Brittany Reid Headshot
Roster Profile

Brittany Reid

Gender Female
Birthday December 25, 2003
Billed From Charlotte, North Carolina
Height 5'1"
Weight 105 lbs

Brittany Reid was born and raised in Charlotte, North Carolina, the youngest of five children with four older brothers who taught her early lessons in toughness, competition, and how to hold her own when she was the smallest person in the room. Her childhood was otherwise ordinary: school, neighborhood games, tumbling classes, and a steady run through competitive cheerleading and gymnastics that sharpened her balance, timing, and aerial awareness. She loved performing long before she ever set foot in a wrestling ring, and those early years of cheer and gymnastics became the foundation for everything she would later do in the squared circle.

Her first real exposure to wrestling came in her late teens when an ex‑boyfriend took her to a local indie show and suggested they train together. They signed up for lessons with the same coach and tried to learn the basics side by side, but the relationship with the sport quickly revealed itself to be a test of endurance rather than a casual hobby. He discovered the grind and the discipline were more than he wanted and dropped out, while Brittany found the choreography, crowd work, and athletic challenge intoxicating. Where he quit, she doubled down, and the decision to stay became the hinge on which her future turned.

Seeking to refine a style that matched her gymnastics background, Brittany pursued specialized training and eventually became a private student of the masked Japanese high‑flyer known only as The Kaiju Kid. Under his tutelage, she learned to treat the ropes, turnbuckles, and apron as extensions of her body, to chain springboards and hurricanranas into fluid sequences, and to convert risky spots into repeatable, safe maneuvers. As her sensei, The Kaiju Kid taught her not only moves but match psychology, timing, and the discipline of a masked performer: how to craft a persona that reads in any arena and how to make every high‑risk moment look effortless while remaining precise and controlled.

Brittany’s in‑ring approach springs from gymnastics and cheerleading, shaping her into an elite high‑flyer who blends fluid ropework, instant counters, and relentless, high‑energy offense. This combination of fluid ropework, instant counters, and surgical aerial attacks became her signature and set her apart on the regional scene. She learned to turn an opponent’s momentum into opportunity, to bait strikes and convert them into hurricanranas or springboard counters, and to use compact, precise aerials to finish matches in ways that looked both graceful and devastating.

Her debut on the indie circuit was the product of months of apprenticeship and countless small‑hall matches. Early on she leaned into short, explosive bursts of offense—springboard sequences, ropewalk tricks, and sudden reversals that left opponents off balance—and she learned to pace a match so that every high spot felt earned. The Spirit Bomb, the Rah‑Rah Rana, the O‑M‑Knee, and the Hornet’s Sting became more than signature moves; they were narrative beats she could place in a match to manipulate tempo, provoke mistakes, and create dramatic finishes. The Queen Bee double‑rotation moonsault emerged as the climatic punctuation she saved for moments when the crowd and the story demanded something spectacular.

As she worked the road, Brittany’s reputation grew. Promoters began to bill her as a modern lucha‑cruiser: compact, impossibly quick, and ruthlessly precise. She became known for making larger opponents look slow and for turning their aggression into openings for her aerial counters. Her matches often followed a recognizable arc—an opening of quick chain moves to win the crowd, a middle section of counters and high‑risk exchanges that tested both her stamina and her opponent’s patience, and a finish built around a dramatic aerial setup that allowed The Queen Bee to land with devastating finality.

Her relationship with The Kaiju Kid remained central to her identity. He would occasionally appear in exhibition matches or mentor‑student tag bouts that served as rites of passage, and the mystique of a masked Japanese master lent her career an international credibility that promoters loved to reference. Outside the ring, the story that she was the youngest of five and that she stayed when others quit—most pointedly the ex‑boyfriend who walked away—became a throughline in promos and interviews, a simple narrative of persistence that fans could latch onto.

