Historical recognition Although many wrestling organizations promote their lead title as a
world heavyweight championship,
Pro Wrestling Illustrated (
PWI) has only recognized a few championships as valid world titles at any one time.
PWI has also generally recognized the main tag team title from any promotion with a recognized world heavyweight championship as being a
world tag team championship (unless named otherwise by the promotion) and certain other select titles from those promotions as world championships. In 1983,
PWI withdrew world title recognition from the
WWF World Heavyweight Championship, citing how champion
Bob Backlund was not facing contenders from outside the
World Wrestling Federation (WWF) territory and was only facing
rulebreakers. This coincided with the WWF's withdrawal from the
National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) in summer 1983.
PWI reinstated the WWF's world title recognition retroactively in 1985 on account of the WWF's massive mainstream media profile. The
AWA World Heavyweight Championship was stripped of its world title status in January 1991 when the
American Wrestling Association (AWA) was in its final days. By this time, the championship was vacant and would remain so until the promotion's closure. Until March 1991,
PWI and its sister publications steadfastly referred to
World Championship Wrestling (WCW) as "the NWA" despite WCW having increasingly phased out the latter name in the preceding months. In spring 1991, the family of magazines adopted a new policy of referring to the current promotion and its champions as WCW and the promotion's pre-1991 past as the NWA. The magazine also announced it would refer to the overall history of the promotion's
world title as the "NWA/WCW World Championship" (and likewise with other WCW championships).
PWI generally traced the lineage of the NWA/WCW World Championship back to
George Hackenschmidt's
title victory in 1905, rather than the creation of the
NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship in 1948. Subsequently, after
Ric Flair left WCW and was stripped of the WCW World Heavyweight Championship in July 1991,
PWI and its sister publications nonetheless continued to recognize the WCW title as held by
Lex Luger,
Sting,
Vader, and
Ron Simmons as the rightful continuation of the historic NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship. When
Masa Chono won an NWA world title tournament in Japan in August 1992,
PWI and its sister publications only recognized Chono's title as the "NWA Championship" and rejected it as a world title or as a continuation of the historic NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship.
PWI initially did not recognize the
ECW World Heavyweight Championship as a world title but granted the championship and the
promotion world title status in 1999.
Current recognition Since 2023,
Pro Wrestling Illustrated (
PWI) recognizes the
WWE Championship,
World Heavyweight Championship,
AEW World Championship,
Impact World Championship,
ROH World Championship,
MLW World Heavyweight Championship, and
NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship from the
United States, the
AAA Mega Championship and
CMLL World Heavyweight Championship from
Mexico, as well as the
IWGP World Heavyweight Championship,
Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship,
World of Stardom Championship, and
GHC Heavyweight Championship from
Japan as
world heavyweight championships.
PWI later additionally recognized the independent wrestling titles the Independent Wrestling World Championship and the Pan-Afrikan World Diaspora Wrestling Championship as world championships.
List of all recognized world heavyweight championships According to the annual
PWI almanac,
PWI still recognizes select
world title reigns from May 4, 1905 – January 28, 1946, before the formation of the
National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) in July 1948, mostly conforming to the lineage traditionally traced backwards 1948–1905 by the NWA for their World Heavyweight Championship. ==Rankings==