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Season 1 — Royal Crackers -

The humor swings wildly from lowbrow slapstick (Stebe throwing a stapler through a window) to high-concept absurdism (a subplot where the crackers become a religious icon for a cult of diabetics). It is unapologetically Adult Swim—weird, slow-paced at times, and willing to let a joke die in silence if it isn't funny. Royal Crackers Season 1 is not for everyone. If you need likable characters or happy endings, this show will make you miserable. But if you enjoy watching the slow-motion car crash of the American Dream, if you find comfort in the idea that your family is a disaster but at least they’re your disaster, then this is the best new animated comedy in years.

In an era of "prestige animation" where shows like Rick and Morty drown in multiverse lore and Bojack Horseman leaves you staring at the ceiling for three hours, Adult Swim’s Royal Crackers arrived in 2023 like a sugar-high toddler running through a funeral. It is loud, it is deeply sad, it is occasionally nonsensical, and it is arguably the most honest depiction of family, failure, and capitalism since The Simpsons lost its edge.

The series pilot hits you with a brutal, hilarious cold open. The family patriarch, "Royal" Hornsby (voiced with gruff melancholy by Andrew Dismukes), is the founder of the cracker empire. He built the brand on a single mediocre recipe ("It’s a cracker... but it’s royal ") and a mustache that screams 1980s boardroom. However, after a freak accident involving a hyper-realistic cake and a stroke, Royal becomes a bedridden, barely conscious vegetable.

The season finale is a gut punch. Royal briefly wakes up from his coma, sees what his children have done to the company, whispers "Just... burn it down," and dies again. Theo, misinterpreting this as a business directive, does exactly that. The factory burns to the ground. The final shot is the family sitting in the ashes, eating a bag of off-brand chips, laughing hysterically. It’s the happiest they’ve been all season. The Animation and Humor: Ugly, Beautiful, Brutal Let’s address the visual style. Royal Crackers is not pretty. The character designs are lumpy, the backgrounds are flat, and the color palette is dominated by beige and sodium-yellow. This is a choice. The ugliness of the animation mirrors the ugliness of the family’s situation. It’s the visual equivalent of a hangover.

It’s a show about a family trying to sell a product nobody wants, made by a network that knows exactly what it’s doing. Royal Crackers is stale, salty, and oddly addictive. Just like the snack itself.

The humor swings wildly from lowbrow slapstick (Stebe throwing a stapler through a window) to high-concept absurdism (a subplot where the crackers become a religious icon for a cult of diabetics). It is unapologetically Adult Swim—weird, slow-paced at times, and willing to let a joke die in silence if it isn't funny. Royal Crackers Season 1 is not for everyone. If you need likable characters or happy endings, this show will make you miserable. But if you enjoy watching the slow-motion car crash of the American Dream, if you find comfort in the idea that your family is a disaster but at least they’re your disaster, then this is the best new animated comedy in years.

In an era of "prestige animation" where shows like Rick and Morty drown in multiverse lore and Bojack Horseman leaves you staring at the ceiling for three hours, Adult Swim’s Royal Crackers arrived in 2023 like a sugar-high toddler running through a funeral. It is loud, it is deeply sad, it is occasionally nonsensical, and it is arguably the most honest depiction of family, failure, and capitalism since The Simpsons lost its edge.

The series pilot hits you with a brutal, hilarious cold open. The family patriarch, "Royal" Hornsby (voiced with gruff melancholy by Andrew Dismukes), is the founder of the cracker empire. He built the brand on a single mediocre recipe ("It’s a cracker... but it’s royal ") and a mustache that screams 1980s boardroom. However, after a freak accident involving a hyper-realistic cake and a stroke, Royal becomes a bedridden, barely conscious vegetable.

The season finale is a gut punch. Royal briefly wakes up from his coma, sees what his children have done to the company, whispers "Just... burn it down," and dies again. Theo, misinterpreting this as a business directive, does exactly that. The factory burns to the ground. The final shot is the family sitting in the ashes, eating a bag of off-brand chips, laughing hysterically. It’s the happiest they’ve been all season. The Animation and Humor: Ugly, Beautiful, Brutal Let’s address the visual style. Royal Crackers is not pretty. The character designs are lumpy, the backgrounds are flat, and the color palette is dominated by beige and sodium-yellow. This is a choice. The ugliness of the animation mirrors the ugliness of the family’s situation. It’s the visual equivalent of a hangover.

It’s a show about a family trying to sell a product nobody wants, made by a network that knows exactly what it’s doing. Royal Crackers is stale, salty, and oddly addictive. Just like the snack itself.