The rise of Critical Role: How a crew of 'nerdy-ass voice actors' became Dungeons & Dragons rock stars | CBC Radio - Action News
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The rise of Critical Role: How a crew of 'nerdy-ass voice actors' became Dungeons & Dragons rock stars

The cast behind the D&D streaming sensation Critical Role have ascended to rock-star status, helped revitalize the game once stigmatized as satanic and through it all, grown to become as close as family.

What started as a livestream of the popular role-playing game is now an animated series and media company

Eight people sit around a table set up with cameras and microphones playing a game of Dungeons and Dragons.
Guided by their dungeon master, the cast of Critical Role take part in a weekly role-playing game of Dungeons & Dragons that airs on their Twitch and YouTube channels. (Chris Lockey/Critical Role)

It started as a group of self-described "nerdy-ass voice actors" playing Dungeons & Dragons, trying to make each other laugh.

Ten years later, the people behind the popular live-streamed gaming experience Critical Rolehave ascended to rock-star status among tabletop gaming fans, helped popularize the game that was once stigmatized as satanic and through it all, grownto become as close as family.

"I think it's the most creatively rewarding experience of my life, of all our lives," said Liam O'Brien, one of the eight founding members.

Millionswatch the groupparticipatinginthe tabletop role-playing game on livestreams that airon their Twitch and Youtubechannels.

Armed with pens, paper, dice and their imaginations, the players take part in a fantasy story,known as a campaign,full of adventuring, monster-fighting and of course, dragons. Matthew Mercer takes on the role of dungeon master, narrating the campaign for the seven players, describing locations andcreaturesandusing the rules to determine the results ofwhatever decisions the players make.

The team's success has since branched out beyond streaming their gaming sessions.

In January, Amazon Prime will release the second season of The Legend of Vox Machina, an animated series based on Critical Role,where all the characters are voiced by the actors who originally created and played them duringtheir D&D sessions.

The show debuted its first season in 2022, following a Kickstarter campaignthey hoped would fund a single animated special. After raising $11 million US, the pilot was expanded to a full 12-episode season andgot picked up by Amazon.

WATCH | The trailer forThe Legend of Vox Machina:

O'Brien, who plays Vax'ildaninthe animated series, says the idea that they've created a world that matters to them and to fans who tune inis extremely gratifying.

"Not a day goes by where I don't pinch myself and say, 'Be worthy of the gift that you've got in life.' "

The adventure begins

It all began in2012, whenO'Brien was voice acting with Mercer on the video gameResident Evil 6.O'Brien mentioned that he wanted to get back into D&D, which he'd loved growing upbut hadn't played in a while.

For O'Brien's birthday, Merceroffered to be the dungeon master and runan abridged one-night campaignfor O'Brien and some of their voice-actor friends.

Marisha Ray received an invite and says the game night was a hit.

A screen shot of a Critical Role episode shows seven cast members reacting to combat in a game of Dungeons and Dragons.
A screen shot from Critical Role's second campaign shows the excitement and emotion that comes with their Thursday games. (Critical Role)

"There were certainly like the first 15 to 20 minutes of just a lot of, like, giggles at the reality that we were a bunch of grown-ass adults sitting around playing Dungeons & Dragons," said Ray, who is now the creative director of Critical Role. In the animated series, she plays Keyleth of the Air Ashari.

Mercer, who is still Critical Role's dungeon master, also felt there was something special during their first game together.

"The electricity there was so strong across the board that even though my subconscious self was wondering if they'd ever want to come back and play again, within the next few days, everyone was wanting to know when the next session was," said Mercer, co-founder and chief creative officer of Critical Role.

What we do together is my heart and my soul and my everything.- Liam O'Brien

The group continued to meet and play together for about two years, before actor Felicia Day approached them about streaming their games on her Youtube and Twitch channel, Geek & Sundry.

Mercer says there was some trepidation about sharing their home game.

"If you put anything on the internet, there's a good chance it's going to get set on fire," he said.

"Especially if it's a comparatively niche passion that is largely misunderstood, which historically, tabletop games have been, since the Satanic Panic."

