Falling in Reverse tickets are usually available through a few different platforms, and where you buy them can depend on factors like how early you want to secure your spot or if you’re looking for VIP packages. The most reliable place to start is their official website or social media pages—bands often link directly to ticket sales there, especially when tours are announced. I’ve snagged tickets this way before, and it’s nice because you sometimes get early access if you’re signed up for their newsletter or follow them closely.
Another go-to is big ticket vendors like Ticketmaster or Live Nation. These sites handle a lot of major tours, and while they can be a pain with fees, they’re usually the safest bet for legit tickets. If you’re willing to risk it, resale sites like StubHub or SeatGeek can have options closer to the event date, but prices can swing wildly depending on demand. I once waited too long and ended up paying way more than face value, so if it’s a must-see show, I’d grab tickets early. Local venues sometimes sell tickets directly too, so checking their box office or website doesn’t hurt. Either way, seeing Ronnie Radke and the crew live is totally worth the hassle—their energy onstage is unreal.
2026-04-09 20:21:01
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Reverse Harem: Rated 16+ After Rose's grandparents passed away, her family moves from Texas to Oregon. Quickly after arriving, she meets many characters with individual charms that attract her attention. What happens when soon after, she hears the word "mate" coming from their mouths? A guaranteed happy ending novel.
Briar is a smart, determined, driven woman who only has one goal in life, finding the ones responsible for taking her brother away from her. This leads her to become a detective who finds herself slowly becoming acquainted with the underworld, a place filled with crime, drugs, sex, and Ciaran O'Reilly, a cold-blooded monster who kills for fun.
After their first meeting he warns her to never appear in front of him again, otherwise, he would claim her, after all, she is his mate, the one destined to him, made for him, and the one that he can never hope to have.
But fate has other plans for the star-crossed lovers. Plans that continue to bring them together and eventually intertwine them in order to stay alive.
Will Briar and Ciaran be able to ignore the bond that they share, or will they risk it all for the thrill of their lust?
Read Falling Into Ruin to find out!
His songs were better when he had a broken heart.
That sentence would change my life after my dream job was dished to me on a shiny, silver platter.
All I had to do?
Hurt Nash Pierce enough to get him writing good music again.
The pop icon’s songs were no longer the phenomena they used to be. His team needed another breakthrough album—like the first he’d penned, using his heartbreak as fuel.
The plan was simple: I’d go on tour with him as a backup dancer…and make him fall in love with me. I was hired to inspire—to become embedded into every lyric he wrote. Then, I was to set fire to it all—to destroy every feeling we hoped he’d develop for me.
It seemed simple enough. Easy, even.
I didn’t expect to be consumed myself—to see so much in the man displayed in the tabloids. I didn’t foresee falling for him. It didn’t occur to me that, while attempting to break his heart, I might just shatter my own.
Most of all, I never thought I’d fight so hard to hold on to a relationship that had always been founded on goodbye.
Nora, a quiet and talented artist, has always kept to herself, letting her creativity speak louder than words. Life takes an unexpected turn when she crosses paths with Jaden, a charming and irresistible basketball star whose reputation for heartbreak precedes him. What starts as a casual connection soon spirals into a passionate and consuming romance, filled with stolen glances, secret moments, and undeniable chemistry.
But love is never simple. Betrayal, heartbreak, and jealousy test the strength of their bond, forcing both Nora and Jaden to confront their deepest fears and desires. As they navigate the turbulence of young love, they must decide whether their hearts are strong enough to endure the storms—or if falling in love means falling apart.
Tender, raw, and unforgettably intense, “The Art of Falling” is a story about love’s power to heal, transform, and sometimes, break us completely.
The idea of Escape the Fate and Falling in Reverse touring together is like a dream scenario for fans of post-hardcore and metalcore. Both bands share roots in the same scene, and their histories are intertwined, especially with Ronnie Radke's past involvement in Escape the Fate before forming Falling in Reverse. I've been following both bands for years, and while they've occasionally shared festival lineups, a full-blown co-headlining tour hasn't materialized yet.
That said, the chemistry between them would be electric. Imagine the crowd's energy if they played back-to-back sets, maybe even a surprise collaboration on stage. It's the kind of tour that would sell out instantly, and I'd be first in line for tickets. Until then, I'll keep hoping and rewatching their live performances on YouTube to get my fix.
Falling in Reverse's music is this wild, genre-blending ride that never sits still. Ronnie Radke and the crew mash up post-hardcore screams with pop-punk hooks, trap beats with metal breakdowns, and even throw in some hip-hop swagger. It's like they took a blender to 'A Day to Remember', 'My Chemical Romance', and 'MGK'—then cranked it to 11. Their album 'Popular Monster' is a perfect example: one minute it's a soaring melodic chorus, the next it's a rage-fueled screamfest. I love how they refuse to be boxed in—it keeps every release unpredictable.
What really stands out is their theatrical flair. Tracks like 'Zombified' feel like mini horror movies with nu-metal riffs and electronic glitches. They’ve coined it 'gangster electronic post-hardcore,' which sounds ridiculous but somehow fits. Critics nitpick about consistency, but fans (me included) eat up the chaos. It’s music for when you want to mosh and sing along to a catchy chorus—sometimes in the same song.