Critical Role The Legend of Vox Machina: Bawdy, Bloody, and Funny

With The Legend of Vox Machina, Critical Role comes full circle from being voice actors playing D&D (first in a private game, then streaming on Geek & Sundry) to an $11 million Kickstarter for an animated special. That success attracted streaming network interest, which then morphed into a 24-episode animated series where they're voicing their own characters.

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If you've never watched Critical Role Season 1 or read any of the stories, TLoVM the animated series is easy to jump into. Instead of being exposition heavy or thrusting viewers into a lot of world building, it starts with some classic fantasy – especially fantasy RPG – tropes like a drunken bar brawl and mercenaries being killed (a TPK) by a mysterious force. Those scenes are delivered with hefty dose of humor, a bit of blood, and some nudity.

This isn't the '80s Saturday morning Dungeons & Dragons cartoon for kids. While there is gore, it's less than an episode of Invincible and far less than that show's season 1 finale. Similarly, TLoVM has nudity and a bit of sex in the first few episodes, but far less than Game of Thrones.

Vox Machina is an established group at the start of the series, but one that needs money and has a less than stellar reputation. The land of Emon is being ravaged by a mysterious threat. A bit of desperation on both sides leads to the bickering heroes taking the job.

TLoVM is bawdy, bloody, and funny, but it also has heart. The first two episodes tell a complete story with an obvious hook at the end that leads into the rest of the episodes – and a stinger hinting at new threats.

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The animation style has clean lines with some anime influence, but nothing excessively intricate or artsy. At the same, the art direction has style, like a scene that adds interest to the characters walking by showing it through a spider's web dotted with raindrops.

The first episode establishes the eight members of Vox Machina quickly with the following episodes building nicely upon each character's traits. Matthew Mercer voices several of the supporting characters, but in this format he doesn't have to cover all of the NPCs. The guest star talent includes David Tennant, Stephanie Beatriz, Tony Hale. Felica Day is the voice of a bandit.

And if they don't sell a stuffed toy bear version of Trinket at some point, Critical Role is missing out on a merchandise opportunity. TLoVM hits the perfect sweet spot between making Vex's companion bear fierce in battle, amusing when waiting, and adorable the rest of the time.

No critic has been given advance access to the entire first season, let alone all 24 episodes, so it's impossible to say how well the entire story arc plays out, but the first few episodes are entertaining and well made.

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You don't have to be a fan of Critical Role to enjoy The Legend of Vox Machina, but if you're a fan of fantasy adventure, TLoVM might turn you into Critter. The Legend of Vox Machina debuts on Amazon Prime on Friday, January 28, with the first three episodes. Critical Role will be holding watch parties on their Twitch channel at 7pm Tuesdays.
 

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Beth Rimmels

Beth Rimmels

I got bored with the show, pretty much just used the later episodes as background noise. For all the hand wringing about the middle school adult humor I actually think it does a decent job of selling the idea of playing D&D to a certain group of normies who would otherwise think it’s a game for dorks who get way up their own ass about the minutia of Dwarven culture. It can be something way different depending on the table. Pretty much what regular Critical Role has done. Not sure I’d want to play with anyone drawn in by this show (I want to play with the people drawn in by seeing it on Community) but I hope they find each other and have a good time.

What I did like about watching was trying to figure out what the spells/skill checks/manouvers were. Ever since the first (or second?) episode when I did a double take, did that Druid just try Call Lightning on a BLUE dragon?!? On that subject, what’s the purple fist Scanlan is always riding around on? Couldn’t figure that one out, maybe dimension door?
 

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What I did like about watching was trying to figure out what the spells/skill checks/manouvers were. Ever since the first (or second?) episode when I did a double take, did that Druid just try Call Lightning on a BLUE dragon?!? On that subject, what’s the purple fist Scanlan is always riding around on? Couldn’t figure that one out, maybe dimension door?

Basically it's Bigby's Hand, but this show isn't especially concerned with making 1-to-1 connections between what its characters do and actual D&D abilities and spells, so probably best not to worry about it.
 



episode 1...

my fiancé even said "You know shocking death and potty humor doesn't work if you front load it"...
Well, I think it may have worked for some shows. That Game of Thrones, starting with bodies torn asunder by undead, beheading someone that ran ffor their life, incest, and throwing a child off a tower ... That show did ok.

This show is doing well, and will be influential. Combined with Invincible, we're seeing Amazon take a definite move towards 20 to 30 year old animation. Some of the antics of Scanlan will deal with the same type of pushback that Barney Stinson of HIMYM would get in modern TV, but they'll survive it. They could have toned him down, but there are definite reasons for them to give him some room to grow as a person.
 

This can't even view the same universe as the lows of toilet humor in much more lauded shows like Rick and Morty.
Rick and Morty did an entire episode about toilet humour (literally jokes about being on the toilet) and they never dropped to as low as this show did. Aside from the fact that it wasn’t funny… just disgusting.

There is more genuine wit in 5 minutes of Rick and Morty as there is in the entire season of this show.
 

What is the specific 'low' that so offends the senses that are thrilled by dropping into a dimension of farting butts or a character literally named 'Mr Poopy Butthole'?

The single silhouetted turd plopping into a toilet vs an entire room covered in drunk-diarhea?

And more importantly would it have been so awful if not viewed from the lens of protecting preciously D&D (the game with a poop-eating tentacle monster).
 

Rick and Morty did an entire episode about toilet humour (literally jokes about being on the toilet) and they never dropped to as low as this show did. Aside from the fact that it wasn’t funny… just disgusting.

There is more genuine wit in 5 minutes of Rick and Morty as there is in the entire season of this show.
Is there a reason you’re still watching it and griping about it here?
 

Is there a reason you’re still watching it and griping about it here?
Yeah of course. There’s lots of good things about it as I have said.

It just seems to take some really weird writing choices that make absolutely no sense to me. Watching a man defecate and literally see the feces drop from his ass into the toilet bowl is some seriously messed up stuff. Was that featured in the livestream?
 
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