Rhea Ripley Returns To WWE Raw In Facemask, Declares ‘WarGames’ For Survivor Series
A women’s WarGames match for WWE Survivor Series appears to be set, with a returning Rhea Ripley, complete with protective facemask, evening the odds between the teams on “WWE Raw” Monday night. The episode kicked off with Women’s World Champion Liv Morgan and Raquel Rodriguez, who addressed the fact they knew the WWE Women’s Tag Team Champions, with who they have been feuding with, were backstage, and Morgan knew they didn’t come alone. Morgan said she and Rodriguez weren’t alone, either.
WWE Women’s Champion Nia Jax’s music hit, and she, alongside Miss Money in the Bank Tiffany Stratton and Candice LaRae came down to the ring. Jax began to address the babyfaces, but was interrupted by Bianca Belair’s music. Belair came out alongside tag partner Jade Cargill and Naomi. Belair said they certainly didn’t come alone, and out came IYO SKY. The babyfaces got in the ring and faced down Morgan and her team. Morgan said they were still outnumbered and she didn’t think there was “anyone dumb enough in the back who would want to be on their team.” She asked who wanted to throw the first punch.

Ripley’s music hit and she came out wearing the mask to cover her broken orbital bone, which in storyline, was caused by an attack with a baseball by Morgan and Rodriguez on “WWE NXT.” She screamed “WarGames” in Morgan’s face, then hit her with a headbutt, starting the brawl between the teams. The babyfaces stood tall in the middle of the ring to end the segment.
Best Selling Auto Brands Ranking up to October 2024 is still dominated by Toyota (-0.6%), followed by Volkswagen in 2nd (-0.2%) and Honda in 3rd (-2.4%) . BYD surged 39.4%, climbing to 6th, while BMW fell out of the Top 10.
The Global Auto Brands Ranking
Sourcing local Minister of Transportation or deputy agencies, we collect new light vehicles registrations, country by country, brand by brand, in 159 markets worldwide. Extracting data for our Global Auto Database we are able to report on this ranking as several others.
Considering cumulative data up to October 2024, Toyota was still the best selling brand, with 7,49 million vehicles sold. Despite a 0.6% year-on-year decrease, the Japanese giant maintained its decade-long leadership in the market, securing a 10.9% share of all global sales.
Volkswagen ranked in 2nd, with 3,94 million units sold and a 5.7% share of the global market (-0.2%).
In third place Honda -up 1 spot- with 3,07 million units sold and a market share of 4.5% (-2.4%).
In fourth place Hyundai -down 1 spot- sold 3,06 million vehicles (-3%), followed by Ford with 2,95 million sales (-0.2%) and BYD -up 3 spots- at 2,95 million (+39.4%). BYD is an EV specialist still selling ICE vehicles (representing over the half of company sales). In 2019 BYD ranking was the 49th in the world!
Nissan ranked in 7th with 2,59 million (+0.9%), followed by Chevrolet -down 2 spots- with 2,46 million units sold (-5.5%), and Kia -down 1 spot- with 2,41 million sales (-3.7%). Closing the top 10, Mercedes -up 1 spot- which reported 1,77 million new registrations (-1.1%). Tables with sales figures
In the table below we report sales for Top 25 Brands.