Yungblud turned a sold-out room at The Anthem on Sunday night into something that felt like a rally, a therapy session and a punk rock celebration all at once. But before he took the stage, The Warning set the tone with an opening run that had the crowd roaring long before the headliner appeared.
The sold-out show was the kind of night that showed why yungblud keeps filling rooms beyond the music itself. His fans did more than watch; they took part, pushing the performance toward something bigger than a standard concert and giving the venue the feel of a communal release.
That energy was already there when The Warning came on. The three sisters earned loud and enthusiastic applause as they moved through More, then S!ck and Escapism early in the set, before digging into Ego, Disciple and the unreleased Ritual. By the time they reached Sharks, Hell You Call a Dream, Evolve, their latest single Kerosene and the closer Automatic Sun, the room was fully theirs.
The friction in the night was impossible to miss. Yungblud was the billed draw, but some of the strongest crowd response belonged to the opening act, and that was not an accident of timing. The Warning are building momentum every time they hit the road, and the review made the point plainly: at this stage, they are no longer just a support act warming up the room.
For Yungblud, the sold-out Anthem date confirmed the strength of a live following that has grown into a full-scale event. For The Warning, it was another reminder that their rise is no longer theoretical. They walked on as the opener and left having made the night feel partly like theirs.
