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AEW's new $60 NFL Lucha masks have received negative feedback for their cheap design. Fans criticize the masks for being generic despite the high price tag.
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AEW released officially licensed Lucha masks as part of a collaboration with the NFL.
AEW
AEWâs new NFL masks are expensive in price, but early reviews suggest theyâre cheap in presentation.
AEW recently announced a licensing agreement with the NFL, resulting in 32 officially licensed Lucha masks. The masks debuted this past Thursday to coincide with the 2026 NFL Draft. AEW president and CEO Tony Khan is also the chief football strategy officer with the Jacksonville Jaguars, owned by his father Shad Khan.
âIâve always wanted the NFL and AEW to work together,â said Tony during a recent interview with Compas on the Beat. âThese will be available for all 32 NFL teams. Starting the first night of the NFL draft, we will have these masks available on ShopAEW.com for all 32 teams.â
Despite the $60 price tag, many fans are already criticizing AEW for the plain, generic andâironicallyâcheap mask design.
Top AEW sicko accountâand possible Tony Khan burnerâDrainmaker posted an announcement of the new masks directing fans to âBUY NOW ON SHOPAEW [sic.]â
âDamn I was excited but those look cheap as hell,â read the top comment. Similar backlash can be found across Twitter both in and out of comment sections from pro-AEW accounts.
âThe bodega down the street from me got the same ones for 10$,â read the top comment in response to another pro-AEW account promoting the masks. Other comments included âWho is the market for these?" and âThese look hella cheap.â Things didnât get much better on AEWâs official X account, which became a lolcow communion for fans critical of AEWâs underwhelming new masks.
AEW's NFL Lucha masks are criticized for their generic and cheap design, failing to meet fan expectations.
The new NFL Lucha masks from AEW are priced at $60 each.
AEW's NFL Lucha masks debuted during the NFL Draft this past Thursday.
AEW's merchandise pricing is part of a trend where top wrestling companies are increasing prices on merchandise and tickets.
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The top comment under AEWâs Lucha mask promotional video came from AEW star Anthony Bowens, who was apparently featured in the commercial under a 49ers mask. âThe guy in the Niners mask is jacked AF, who is he?â Bowens joked. The next comment with the most likes read âThat has to be the most laziest and ugliest masks I ever seen [sic.]â Ensuing comments referred to the masks as âgoofyâ and âgeneric.â
âAEW can sell the cheapest looking NFL masks, yet they couldnât sell Penta and Rex Fenix masks...business man of the year,â read one viral comment.
Criticism of AEWâs masks is warranted due to its poor design and a very high price point, especially considering AEWâs attempts to position itself as a cheaper, more family friendly alternative to WWE. In reality, AEW is currently selling low-effort masks which are inferior to similar items available at a street vendor who sells them for less than half AEWâs price. AEWâs new masks look like they were designed by somebody outside of Lucha Libre culture only for Tony Khan to approve the first draft.
The memeable masks debuted at or near the price of a full tank of gas in 2026. This during a time period where wrestling fans are being priced out more than ever by corporate wrestling. The polarizing WWE-TKO era gets the most flack for corporatizing the wrestling businessâpartly due to WWEâs own stars pushing this narrative on their own TV. But AEW is far from innocent in the time-honored tradition of promoters shaking down their superfans.
AEW recently announced a new service called MyAEW. The premium subscription service offers access to classic content and pay-per-views costs upwards of $119.99 annually. When packaged with its new overpriced street masks, AEW (which is owned by billionaires) is nothing more than a synonym for TKO.
This article was originally published on Forbes.com