Late Show host and former The Colbert Report host Stephen Colbert is an unabashed fantasy geek and long-time Dungeons & Dragons player. Though his love of D&D is no secret, we’ve never had the chance to see him play firsthand. All that changes today.
Critical Role’s producer Marisha Ray and its Dungeon Master Matthew Mercer flew out to New York just days ago to sit down for a one-on-one game of D&D with Stephen Colbert. This game is now available to on YouTube; you can find the video embedded below. This game wasn’t just a flight of fancy, but a fundraiser to benefit Red Nose Day, a charity with a mission to end child poverty. Fans of D&D, Critical Role, and Stephen Colbert could donate to affect the game, with every $20 pledge counting as a vote towards adventure elements such as: the plot of the adventure, who the villain of the adventure would be, and what legendary artifact Colbert’s character would find during the adventure.
Ultimately, the Critical Role fan community blew past their original goal of $50,000, with the highest single donation exceeding $1,000. You can watch the video now, or join the Critical Role community to watch it "live" on twitch.tv/criticalrole at 6 PM today (5/23/2019).
Stephen Colbert, Nerd Icon
His love of (and encyclopedic knowledge of) the works of J.R.R. Tolkien is well known, and he takes huge pride in being an “OG nerd…back when [being a] nerd meant something…[before it was] hip to be a nerd.” Last year, he invited actor Joe Manganiello on the Late Show to talk about their love of the original “red box” D&D set, and about Manganiello’s ‘80s heavy metal-inspired streetwear brand, Death Saves. In that interview, Colbert and Manganiello discussed the need to have friends to roleplay with, and lamented their occasional inability to gather friends and roll dice, citing the “secretive” nature of D&D, thanks to its lack of coolness and the moral fright now known as the “Satanic Panic.”
Times have changed.
Colbert appearing side-by-side with Matthew Mercer, in many ways the face of the modern age of D&D, is a landmark moment. Colbert has been quietly injecting the pride of being an unabashed nerd into the mainstream for years, ever since he was a correspondent on The Daily Show. But it’s always been a very personal thing. Colbert’s love of Tolkien and D&D always seemed like a fluke; that a nerdy guy managed to make it to late night TV was indicative of how he was able to compartmentalize his geeky traits and present a respectable and relatable appearance. His nerdy passions were just another comic bit for a mainstream audience to laugh at, even though Colbert’s pride was authentic.
Again—times have changed.
These days, it’s easier than ever to find a group to play D&D with, thanks in part to its visibility on livestreamed shows like Critical Role; loving parody appearances in children’s cartoons like The Amazing World of Gumball and She-Ra and the Princesses of Power; the celebrity endorsements of actors and personalities like Deborah Ann Woll, Vin Diesel, Terry Crews, and Stephen Colbert. The list continues, but suffice to say, D&D has suffused pop media in a hitherto unprecedented way—save perhaps for when an official D&D cartoon was on the air.
When Colbert roasted James Franco for daring to challenge his knowledge of The Silmarillion on The Colbert Report, he was stridently defending his passions from a Johnny-come-lately. Someone who might be, as Colbert later said to Joe Manganiello, was a bandwagoner who was reading a book he may have once been teased for loving, just because “because it’s hip to be a nerd now.” Now, staring at Matthew Mercer from the other side of a DM screen, Colbert no longer needs to defend his turf. Critical Role, and by extension Mercer himself, is emblematic of an influx of new players into D&D driven not by the bogeyman of trend-chasing, but by an authentic and inextinguishable love for nerdiness.
It’s not so much that it’s “hip to be a nerd now,” but rather that being a nerd isn’t uncool anymore. The difference is subtle, but meaningful. And it’s exemplified in the difference in attitude between the good-natured but exclusionary posturing in Colbert’s interview with Joe Manganiello and the rapport between Colbert and Mercer, a man renowned for throwing wide the gates of D&D to thousands of new players over the past few years.
Stephen Colbert is a nerd icon beloved by non-nerds. People who watch The Late Show but who have never picked up a twenty-sided die may see this game and decide to try out the game that their favorite talk show host plays. Even though Colbert, by his own admission, hadn’t played D&D since he was in college, one can only hope that his return to this game will inspire a new wave of players—both new and lapsed—to gather their party, bust out their dice, and play Dungeons & Dragons.
What did you think of Mercer and Colbert's game? Do you want to see Colbert in a full game of D&D after this? Let us know in the comments!
