So, I decided I really wanted to catch the WWE event happening over in Rochester. Been a fan for ages, you know, and figured it’d be cool to see it live again.

First thing I did, obviously, was hop online. Just typed something like “wwe tickets rochester” into the search bar. A whole bunch of stuff popped up right away. The official WWE site was there, naturally, but also a ton of those reseller sites, you know the ones. Ticketmaster, StubHub, SeatGeek, the whole gang.
Figuring Out Where to Buy
I looked at the official site first. Seemed like the most straightforward place. But then I thought, maybe the prices are better elsewhere? Curiosity got the better of me. So, I started clicking around on those other sites. Man, the prices were all over the place! Some seemed okay, others were just ridiculously high. And the fees! Don’t get me started on the fees they tack on at the end.
I spent a good chunk of time just comparing. Found myself going back and forth:
- Check official site prices.
- Check Ticketmaster prices + fees.
- Check StubHub availability (sometimes they have seats others don’t).
- Check SeatGeek to see if they aggregate anything cheaper.
It felt a bit like detective work, trying to figure out the actual final cost and which seats were really available versus just listed.
Making the Purchase
After comparing for what felt like forever, I decided to stick with Ticketmaster this time. Their layout felt a bit more familiar, and the seats I wanted seemed reasonably priced compared to some of the others, even with the fees factored in. Still wasn’t cheap, mind you, but live events rarely are these days.
Selecting the seats was the next step. They have that map thing, which is kinda helpful. Picked a section I liked, not too close to break the bank, but not so far back I’d need binoculars. Clicked on the seats, added them to the cart. Simple enough, right?
Then came the checkout. Had to log in, or create an account if you don’t have one. Filled in all the payment details. Double-checked everything – the date, the seats, the price. Always gotta double-check. Hit the final button and held my breath for a second. Sometimes those sites can be glitchy, especially when lots of people are trying to buy.
Success! The confirmation screen popped up. Got the email confirmation almost immediately too. Tickets secured. Felt good to finally have that sorted.

So yeah, that was my little adventure getting those WWE Rochester tickets. A bit of searching, comparing, and finally clicking the buy button. Now just gotta wait for the actual show. Should be a blast.