Critical Role's animated intros are a master class in storytelling
What's the best way to get a Critical Role fan hyped? Show them a new animated intro featuring their favorite characters.
Published 14 hours ago
An new campaign intro from Critical Role is always going to be a grand time
Image: Critical Role
If there's one thing guaranteed to get Critical Role fans hyped, it's a dramatic new opening for the company's incredibly popular actual-play Dungeons & Dragons campaigns. No matter whether you started right at the beginning with Campaign 1: Vox Machina or are jumping in as a newbie with Campaign 4, Critical Role's openings bring a dramatic flair that’s sure to get you pumped for whatever its cast is about to do for the next three to four hours.
More importantly, like every fantastic opening credits scene out there, Critical Role’s opening intros deliver superb storytelling — and not just about the characters they’re playing as, but also the people behind those characters.
If we rewind back to 2015, the first intro for Vox Machina captures the feeling of home videos. The cast, featuring all of the Critical Role’s founders, is dressed in leather or dark clothing, wearing scarves meant to represent long black cloaks and carrying toy swords and bows. They strike a pose meant to represent their characters; Liam O’Brien twirls two daggers, while Laura Bailey uses her bow to shoot at the screen. At the end of the intro, the cast comes together, looking like ye olde favorite emo bands from the early 2000s. It’s all gloriously low-budget and highlights how small-time Critical Role was at the beginning, compared to the giant conglomerate it’s become today.
Image: Geek & Sundry
As each Campaign has continued and evolved, so have the Critical Role intros. If the vibe of Campaign 1: Vox Machina was edgy boy band, then Campaign 2: The Mighty Nein went back in time to the ‘80s. The story here is obvious: no matter if you’re a leather-jacket-wearing cool guy or a nerdy kid with glasses, we’re united in your shared love for sitting down at a table and playing Dungeons & Dragons. It’s camp and fun, and perfectly captures the geeky sentiment that makes Critical Role so beloved
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However, Campaign 2 wasn’t just a change in tone. As the campaign continued well into 2020, it received a major glow-up Critical Role had never tried before: an animated introduction.
With its own introductory song (written and produced by co-founder Sam Riegel and rock musician Jason Charles Miller, and performed by the entire cast) Campaign 2’s “Your Turn to Roll” was absolutely electric. The animation gave the Mighty Nein characters new dimension, allowing viewers to see their favorite characters brought to life like never before.
Critical Role was making big strides to be more than just “a bunch of nerdy voice actors playing Dungeons & Dragons.” This wasn’t just a home game being livestreamed, it was a wildly popular product that Critical Role wanted to sell, and to do that, they needed to make a big splash.
Image: Critical Role
In one moment from Campaign 2’s opening scenes, we see Fjord (played by Travis Willingham) drowning and then being saved by his patron, Leviathan demigod, Uk'otoa, its yellow eye a behemoth stretched across the screen. What had only been imagined, was now brought to life. It gave the stories Critical Role was telling a new depth of scale, and stirred up thoughts of what it would look like to see these adventures play out on screen. Years later, we now know exactly what that looks like thanks to full-blown animated series The Legend of Vox Machina and The Mighty Nein, the former earning its own introduction soon after Campaign 2 with Critical Role’s 2019 record-breaking Kickstarter campaign.
But even with the success of its animated series, Critical Role hasn’t given up its live-action introductions completely. The intro for Campaign 3: Bells Hells features the cast exploring a dense jungle, which fits the campaign’s setting and overall theme of uncovering long-forgotten secrets of the past. Though that too received an animated introduction midway in the campaign, adapting several plot points and key moments. An animated version elevates the live-action's story through its visuals and sound, revealing additional information that the live-action intro can’t convey, such as the look of the world and important NPCs.
As for Campaign 4, which began in Oct. 2025, the live-action intro leans hard into political and societal intrigue through masks, magic, and theater. It feels very Game of Thrones-esque. However, this also begs the question of when Campaign 4’s animated introduction will appear. Previous animated intros only arrived years into the campaign — but they also didn’t have 13+ characters and a brand-new setting to think about.
Intentional or not, the live-action introductions have become something to whet the appetite of Critical Role’s fans. Capturing the right tone and intensity is paramount for a campaign that’s already changed so much from previous outings — such as its grim tone — and first impressions are everything. What we do know is that Critical Role has the skills to create a dramatic opening introduction that will get fans talking, but what story Campaign 4’s inevitable animated intro will tell remains to be seen.
