>>10086464I do, unlike you, which is why I find your comment completely nonsensical. I'm not gonna run down each of these so I'll just focus on one comparison to explain how retarded you are.
Bullet Club's raison d'etre in kayfabe is supposed to be a bunch of the overlooked and underutilized gaijin wrestlers banding together to support one another and get back at management. They'd always get overlooked for the big main event spots, so Bullet Club was a way to force management to acknowledge them. From the perspective of the fans and the other New Japan factions, they're basically an invading army.
Bullet Club's "philosophy" is, or at least it's supposed to be, "one for all, all for one". There's always been a defacto "leader", but there's no real hierarchy or pecking order, every member has a pretty high degree of autonomy. This is the kayfabe reason for why there's so many backstabbings, betrayals, infighting and splintering off into new groups/subgroups. It's a survival of the fittest kind of deal where everyone pursues their own self-interest, the cooperation is based on quid pro quo, it's not done for the collective.
Meanwhile The Bloodline's raison d'etre in kayfabe is members of the Anoa'i family falling in under Roman Reigns to protect/ensure/advance their family's dynasty, specifically Roman as "The Head of the Table". They weren't being overlooked or underutilized, they're just securing what's already theirs. They're not outsiders in any way, they have a long, storied history in the company.
The Bloodline blatantly evokes a mafia structure where the patriarch (Roman) is the supreme leader that all the other members are subordinate to. Everything revolves around him, and exists to prop him up and support him. There's a definitive hierarchy and every member of the group has a unique role within the group.
The only things they have in common are that they're both overpushed heel factions that run a lot of interference spots. You're a fucking retard.