James Haeck is the lead writer for D&D Beyond, the co-author of Waterdeep: Dragon Heist and the Critical Role Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting, the DM of Worlds Apart, and a freelance writer for Wizards of the Coast, the D&D Adventurers League, and Kobold Press. He lives in Seattle, Washington with his partner Hannah and their animal companions Mei and Marzipan. You can find him wasting time on Twitter at @jamesjhaeck.
If we must be gatekeepers, let's make sure we keep that gate wide open for everyone.
I would lose my mind if Colbert was a guest on Critical Role!!
Your teenage self would have said, "Matt who? Colbert? And why don't you pronounce the 't'? Is that French or something? Oh, god, am I going to have to learn French to play D&D in the future? What hellscape is this?"
Just kidding. :D
What a fantastic session for a great cause!
Watching Colbert play and get back into the game was actually quite a lot of fun.
It was amazing to watch two people nerd out this completely. It brought some true joy to my heart.
“[T]hanks to its lack of coolness and the moral fright now known as the “Satanic Panic.” — Pretty much what my dad said when I asked him for the core books growing up. Roughly 10 years later and I’m a player and DM largely thanks to CR and DnD Beyond :)
I was on a tear watching DnD related things tonight and this was one of them. The genuine look of joy and wonder on Colbert's face as Matt ran him through the adventure was priceless.
I wonder if he'll feel the Matt Mercer effect if he does actually start playing again for real. Because the next DM he plays with will most likely not live up to even that short experience.
Side note: another one of the things I watched today was Part 4 of The Descent which had me laughing for over an hour. Well done!
I thought the game was fantastic! Stephen's joy was showing from the start as he slowly delved back into the game. Matt's ability to DM is wonderful! I swear it is watching an artist at their craft. I will never forget Eric (the Brave Bee.) Matt brought this little creature to life in ways I would never have expected; his buzz was amazing.
Having only started playing four years ago I am part of this new wave of D&D fans. I play, I DM, and I watch live stream and VODs of games every week. I applaud all of those who came before us who struggled to find their group. I thank those who dealt with the bullying and ostracizing from their communities, and continued to play the game they loved so that it could continue to grow. I only hope that you all see the great love the game is receiving today as vindication for those hard years.
I will now do my part to spread the joy that D&D can bring with my friends, to grow this game we all love. May the multiverse of D&D continue to grow in leaps and bounds.
You are a great writer, James.
Colbert is clearly a player and would be a force to be reckoned with at the table. He was measured, disciplined, careful, complete, and decisive in his actions at the table. His path to the solution was as direct as it probably could have been. I do not know if there had been any planning prior to the game to enable it to have finished in the hour allotted, but I suspect not. It was simply that quick and he was that good - at least that is how I will view it until told otherwise.
We witnessed a good DM and a good Player at the same table.
This was an enjoyable watch. It was clear both were having fun.
Yes, Matt get Colbert in a full game of D&D ASAP. Maybe as a guest Character in the Crucial Role Campaign With the M9? Or a D&D Beyond Campaign?
gonna be honest. i was almost expecting it after the critical role kickstarter ended but it was not to be. maybe if The Legend of Vox Machina gets big enough we will see this awesome dream
honestly it was a great one shot. even with the time constraints it was a whole lot of fun.
does anyone watch The Late Show? i do wonder if Colbert mentions it at all, i mean it's for a great cause and they have raised over 100K last i checked. it would be weird ot have such a big charity and big celeb that doesnt make mention towards something that you can still donate to (as of this comment anyways). kinda wish the article, which is great, covered a little more about Red Nose Day and what it is all about too.
Just listened to this this morning. It was awesome!
Was I the only one a tad bit disappointed that Colbert didn't play a paladin though? I mean I guess that was more who he was when he had the Colbert Report, but still that image of paladin Colbert is sooooo iconic.
Q: Do you want to see Colbert in a full game of D&D after this?
A: Yes
There needs to be a like or thumbs up or heart or rank up button or something like that on DnD Beyond for comments so that I can do that for this.
this video was so awesome! I am so happy for this renaissance I had wanted to play since high school which was 15 years ago and even then in the early 2000s finding a group was hard and being a girl finding a group even harder. I am now 5 sessions into my first game :D and I am hooked.
Seeing Colbert's absolute delight was the best thing about watching that adventure. He was like a child in a sweets shop, it was awesome.