Today Brittany stands as a top babyface on the regional and national indie scene, a performer who opens shows with a high‑octane match that guarantees the crowd will be on its feet. Her goals are clear: to expand internationally, to challenge for junior‑heavyweight and cruiserweight gold, and to carry forward the lessons of Kaiju Kid while continuing to evolve her own choreography and match psychology. Her arc is defined by the choice she made to stay when others left, by the discipline she learned from a masked master, and by the way she turned a cheerleader’s showmanship into elite ringcraft that makes every match feel like a highlight reel.

Career Honors

Achievements

Ranked! Ranked!
No allies recorded.
No rivals recorded.
Event Segment/Match Date Result
Victorious: 2026 The Killer Bee is Coming Apr 18, 2026
Victory: 04.10.2026 Coming Soon Apr 10, 2026
No promos have been posted by this character.
Wins 0
Losses 0
No Contest 0
Total Matches 0
Win % 0%
Loss % 0%
This character has never held a title.
No awards recorded for this character.
Entrance Description

The arena goes quiet and the first hard beat of “Catch Me If You Can” cuts through the dark. A green spotlight slices the smoke on the stage and, on that exact hit, a cannon of green and black confetti explodes outward. The confetti hangs for a second like a promise, and in that flash she is already at the top of the ramp: twin ponytails, big pom‑pom bows, HORNETS across her chest. Her uniform is neat, her gloves catch the light, and her smile is bright and practiced.

She jogs down the ramp to the percussion—short, rhythmic steps that match the music: step, clap, step, clap. Every few paces she reaches out and slaps hands with fans at ringside, making eye contact, squeezing a kid’s hand, and feeding off the noise. The crowd answers louder each time; she gives it back with a wink or a quick blown kiss.

Three paces from the ring she folds into a compact cartwheel that carries her onto the apron. Her hands hit the vinyl, her legs snap through, and she lands facing the ring with no wasted motion. From the apron she pivots and steps through the ropes in one smooth motion and lands inside the ring cleanly and safely. The green spotlight tightens on her as she bounces once and moves to the nearest corner.

She climbs the turnbuckle, turns to the crowd, and holds a cheerleader pose for two beats—arms wide, chin up—letting the arena react. Then she performs a controlled, beam‑style dismount off the top: a tight forward flip that reads like the finish of a routine, not a long hang or a risky leap. She lands on both feet in the center of the ring, chest up, steady.

Now, from inside the ring, she plays the crowd hard. She paces the ropes and points to signs, blowing kisses and miming a quick selfie toward a group of teenagers. She leans back on the ropes. She points to a banner and gives it a theatrical bow. Her gestures are big and clear so fans in the cheap seats read them as well as those at ringside.

After several seconds of this in‑ring crowd work—waving, pointing, blowing kisses—she positions herself in the corner, where she starts to stretch and mentally prepare for the match.

Move #1

Arm drag

Move #2

Tilt-a-whirl head scissors

Move #3

Tope con hilo

Move #4

Dropkick

Move #5

Tornado DDT

Special Move #1

Super Duper Kick: A high-impact superkick to the head, where she throws all of her bodyweight into it and it often causes her to leave her feet to reach her opponent’s mouth.

Special Move #2

Makeup Remover: A two-footed curb stomp.

Special Move #3

Slice of Heaven: AJ Styles’ backflip into a reverse DDT, but she lands flat like a Sliced Bread Number 2. She can do the back flip off of just about anything.

Finisher Setup Move

The Hornet's Sting

Finisher Setup Desc

A versatile Diamond Cutter that can be hit as a sudden counter, from a grapple, or even out of a running maneuver. She seems to hit it in amazing and unexpected ways.

Basic Finisher

The Queen Bee

Basic Finisher Desc

Submission Finisher

3C ("Cheer Captain Clutch")

Submission Finisher Desc

In Ring Personality

Brittany Reid is the embodiment of a perky optimist with a heart of gold and a never say die attitude. She comes from a background of competitive cheerleading and gymnastics, which has given her unparalleled agility, flexibility, and a naturally charismatic personality. A relentless work ethic, good looks, and sunny disposition make her a fan favorite, as she approaches every match with a sense of competitive spirit and a big smile. Her opponents often underestimate her cheerfulness, only to be caught off guard by her breathtaking aerial offense and surprising tenacity. She's a positive presence and her "Killer Bee" nickname is a reminder that she can sting you at any moment. A role model for every little girl in the crowd or watching at home, as she always gives her all, has no fear, and sees the positive in every situation and person.