In the 1980s, some labelled Dungeons & Dragons a danger to society. Alarmists worried the game, which debuted in 1974,would lead players to commit torture, murders or even cannibalism. Many parents forbid their children from playing it.

With that in the back of their minds, the crew agreed to stream their games online. But they certainly didn't expect to attract a large following.

WATCH | A look back at how D&D was once considered dangerous:

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The Critters

The first live-streamon March 12, 2015, was riddled with audio issues: players talking over each otherand mid-game snack munching. But viewershipstill grew exponentially thatfirst episodealone has over 20 million views.

In 2018, the Critical Role cast broke off from Geek & Sundry to form their own company. They've since released more than300 episodes through three D&D campaigns, garnering hundreds of millions of views in total.

Mercer credits the team's chemistry andknack for storytelling as reasons the streams became so popular so quickly.

"We were all trained performers who had spent our lives honing a skill setthat allowed us to take an improvised narrative with no real visual specialty, with no effects, no costumes," he said.

The eight members of the cast of Critical Role pose in front of a wooden backdrop.
The cast members say they've become as close as family during their time playing Dungeons & Dragons. From left, Taliesin Jaffe, Liam O'Brien, Marisha Ray, Travis Willingham, Ashley Johnson (front), Sam Riegel, Laura Bailey and Matthew Mercer have been playing together since 2012. (Robyn Swank/Critical Role)

Fans of the show, known as Critters, can purchase clothing, graphic novels, action figures and much more, in addition to watching thelive streams or attending live shows at conventions.

Laura Bailey, who plays Vex'ahlia in the Amazon Prime series, says she hopes fans can use their game as an escape. She says she certainly has.

"That might seem frivolous, but life is stressful, and it's nice to have something to distract you for a little bit, that also can maybe open up your life experience a little bit and make you think in different ways," said Bailey.

"I think that this game is a really strong way to increase your empathy and to step into the shoes of other lives. And if we can facilitate that for other people, that's a pretty cool thing."

The game evolves

As Critical Role has grown in popularity, so has the game of Dungeons & Dragons.

Steven Edmonds, co-owner of The Bard and Bear board game cafe in Hamilton, says many of his customers were introduced to D&D through Critical Role.

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"They have been a catalyst for an extreme expansion in the popularity of D&D," said Edmonds, who's been playing the game himself for the past decade, and is a huge fan of Critical Role.

He attributes their popularity witha coincidingrise in nerd culture,D&D's appearance on TV shows such as Community and Stranger Things, and a new and more player-friendly version of the game itself.

"It provided the first point of contact for a lot of people to suddenly go, 'Wow, this, this kind of seems interesting. Maybe I want to give it a go,' " said Edmonds.

O'Brien and the others don't take theirpopularity lightly. He remembers it being hard to find people to play with when he was growing up.

A group of people sit at tables at a board game caf, listening to the store owner.
Steven Edmonds, far right, organizes Dungeons & Dragons games at The Bard and Bear, his Hamilton board game caf. (Submitted by Steven Edmonds)

Now, D&D groups likethose organized by The Bard andBear are full to overflowing.

"The idea that our sort of shenanigans and dumbassery and love for each other is rippling out, and other people get to do the thing that we fell in love with, that's magic," said O'Brien.

What's next?

To the players, the game ismuch more than just a business.

Bailey admits there are a lot more responsibilitiesnow that their company has grown, but when they sit at the table, they're just agroup of friends playing D&D together.

This image shows the production set up with microphones and cameras around a table as the cast prepares to start a stream of Critical Role.
Critical Role, which is in the middle of its third Dungeons & Dragons campaign, has branched out beyond streaming gaming sessions with the animated series The Legend of Vox Machina, based on Critical Role characters and airs on Amazon Prime. (Chris Lockey/Critical Role)

"Tenyears ago, 12 years ago, 20 years ago, if I had a thought that this is the direction that my life would go or that my career would go, I absolutely would not have understood it or believed it," she said. "But it feels so natural to be doing it with this group."

In the new season of the animated series, coming inJanuary, O'Brien and Bailey play brother and sister. And O'Brien saystheentire casthas become a family.

"What we do together is my heart and my soul and my everything," he said. "I'm so happy to be in it and doing it every single day."