Halloween Costume Guide
Burn it down. Then show up in head-to-toe white and a Power Rangers helmet.
Seth Rollins walks to the ring like he is the main event of the entire concept of professional wrestling, and he has been doing it long enough that the argument is hard to dispute. His most iconic entrance came at WrestleMania 31 in 2015, when he emerged wearing a gold and white helmet that directly referenced the White Ranger from Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, then cashed in his Money in the Bank contract to win the WWE World Heavyweight Championship (Wikipedia). That entrance is what this costume is built around. WWE fans will get it. Everyone else will think you showed up as a very athletic Power Ranger, which is not a bad fallback.
Affiliate links. We may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
The helmet is the costume’s entire argument, and it has to be on your head, not tucked under your arm. Carry it in at the venue if you must, but the moment it comes off and stays off, the outfit becomes a white athletic set with no context. If the helmet is cheap or ill-fitting enough to be uncomfortable, that is the problem to solve before Halloween, not at the party. The all-white clothing needs to be genuinely clean. One visibly dirty item and the look reads as “forgot to do laundry” rather than ring gear.
The WrestleMania 31 cash-in is the specific moment to channel. Rollins did not just walk out, he walked out with complete confidence at the worst possible moment for two other people, helmet on, and won the title in under three minutes. That energy is the character at the party: calm, certain, slightly too pleased with himself. “Burn it down” as a catchphrase does not need much prompting to land with WWE fans once they see the helmet.
The helmet is not designed for a full night
Power Rangers helmets are built for display and short wear, not for standing in a crowded venue for four hours. The visibility is limited and it gets warm quickly. Plan to wear it for photos and entrances, then carry it. A helmet under your arm still reads as Seth Rollins. A helmet you took off because you had a headache and left somewhere does not.
Keep every white item actually white
The costume only works if the whole outfit is the same shade of white. Mixing bright white pants with an off-white shirt looks like a mismatch, not a costume. Order everything from the same product range if you can, or compare them in daylight before the event. Under party lighting, a slight difference becomes very obvious.
Group Idea: WWE Legends
Excellent group for a WWE crowd. The Rock, John Cena, The Undertaker, and Seth Rollins covers four of the most recognizable WWE names of the last three decades, and each costume is visually distinct enough that no one gets confused with anyone else. At a general party, most people over 25 will get at least three of the four on sight. The Undertaker is the hardest build of the group.
Group Idea: Fighters Across Franchises
Strong concept if everyone commits to the look. A WWE superstar alongside Ryu, Scorpion, and Sub-Zero covers three different fighting franchises in one group, and all four costumes read clearly on their own. The connection is loose enough that it needs a bit of explaining at a general party, but at a gaming or pop culture event it lands without any setup.
Group Idea: Flamboyant Showmen
Might work, but the theme is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Elvis, Freddie Mercury, Ricky Bobby, and Seth Rollins do share a specific kind of committed, theatrical showmanship, and the visual contrast between the four costumes is genuinely interesting. The problem is that the connection is tonal rather than factual, so the group needs a shared explanation to land. At a party where people enjoy the joke, it works. At a general Halloween event, it mostly reads as four unrelated costumes standing together.
Group Idea: Famous Seths
Might work, but only if every person in the group is willing to spend the night explaining who they are. Seth Cohen from The O.C. and Seth from Superbad have decent recognition with the right age group. Seth Brundle from The Fly is genuinely niche. The concept is the kind of joke that lands hard with people who get it and completely misses everyone else. I would only do this group if the entire party already knows the premise going in.
This is a straightforward build. The difficulty is almost entirely in the helmet and keeping everything the same shade of white. No special makeup, no complicated layering.
Rollins is not a screamer. He is a person who walks into rooms like he already knows how it ends. That is easier to sustain for four hours than a full-volume character.
Start with the Power Rangers-style helmet, which is the single most recognizable piece. Pair it with white jogger pants, a white sleeveless compression shirt, white-black striped sweatbands, and white sneakers. The all-white ring gear is what separates this from a generic wrestler build.
Yes, and more broadly than most wrestler costumes. The White Ranger helmet entrance is one of WWE’s most talked-about visual moments from the 2010s, and Rollins has stayed consistently in the main event picture through the mid-2020s. WWE fans will recognize it immediately, and the helmet is striking enough to catch non-fans off guard in an interesting way.
His two most-used lines are “Burn it down,” his signature catchphrase, and the self-proclaimed title “The Visionary.” Both are tied directly to his run as WWE’s most flamboyant performer across both heel and babyface periods.
Seth Rollins’s real name is Colby Lopez. He trained at the Lance Storm Wrestling Academy and broke through on the independent circuit before signing with WWE in 2010.
At WrestleMania 31 in 2015, Seth Rollins entered wearing a gold and white helmet that directly referenced the White Ranger from Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, then cashed in his Money in the Bank contract to win the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. That entrance is what this costume is built around.
Skip the helmet and this becomes a white gym outfit. The helmet is the one item that turns “guy in white pants” into a recognizable Seth Rollins build. I would not cut it.
Rollins has held the WWE World Heavyweight Championship multiple times and has also held the Intercontinental Championship and the United States Championship. He was also part of The Shield trio alongside Roman Reigns and Dean Ambrose, which won the WWE Tag Team Championships. The Money in the Bank cash-in at WrestleMania 31 is the moment most people associate with the peak of his title run.