C

Chaos Video

Verified Promoter
RU Russia Joined May 2026
Events Q&A
Chaos Video is remembered as one of the more distinctive names from the early internet era of female fighting, Russian catfights and underground-style combat video production. Emerging during a period when independent producers were beginning to use websites, downloadable clips and mail-order DVDs to reach niche audiences around the world, Chaos Video built its reputation around variety, intensity and a raw, competitive style of female combat.

Unlike producers that focused on one narrow format, Chaos Video presented itself as a broad female fighting brand. Its catalogue and promotional identity covered many different types of women’s combat, including catfights, wrestling, boxing, mixed matches, martial arts-inspired contests and no holds barred style fights. This wide-ranging approach helped the producer appeal to fans who were interested in more than just staged glamour wrestling or polished fantasy matches. Chaos Video became associated with fights that felt unpredictable, physical and grounded in real competitive energy.

The Russian and Eastern European element was a key part of the brand’s appeal. At a time when many catfight and women’s wrestling producers were based in the United States, the UK or Western Europe, Chaos Video offered something that felt different. The fighters, settings and atmosphere gave many of the videos a rougher, more underground identity. For fans of Russian catfights, amateur female fighting and gritty one-on-one contests, Chaos Video stood out as a producer that captured a less polished but often more intense style of action.

Part of what made Chaos Video interesting was the mixture of formats in its library. Some fights leaned more towards wrestling and grappling, with the women battling for control, pins and submissions. Others moved closer to catfighting, with a more emotional and aggressive tone. The producer also explored boxing, martial arts, mixed fighting and no holds barred concepts, giving the catalogue a varied feel. This made Chaos Video a useful discovery point for fans who wanted to explore different forms of female combat rather than watching the same type of match over and over again.

Chaos Video also belongs to an important period in the history of online catfight content. In the early 2000s, producers relied heavily on simple websites, preview images, sample clips, DVDs and word-of-mouth discussion in forums. Before the rise of large clip marketplaces and streaming platforms, independent producers like Chaos Video had to build their own audience directly. That old-school presentation is part of the brand’s legacy. For long-time fans of the niche, Chaos Video represents a time when female fighting content felt harder to find, more underground and often more mysterious.

Today, Chaos Video remains a name that serious collectors and fans of classic female fighting may recognise. Its reputation is not built on mainstream production values, but on its place within the wider evolution of catfight, wrestling and female combat media. For viewers interested in Russian catfights, vintage internet-era female fighting and raw competitive matchups, Chaos Video is an important producer to document.

Top fights

Watch the best from Chaos Video

Videos (8)

Anni vs Kami 30:03

Anni vs Kami

$5.00 FC 5 FC
Kami vs Tania 29:52

Kami vs Tania

$5.00 FC 5 FC
Kami vs Veta 74:38

Kami vs Veta

$7.00 FC 7 FC
Lucretia vs Molly 17:01

Lucretia vs Molly

$3.00 FC 3 FC
Cathreen vs Lana 14:46

Cathreen vs Lana

$3.00 FC 3 FC
Irene vs Lana 12:36

Irene vs Lana

$3.00 FC 3 FC
Anne vs Lana 2:17
Anne vs Marie 14:50

Anne vs Marie

$3.00 FC 3 FC

No community features available yet.

C

Chaos Video

0 followers