In Ring Tactics

Brittany Reid is an Elite High Flyer who wrestles like a compact lucha‑cruiserweight: she uses constant motion, chain‑linked aerial sequences, and lightning‑fast counters to control the pace of a match. Her background in gymnastics and cheerleading gives her the body awareness to convert risky-looking spots into safe, precise landings, and to chain springboards, hurricanranas, and corkscrews into seamless offense.

Core Characteristics
Lucha fluidity and ring geometry: Brittany treats the ropes, turnbuckles, and apron as extensions of her body, using springboards, ropewalks, and top‑rope rebounds to create angles and momentum the way Rey Mysterio popularized in WCW.
Explosive reversals and counters: Like Dragon Kid and Takuya Sugi, she thrives on instant counters — turning an opponent’s strike into a hurricanrana, or converting a grapple into a sudden Hornet’s Sting (diamond cutter) out of nowhere.
Relentless tempo control: She forces opponents to react to her pace, alternating blinding aerial flurries with short, sharp mat sequences to sap resistance and set up her signature finishers.
Compact power and precision: At 5'1" and 110 lbs, Brittany’s offense emphasizes precision over brute force — surgical kicks, pinpoint moonsaults, and perfectly timed springboard attacks that look effortless but are ruthlessly effective.
Flaws: Not as big and strong as others in the business and can be thrown around easily. She also can’t stop herself from playing to the crowd. She isn’t very experienced, so she makes up for it with innovation and pure athleticism. She’s rather average when it comes to technical wrestling, it isn’t her strong suit.

Match Psychology & Structure
Opening: Quick chain‑moves and rope tricks to win the crowd and disorient opponents.
Middle: A sequence of counters and high‑risk counters that showcase her gymnastic roots and force opponents into mistakes.
Finish: A dramatic setup — The Hornet Sting or Super Duper Kick, then The Queen Bee double‑rotation moonsault for the decisive pin.
From the bio: “Brittany's in-ring style is defined by her background in gymnastics and cheerleading, making her an Elite High Flyer. She combines breathtaking acrobatics with a relentless, high-energy pace.”

Visual & Performance Notes
Signature pacing: Short, explosive bursts rather than long power exchanges.
Selling & charisma: Her bubbly, cheerleader persona masks a surprisingly high ring IQ — she sells theatrically and bumps like crazy for her opponent in hopes of making them look amazing, but always keeps the match moving toward a high‑impact finish. Think a female Dolph Ziggler when she is bumping.
Safety emphasis: Every high‑risk spot is framed as controlled athleticism; her ability to land on her feet and absorb impact is a core selling point.
Gymnastics: She will often blend in gymnastic moves like cartwheels, flips, and handsprings into her movements.
How to Use This in Promos and Announcer Copy

Emphasize “lucha‑cruiser choreography,” “cat‑like reversals,” and “spectacular, graceful aerials.” Position her as the small‑stature dynamo who makes giants look clumsy and turns every match into a highlight reel.

Always Do

Play to the fans — She will always give the crowd a wink, squeal, pose, or sparkly flourish the moment she has space.

Sell huge — She will always bump big and dramatically, making her opponent look like a powerhouse every single time.

Stay in motion — She will always chain movement into movement, keeping the pace fast and fluid from bell to bell.

Never Do

Break her babyface_code — She would never cheat, never grab tights, never rake eyes, never take a shortcut even when she’s getting tossed.

Sandbag or stall — She would never dead‑weight an opponent or slow the match into a plodding rest‑hold; killing momentum is against her nature.

Disrespect an opponent — She would never mock someone maliciously, refuse a clean break, or no‑sell out of spite; she’s too earnest and too respectful. SHe will taunt, but it isn't malicious at all.

Writer Notes

Think Takuya Sugi or 90's Rey Mysterio Jr. with her in-ring style.

She doesn't use the 3C very often. It is a big match only move.