The Prodigy announce huge ‘Warriors Dance’ summer 2026 UK and Ireland outdoor shows – including Milton Keynes Bowl

The Prodigy have announced a run of four huge outdoor shows for summer 2026, including a return to the Milton Keynes Bowl.

The legendary electronic band have already announced a UK and Ireland arena tour for April and May, a 12-date jaunt that sold out in record time and includes two dates at Wembley Arena – see all those dates here.

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Now, they have confirmed that they are bringing the ‘Warriors Dance’ show to Dublin’s Irish Museum of Modern Art on August 20, the Milton Keynes Bowl on August 22, Edinburgh’s Royal Highland Showgrounds on August 29 and Manchester’s Wythenshawe Park on August 30.

The iconic DJs Carl Cox and David Rodigan will be on the bill for all four shows, while drum’n’bass legend Andy C will play at the Milton Keynes and Manchester shows. Japanese producer ¥ØU$UK€ ¥UK1MAT$U and British trap metal artist SCARLXRD will also be at the Milton Keynes, Manchester and Edinburgh dates.

A ticket pre-sale begins at 9am on Wednesday (November 5), while general sale is at the same time on Friday (November 7) – get your tickets here.

The Prodigy announce huge ‘Warriors Dance’ summer 2026 UK and Ireland outdoor shows – including Milton Keynes Bowl

Liam Howlett and Maxim have said: “We are bringing back our Warriors Dance event for the people next summer. A lot has happened since we last did these, but now more than ever we are takin it to the next level along with the support from the kings of their game. 4 nights of pure ruckus…LET’S GO!!”

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In June, the band played an epic, combustible headline set on the Other Stage at Glastonbury 2025, a performance they dedicated to their late vocalist Keith Flint.

After the blistering opener ‘Voodoo People’, Maxim addressed the crowd: “This is the fourth time we have played this festival. There are supposed to be five of us, but six years ago, we lost our brother. This show tonight is dedicated to Mr. Fucking Flint. This is his night!”

Among the frenetic Other Stage crowd, one woman managed to land a picture perfect backflip in the middle of a circle pit in a video that later went viral online.

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Last year, they spoke to NME about the decision to return to playing live without Flint: “After losing Keith we couldn’t even think or talk about the band,” Howlett recalled. “I think it was two years after his death that me and Maxim started bringing it up. ‘Could we play live again? Did we even want to? Why? How?’ All that shit”.

“We realised the only possible real way to know how we would feel was to do it: get back on stage and do a bunch of gigs. It was so hard to walk onto that stage without our brother, but we really felt the crowd with us. Those gigs were highly emotionally-charged but we came out the other end with our answer”.

Howlett also hinted at the possibility of new music from the group. “Playing live fuels the music for me,” he said. “It’s always been that way. If I have too much time off, I start getting distracted and wandering off course. I like to keep it on edge and moving.”

Explaining what any new music might sound like, he added: “We have owned our own sound since the start, so we ain’t about to change. It’s all about writing bigger tunes and finding different ways to sonically attack the crowd when we play live.”

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