There have been several live-action attempts at Dungeons and Dragons over the years, and while the most recent film, Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, has proven itself a cult success, the other D&D movies are notorious failures. With the future of live-action D&D media now up in the air, prospective showrunners need to look for inspiration elsewhere if they wish to succeed. Fortunately, The Legend of Vox Machina provides a great template.
If A Live-Action Dungeons And Dragons Show Happens, It Must Learn From The Legend Of Vox Machina
Since its debut in 2022, The Legend of Vox Machina has been delivering just the kind of chaotic, violent, heartfelt adventure that D&D fans love. This is only to be expected, since Vox Machina is an adaptation of Critical Role’s first campaign, which not only used D&D rules but has since become canonized in D&D lore since the release of the Explorer’s Guide to Wildemount sourcebook and Call of the Netherdeep adventure module. The Legend of Vox Machina is a distillation of what D&D is all about, an essential quality that any live-action adaptation must incorporate.
Perhaps the biggest takeaway from Vox Machina is the blend of honoring the D&D source material and accessible storytelling. While the show is demonstrably designed for D&D loyalists, its universal critical acclaim proves that the show is much more than fan fiction. This discipline is something any adaptation should incorporate. However, there are other important lessons for a prospective D&D live-action to implement.
What A Live-Action Dungeons And Dragons Show Can Take Away From The Amazon Series
Another important takeaway from Vox Machina is how the show handles exposition. Backstory, lore, and details are all essential to achieving the feel of a game of Dungeons and Dragons, but there is an important balancing act in avoiding either swamping the audience with too much exposition but also not leaving everyone scratching their heads as to what is going on. Honor Among Thieves did this well enough, but again Vox Machina nails the target, with the scope of the show slowly expanding as the characters gain more power and, to their dismay, more responsibility.
Demand for live-action Dungeons and Dragons content is only going to increase over the next year as the rest of the updated core rulebooks are released. Now that the third season of The Legend of Vox Machina has ended and a fourth season is already in the works, viewers will be looking to get their fill of foul-mouthed, violent adventurers wherever they can. Hopefully, a live-action D&D show will soon be announced that serves as a worthy successor to Vox Machina.