KICKBOXER: ARMAGEDDON (2026)


Kickboxer: Armageddon pushes the legendary martial-arts franchise into its darkest, most brutal chapter yet. This is not a comeback story—it’s a final trial, where honor, blood, and legacy collide in the ring and beyond it.
Alain Moussi returns as Kurt Sloane, now a hardened veteran whose body bears the cost of every victory. He is no longer fighting to prove himself, but to protect what little peace remains. His style is raw, disciplined, and unforgiving—every strike driven by survival rather than pride.
Scott Adkins enters as the film’s central force of destruction: a merciless world-class kickboxer forged in underground death matches. Fast, vicious, and surgical, his presence turns every fight into a life-or-death calculation. When he and Sloane clash, it feels less like sport and more like an execution postponed.
Jean-Claude Van Damme returns as the spiritual pillar of the saga—the master whose teachings echo through every movement. Older, wiser, and carrying the weight of past sins, he represents tradition in a world rushing toward collapse. His role is quieter, but his shadow looms over every choice made in blood.
Set against a global fighting tournament held as the world teeters on chaos, the film moves from sweat-drenched gyms to brutal international arenas. The choreography is grounded and savage—no wire tricks, no mercy. Bones crack, stamina fails, and victory always comes at a cost.
At its core, Kickboxer: Armageddon is about endings. What happens when the last fight really is the last one? Can honor survive when violence becomes spectacle?
In the end, the ring is not where fate is decided.
It is decided in the choice
to stand…
or fall.