Sunday, October 13, 2024

The World of Critical Role by Liz Marsham review

    THE WORLD OF CRITICAL ROLE is a nonfiction book that chronicles the creation of the Critical Role Twitch stream that has since exploded into a massively successful multimedia franchise that includes comics as well as animated cartoons. In a very real way, it contributed to the massive successful of 5th Edition Dungeons and Dragons as well as led to a slew of imitators for everything from Call of Cthulhu to Shadowrun.

    The origin of Critical Role was Felicia Day convincing Matt Mercer and the other voice actors playing at his home game to air their D&D game on her channel. From there, they proceed to develop a massive Twitch following and that moved on to becoming a marketing juggernaut. The book covers most of the history in a somewhat superficial but, mostly, accurate way.

    I say mostly accurate because the book more or less writes out Orion Acada and his character of Tiberius, only mentioning him as a “guest” party member despite his role in the founding of the franchise. It also overlooks some of the smaller controversies that dogged Critical Role. It doesn’t mention the backlash that Marish Ray got about her character of Keyleth or the controversy of “broomgate” where Laura stole another party member’s magic broom.

    Basically, this is a fine book but it’s also very much a love fest for Critical Role that doesn’t include any of the controversies or the occassionally unpleasant elements of fandom. It’s a puff piece that loses points because a lot of that would have been interesting and lended some authenticity to the story about the struggles some of the individuals involved had to overcome. We all know fans aren’t always great people, particularly against women.

    Despite this, the book has a lot of fascinating bits in it about the world of Exandria and the character arcs for the first two campaigns. There’s character studies of all the characters as well as biographies for the actors. We also get write-ups for Will Wheaton and other guest stars plus their characters. Just because it doesn’t dive deeply into the negative elements doesn’t mean it’s not something worth buying if you are a “critter.” We also get surprisingly deep into the real life backstories of the actors with some stories, like Ashley Johnson and Taelsin Jaffe being particularly fascinating.

    In conclusion, I don’t recommend purchasing this book if you are not already a fan of either Vox Machina or the Mighty Nein. This makes the most sense if you’re familiar with Campaigns 1 and 2 but doesn’t cover the events of 3 at all. Still, it’s a fun coffee table book and enjoyable for hardcore fans.

Available here

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