhythm on PPV is simple and mean: let matches breathe, let characters talk with their wrestling, and keep the nearfalls honest so the crowd leans in instead of checking out. The result is that even the setups and transitions land. You remember sequences, not just finishes. You remember how a guy escaped the first time, adjusted the second time, and still got clipped the third.
MJF vs Omega lived in the details. Rope breaks timed on nine-and-a-half. Footwork that cuts off the corner right before the hot run starts. The kind of counters that only work when both wrestlers trust each other to hang on the edge. It’s the matchup where a headlock takeover can mean more than a ladder.
Moxley vs Ospreay, meanwhile, is physics with malice. Strike exchanges that test chin and timing. A scramble here turns into a trap there, and suddenly somebody’s eating something gross on the apron. You get those bursts where it looks like sprinting downhill and then—bang—Mox drags it to the floor, or Ospreay slips a killshot through the guard and flips momentum back in an instant.
If you watched on PPV, you got the clean feed. If you tuned in on MyAEW internationally, you were right there with Vancouver, riding the same crests. Either way, Dynasty did what a tentpole show should do: make the headliners feel inevitable and still have you second-guessing yourself when the ring announcer starts talking.
Event details locked: AEW Dynasty took place April 12, 2026, inside Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, available on PPV domestically and on MyAEW internationally. Headlined by MJF vs Kenny Omega, with Jon Moxley vs Will Ospreay as a featured bout. The rest of the card filled in around those tentpoles to keep the pace hot.
Full match results center on those two clashes and the supporting slate that kept the crowd tuned all night. If you came for one name, you stayed for the work. That’s Dynasty.


