World Level Wrestling

World Level Wrestling (WLW) is a Magisterian professional wrestling promotion based in Blackburn, Hildegarde. The promotion was founded by Jefferson Belmont, Jean-Jacques Roy, and Brad Walter, and was operated by Kairo Duval from 2005 to 2015 before Jean-Jacques Roy purchased the company.

Created in 2000, WLW have pioneered the concept of mixing traditional sports entertainment with the serious side of professional wrestling. By combining the new style with a sense of fun, they have a product that serves as the best alternative to the three larger companies: Golden Canvas Traditional Grappling (GCTG), Pride Glory Honor Wrestling (PGHW), and Violent Extreme Wrestling (VEW).

From its inception, the promotion had been considered the third-largest in Magisteria. WLW was viewed by some to have fallen behind longtime rival Violent Extreme Wrestling in 2013, with the loss of their television contract with CBS2, as well as monetary and personnel issues, being noted as factors to their decline. Since 2015, WLW has been thought by many to have recovered, through the purchase by co-founder Jean-Jacques Roy, and securing a television contract with MTV.

Formation and early history (2000-2002)
The concept of WLW originated shortly after Danger And Violence Extreme (DAVE) began its meteoric rise into prominence in 2000. A trio of wrestling enthusiasts Jefferson Belmont, Brad Walter, and Jean-Jacques Roy, with the help of various investors, opened up a new wrestling promotion in December 2000, with Belmont coining the name 'World Level Wrestling'.

The original intention of the trio was to get WLW viewed as a more PG entertainment-based product to the then-larger two companies Golden Canvas Traditional Grappling (GCTG) and Danger And Violence Extreme (DAVE).

Growth and surging popularity (2002-2005)
By 2002, WLW was slowly but surely making a name for themselves, creating their weekly television program WLW Shockwave, which first aired via broadcast syndication. WLW would began producing monthly pay-per-views in 2003, beginning with No Love Lost in February 2003.