God Is A Weapon Tour Takes Over Xfinity Center
The God Is A Weapon tour rolled into Mansfield’s Xfinity Center on September 13th and delivered one of those rare nights where everything seemed to click. From the first note to the last, the show was as much about the connection between bands and fans as it was about the music itself.
Point North opened with a set that immediately drew the crowd in, their polished sound and sharp delivery setting the pace for the evening. They had the audience warmed up and leaning forward, ready for what was to come.
Hollywood Undead took that momentum and turned it into a full-blown party. Their setlist was stacked with fan favorites, and the crowd never stopped moving — hands in the air, voices raised, pits opening up in bursts of energy. Their mix of rap and rock got the venue bouncing. The highlight came when they brought “Cowboy Nick” onstage to play guitar for Comin’ In Hot, a moment that had the entire crowd cheering, but the band never let up. Every track landed and the energy never dipped.
Then came Slaughter To Prevail, who unleashed absolute devastation in the best way possible. Their set was crushing, the pits opened wide, and Alex Terrible’s infamous no-mic scream cut straight through the noise, echoing across the venue and sending the crowd into a frenzy. It was raw, visceral, and unforgettable.
Falling in Reverse opened with Prequel in near darkness, a single spotlight glowing behind Ronnie Radke to cast his silhouette across the stage. It was a striking, cinematic entrance that had the crowd holding its breath until the first notes hit and the night roared to life. From there, the set was pure spectacle with bursts of pyro lighting up the stage and massive graphics on the screen behind them amplifying every song. The crowd screamed every lyric back at Ronnie, so loud it sometimes overpowered him, and the band fed off that energy, laughing, trading glances, and clearly having the time of their lives. Midway through the set, Ronnie stopped everything when he spotted someone who needed help in the crowd, refusing to continue until they got the help they needed. The pause only deepened the sense of connection in the room, showing how present and in control he was. From the crushing punch of Zombified to the nostalgia of The Drug in Me Is You and the firepower of God Is a Weapon, every track landed like an anthem. By the end, the bond between band and crowd felt electric, the kind of headlining performance that lingers long after the lights go out.
By the end of the night, there was no question: this stop on the God Is A Weapon tour was flawless. Each band brought something different to the stage, and together they created a night that fans will be talking about long after the lights went down.