Wwe.nxt.2025.01.14.multi.1080i.feed.x264-gita-p... High Quality < Ultra HD >

The hooded figure had lowered its hood.

She tried to overwrite it. Instead, VLC launched itself. The video played.

Quality: High.

The video glitched. When it returned, Maya was sitting in her chair. But the Maya on screen turned to the camera and smiled. The hooded figure had lowered its hood

He logged it, shrugged, and went back to work. At 11:47 PM, an automated script run by a user known only as GITA scraped the raw European satellite feed. Unlike other release groups that re-encoded the video to save space, GITA was a purist. They released MULTi —multiple audio tracks, multiple subtitle streams, and the original 1080i interlaced broadcast signal.

“You shouldn't have opened the ending release,” said the Maya on screen, in a voice that was slightly out of sync. “The p stands for pre-live . This isn't a recording of January 14th.”

He deleted the file. He reformatted his drive. But the image stayed burned into his retina: a hooded figure, standing over his shoulder, holding a stopwatch that read . Part 3: The Artifact Digital forensics expert Maya Chen was hired anonymously (via 5 Bitcoin) to analyze the .mkv file. She isolated it on an air-gapped Linux machine. The video played

, the most elusive release group in the underground wrestling torrent scene, had just dropped it: WWE.NXT.2025.01.14.MULTi.1080i.FEED.x264-GITA-p...

The stopwatch on the figure’s wrist hit .

But this release had a suffix: -p...

It was , the video editor. His eyes were completely white. In his hand, the stopwatch wasn't counting up. It was counting down .

On it, one file.