Critical Role's chief creative officer, Matt Mercer, explains how he avoids burnout

1 week ago 18

By Cheryl Teh

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 A Decade of Adventure And The Animated World of Exandria New York Comic Con panel at Javits Center on October 09, 2025 in New York City.

Critical Role's chief creative officer, Matthew Mercer, talked burnout with Business Insider. Valerie Terranova/Getty Images for Prime Video
  • Matt Mercer gave up the seat of game master for Critical Role's Campaign Four this year.
  • That came after 10 years of work on Critical Role's campaigns and the business's slate of fresh projects.
  • Mercer's tip for coping with burnout: Admit that you're at a breaking point.

Critical Role's chief creative officer, Matthew Mercer, had been spearheading his eight-member crew's relentless push into the big leagues of nerdworld for 10 years.

That was until this July, when he announced that he'd be giving up control of one of the crew's biggest priorities, their long-running "Dungeons & Dragons" Twitch livestream.

In an August appearance on the podcast "Crispy's Tavern: Tales and Tea," Mercer said he'd felt the threat of burnout and thought he needed a break. He said he'd started to feel a "continuous need to produce creatively," which was "a very draining and very scary thing."

To be sure, Mercer and his seven cofounders still have a full slate of projects to work on. That includes an ongoing sold-out arena tour, as well as two Amazon-backed animated series on Prime Video. Mercer also has a key role in the team's game publishing arm, Darrington Press, home to "Daggerheart," their flagship game and their answer to "D&D."

Still, Mercer says, it's important to be able to admit when you're done, and to give yourself permission to step away from the work for as long as you need to.

"My biggest advice for burnout is to acknowledge when you're at the edge and take every opportunity you can to step away and replenish your cup," Mercer told Business Insider.

Brennan Lee Mulligan of "Dimension 20" fame, Mercer's longtime friend and collaborator, is the game master for Campaign Four, the team's ongoing "D&D" stream. Mulligan taking over the main stream means Mercer is no longer solely in charge of captaining the team's regular episodes, which often run to the four-hour mark.

"There's this concept, the idea that just pushing through and sometimes necessity requires you to do that to a certain point," Mercer said.

"But I find walking away and taking some time to enrich your creative input means that whatever time you lost beating your head against the wall will be more than made up for when you can return from a place of genuine inspiration and renewal," Mercer added.

Campaign Four airs on Beacon, Critical Role's in-house streaming platform, as well as on Twitch and YouTube.

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