This past weekend’s UFC 205 event was a big one, based on numerous metrics. But it didn’t break all the records.

Following the Nov. 12 pay-per-view event, which took place at Madison Square Garden and marked the UFC’s long-awaited New York City debut, UFC President Dana White discussed the expected PPV buy rate for the card. When asked if the card, which featured a championship tripleheader topped by now-two-division champ Conor McGregor, would give the company a new high-water mark for PPV, the UFC executive confirmed (check out the full video above).

“We did,” White said. “We broke the record.”

However, it’s not clear if that’s really the case. The UFC, of course, doesn’t publicly disclose PPV buy rates (though MMAjunkie learned a few details by acquiring some UFC investor documents). But in a post-UFC 205 media mailing, officials listed many of the records broken by UFC 205.

But when it comes to PPV, UFC 205 was apparently one of the top events, but presumedly not the new king (though it could be weeks or months before the organization gets an official tally).

Still, it was an impressive event on all fronts. Here’s the UFC’s full list, with plenty of noteworthy milestones:

Pay-per-view: One of the most viewed PPV events in UFC history

Gate: $17.7 million – UFC and Madison Square Garden record

Attendance: 20,427 – Domestic UFC record

Weigh-in attendance: 15,480 – Global UFC record

Social media: 14 billion impressions – Most in UFC history

Closed-circuit (commercial PPV): Highest performing in UFC history (locations and gross revenue)

Consumer products: Highest U.S. event retail performance in UFC history

FS1 prelims: Most viewed PPV prelims in FS1 history for M18-49 and P18-49

FOX: 2.4 million viewers – “UFC 205: Alvarez vs. McGregor – Fighting for History” was the most viewed preview show in UFC history.

According to MMAFighting.com, the UFC 205 prelims on FS1 did a little more than 1.8 million overall viewers, ranking it third all-time behind UFC 194 and UFC 196 (cards also headlined by McGregor). The two-hour UFC 205 prelims broadcast featured, among other bouts, featherweight contender Frankie Edgar (21-5-1 MMA, 15-5-1 UFC) scoring a unanimous-decision win over Jeremy Stephens (25-13 MMA, 12-12 UFC), and lightweight contender Khabib Nurmagomedov (24-0 MMA, 8-0 UFC) submitting Michael Johnson (17-11 MMA, 9-7 UFC) in a dominant performance.

As for the PPV portion of the card, White recently suggested UFC 202 would likely outpace the previous PPV record-holder, UFC 100, which reportedly drew 1.6 million buys.

While we’ll never know the official PPV numbers, it’s worth noting that featherweight champion McGregor (21-3 MMA, 9-1 UFC), who dethroned lightweight titleholder Eddie Alvarez (28-5 MMA, 3-2 UFC) in UFC 205’s headliner to become the first simultaneous two-division champ in UFC history, has proven the new king of PPV. Of the UFC’s reported top-five PPV events, McGregor headlined all (UFC 205 UFC 202, UFC 196 and UFC 194) but one (UFC 100) of them.

For more on UFC 205, check out the UFC Events section of the site.