| 1 | First WrestleMania Held Outside the United States SkyDome, Toronto, Ontario, Canada — April 1, 1990 WrestleMania VI was the first — and to date only — WrestleMania to be held entirely outside of the United States. The choice of Toronto's SkyDome was a deliberate expansion of the WWF's international market, capitalising on the sport's growing Canadian fanbase and the spectacular brand-new venue that had opened in 1989. WrestleMania VI's Canadian setting also made it the first WWF pay-per-view event of any kind held outside American borders. The decision proved commercially successful — the event drew a SkyDome attendance record of 67,678 and demonstrated the WWF's ability to draw massive numbers internationally. No subsequent WrestleMania has been held outside the United States. | First WWF pay-per-view event outside the United States | First and only WrestleMania outside the United States |
| 2 | First Title vs. Title WrestleMania Main Event WWF Championship vs. WWF Intercontinental Championship — Winner Takes All WrestleMania VI's main event was the first in WrestleMania history to feature two championships simultaneously on the line. The Winner Takes All stipulation — with both the WWF World Heavyweight Championship and the WWF Intercontinental Heavyweight Championship contested in the same match — had never been attempted in WWF history. WWF President Jack Tunney officially announced both titles were at stake on February 24, 1990. The concept was daring: the Intercontinental Championship was the WWF's most prestigious secondary title, and placing it alongside the world title gave the challenger (Warrior) genuine prestige while creating unique stakes for the outcome. | — | First title vs. title main event in WrestleMania history |
| 3 | First WrestleMania Main Event Between Two Babyfaces Hulk Hogan vs. The Ultimate Warrior — Both Fan Favourites Every previous WrestleMania main event had followed the conventional hero-versus-villain formula — a babyface champion defending against a heel challenger. WrestleMania VI shattered this template by pitting two of the most popular babyfaces in WWF history against each other. There was no villain, no manager scheming at ringside, no dishonest tactics — just two beloved, fan-favourite champions competing to determine who was the single greatest force in the WWF. The resulting 50/50 crowd split in Toronto — half supporting Hogan, half cheering Warrior — created a unique and extraordinary atmosphere that a traditional babyface-versus-heel dynamic could never have produced. | — | First babyface vs. babyface WrestleMania main event |
| 4 | Shortest Match in WrestleMania History Hart Foundation vs. Bolsheviks — 19 Seconds The Hart Foundation's demolition of The Bolsheviks in 19 seconds remains the shortest match in WrestleMania history. The record-setting brevity was entirely intentional — designed to communicate the Hart Foundation's dominance while simultaneously punishing the Bolsheviks for wasting everyone's time with their Soviet anthem. The 19-second WrestleMania match has been referenced, celebrated, and marvelled at in retrospectives for over three decades. No subsequent WrestleMania match has come close to matching its brevity. | — | Shortest match in WrestleMania history |
| 5 | Hulk Hogan's Only WrestleMania Singles Loss Hogan's WrestleMania Record: 7-1-1 After WM6 The Ultimate Warrior's victory over Hulk Hogan at WrestleMania VI delivered something fans had long considered impossible — a clean, decisive, in-ring WrestleMania defeat for the Immortal Hulk Hogan. Hogan had been undefeated at WrestleMania since the inaugural event in 1985, successfully defending against King Kong Bundy at WM2, André the Giant at WM3, and Randy Savage at WM5. WrestleMania VI's loss was Hogan's only WrestleMania singles defeat. His final WrestleMania record stands at 7 wins, 1 loss, and 1 no-contest. | — | Hogan's only WrestleMania singles loss |
| 6 | André the Giant's Final WWF Television Match WrestleMania VI — Last Major Performance of a Legendary Career WrestleMania VI was the final WWF television and pay-per-view match of André the Giant's extraordinary career. André's deteriorating health — the result of acromegaly's devastating progression — made this his last competitive appearance on a major WWF platform. He returned for non-wrestling appearances later in 1990 and 1991, but WrestleMania VI represented the athletic end of the greatest career in professional wrestling history. André died on January 27, 1993 — making WrestleMania VI's post-match standing ovation one of the last times a WWF crowd collectively celebrated the man they had loved for two decades. | — | André the Giant's final WWF television and PPV match |
| 7 | SkyDome Attendance Record 67,678 Fans — Record for the Venue at the Time WrestleMania VI set a new attendance record for the SkyDome — 67,678 fans were the announced figure, with the actual number estimated at approximately 64,287. Regardless of which figure is accepted, the event established the SkyDome as a legitimate major venue for professional wrestling and demonstrated the sport's capacity to fill the largest Canadian indoor sports arena. The record attendance further bolstered the case for the WWF's international expansion strategy. | — | SkyDome attendance record at time of event |
| 8 | First Time Future WWE Hall of Famer Edge Attended WrestleMania Adam Copeland — 16-Year-Old Fan in the Crowd Among the 67,678 fans inside the SkyDome for WrestleMania VI was a 16-year-old wrestling fan from Orangeville, Ontario named Adam Copeland — who would later enter the WWF as Edge and become a multiple-time world champion and WWE Hall of Famer. Copeland has spoken extensively about the experience of watching WrestleMania VI live as a teenager, describing it as a formative moment that deepened his determination to become a professional wrestler. The event he attended as a fan would eventually become the same event where one of his greatest rivals — Christian — also attended. | — | Future WWE star Edge attended WM6 as a 16-year-old fan |