Reese reposted a tweet from @lifewithkeerose that read,
“Angel Reese’s 2025 Wrapped [heart emoji][sparkles emoji],” a post that listed around 20 accomplishments from the year.
Among the highlights were “Became a 2x WNBA All-Star” and “First woman athlete to have a McDonalds meal.” Reese added her own caption on the repost, writing, “Whew. God did his biggest one for me this year! 2026 is about ELEVATION! [sparkles emoji].”
Whew. God did his biggest one for me this year! 2026 is about ELEVATION! [sparkle emoji] https://t.co/VgJJcKpPSl
— Angel Reese (@Reese10Angel) December 31, 2025
Many WNBA Fans replied with congratulations and well-wishes for 2026, but as always, a noticeable portion of them were more on how Reese has spent her time outside of basketball.

Some replies questioned whether endorsements and branding have taken priority, while others nitpicked her on-court output compared to her peers.
One blunt response from @edp9170 cut through the noise, saying, “You’re still nowhere near as good as Caitlin Clark.”
That comparison sparked a familiar pattern. WNBA Fans have regularly framed Reese’s career alongside Clark’s, often reducing individual achievements into head-to-head arguments that ignore context. The reaction showed how Reese’s visibility makes her a constant target for comparison, regardless of the milestone being celebrated.
This post isn’t just about a recap graphic. It reflects how WNBA Fans consume success differently depending on who it belongs to. For every supportive message, there was another dissecting branding choices, focus, or performance.
As Reese looks ahead to 2026, WNBA Fans remain split. Some see growth and momentum. Others see unfinished business and expectations that have yet to be met.
WNBA Fans Turn $500K vs Angel Reese “Debate” Into a One-Sided Decision
WNBA Fans wasted no time turning a supposed debate into something that barely qualified as a discussion.

The post that kicked it off came from @akafaceUS, who tweeted, “A huge ongoing debate as to whether people would rather have $500k cash right now… or a date with Angel Reese.”
Framed as a question, the replies quickly showed that WNBA Fans had already made up their minds.
The most liked response came from @JimSTruthBTold, who wrote, “Lmao. Should be the shortest debate in history. Take the $$.”
That comment set the tone for everything that followed, as WNBA Fans piled on with similar answers.
Another reply that gained traction came from @Winston_Frazer, who added, “I’ll take $500,000 and no STD’s Alex.” which kept the snowballing roll of “no date” down the hill.
From the fan’s perspective, it was never a debate to begin with. If the original poster expected mixed opinions or playful disagreement, it never happened. Instead, WNBA Fans treated the question as a punchline rather than a choice.
This moment shows how quickly online framing can collapse. Once the replies start rolling in one direction, the idea of a debate disappears. WNBA Fans weren’t weighing options. They were competing to say the same thing louder and funnier.
In the end, the headline promised a discussion. The replies delivered a verdict, and it was never close.

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