Some moves rattle bones. Others rattle memories. Stephanie Vaquer’s Devil’s Kiss does both—it doesn’t just stomp a skull into the mat, it leaves a crater in your brainpan like a meteor made of muscle and malice. It’s the kind of move that looks like it was cooked up in a fever dream after too many shots of tequila and one too many nights in Ciudad Juárez.
It didn’t take long for the WWE Universe to take notice. Less than a year into her run, and Vaquer—La Primera, the Dark Angel from Chile by way of the underworld—has already carved her initials into the main event horizon with the subtlety of a prison shank.
A Stomp Heard Round the Industry
The move? They call it the Devil’s Kiss, and it’s as vicious as it sounds. Vaquer traps her opponent’s head between her thighs and sends it into the canvas like she’s trying to break through to the other side. It’s part head trauma, part theater, and all Vaquer. The fans don’t just like it—they wait for it, chant for it, salivate over the violence of it like stray dogs crowding a butcher shop window.
And now, the kiss has caught the attention of one of wrestling’s most quotable degenerates: Scott Steiner.
In a post that reeked of both locker room musk and classic Steiner sleaze, Big Poppa Pump weighed in with the kind of half-joke that tells you everything you need to know:
“Just saw this ‘devil’s kiss’ move. Seems like something the Big Bad Booty Daddy would’ve done… just not in the ring, if you know what I mean.”
That’s Steiner-speak for “hell of a move, kid,” filtered through his usual cocktail of innuendo and gym-rat bravado. If anyone would appreciate Vaquer’s brand of danger, it’s the man who once threatened to suplex God.
From NXT to RAW, with Blood on Her Boots
Vaquer didn’t take the slow elevator to the top. She climbed it like a woman trying to outrun hell. After a blazing stint in NXT where she turned heads—and occasionally cracked them open—she got the call-up to Monday Night RAW, no frills, no filler.
In the span of one weekend—Money in the Bank, no less—she laced her boots and wrestled three times. No ego. No diva tantrums. Just blood, sweat, and that quiet look in her eyes that says: I’m not here to be your role model. I’m here to hurt someone.
WWE’s red brand is a meat grinder, and Vaquer dove in headfirst.
Not Just a Move, a Manifesto
The Devil’s Kiss isn’t just a signature. It’s a calling card, a warning shot, a love letter to chaos written in cracked vertebrae. And it’s given color commentary lifer Booker T something to lose his damn mind over. Every time she signals it, Booker sounds like he’s seen a ghost dressed in spandex—and maybe he has. Because Stephanie Vaquer isn’t just a wrestler. She’s a phantom in lace and leather, the kind of performer who haunts highlight reels.
Fans cheer because they feel something when she does it. That’s rare in this overproduced, pyrotechnic-choked industry. We’re talking about a woman who gets real pop—not the piped-in variety. The kind that surges from the back row and smashes into the mat like thunder.
A Future Paved in Scars
What’s next for Stephanie Vaquer?
If history holds, she’ll do what all the greats do—bleed, evolve, and refuse to blink. There’s talk of championship gold in her future. There’s buzz around her backstage like the hum of a power plant before the grid blows. But Vaquer doesn’t talk much. She lets the boots do the sermonizing. And when she hits that Devil’s Kiss, she’s not just ending a match. She’s declaring war.
So here she is—La Primera, the Dark Angel, the woman with a signature move so violent even Scott Steiner had to take off his sunglasses and tweet about it.
Stephanie Vaquer isn’t waiting for history to remember her. She’s dragging it to the mat and forcing it to tap.
And that, my friends, is one hell of a kiss.


