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Murder Drones

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Murder Drones
The text "Murder Drones" in start case, with a stylised "O" resembling a skull
Genre
Created byLiam Vickers
ShowrunnerLiam Vickers
Written byLiam Vickers
Directed byLiam Vickers
Voices of
  • Elsie Lovelock
  • Michael Kovach
  • Nola Klop
  • Shara Kirby
  • David J. Dixon
  • Sean Chiplock
  • Caitlin Dizon
  • Emma Breezy
  • Allanah Fitzgerald
  • Daisy Rose
  • Darcy Maguire
ComposerAJ DiSpirito
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8
Production
Executive producersKevin Lerdwichagul
Luke Lerdwichagul
ProducerKevin Lerdwichagul
Editors
  • Luke Lerdwichagul
  • Abhignya Cavale
Running time17–26 minutes
Production companyGlitch Productions
BudgetUpwards of $300,000
Original release
NetworkYouTube
ReleaseOctober 29, 2021 (2021-10-29) –
August 23, 2024 (2024-08-23)

Murder Drones is an Australian adult independent-animated web series created, written, and directed by Liam Vickers and produced by Glitch Productions.[2]

The pilot episode premiered on Glitch's YouTube channel on 29 October 2021. The remaining seven episodes were released from 18 November 2022 to 23 August 2024. The series received positive reviews from critics for its animation and plot, though its pacing and humour have received criticism. The series received three nominations for a Webby Award in the Best Animated Video category, winning two.

Synopsis

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The series occurs in 3071 on Copper 9, an Earth analog owned by the megacorporation JC Jenson (a parody of SC Johnson). Worker Drones, autonomous robots designed to serve humans, inhabit the planet and mine it for natural resources.[3] Eventually, the planet suffers a catastrophic core collapse brought on by the corporation's employees, wiping out all biological life on the planet, including humans.[‡ 1] As a result, the planet becomes a frozen wasteland, and only the Worker Drones remain. One day, three violent killing machines known as Disassembly Drones—nicknamed "Murder Drones"—invade Copper 9 to exterminate the remaining Worker Drones. The Worker Drones live in constant fear of the Murder Drones and hide behind a series of blast doors, in an attempt to protect themselves.[4]

The protagonist of the series is Uzi Doorman, an angsty teenage Worker Drone who plans to defeat the murderous drones and save her kind. In the process, she forms an unlikely partnership with two of the Murder Drones—N, a male drone with a friendly and curious disposition toward Worker Drones; and V, a sadist who is purposely elusive about her history with N—and works with them to uncover the truth about their origins and purpose in the planet's harsh environment.[5]

Cast

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  • Uzi Doorman (Elsie Lovelock), a rebellious teenage Worker Drone who seeks to end her oppressed lifestyle. Throughout the series, Uzi struggles with being possessed by the Absolute Solver, which she learns to use to manipulate reality.[5]
  • Serial Designation "N" (Michael Kovach), a friendly and eager Disassembly Drone who befriends Uzi and provides her with emotional support throughout her possession[5]
  • Serial Designation "V" (Nola Klop), a sadistic Disassembly Drone and N's teammate who secretly harbors protective feelings towards him[5]
  • Serial Designation "J" (Shara Kirby), the neglectful leader of N and V's Disassembly Drone squad[5]
  • Khan Doorman (David J. Dixon), Uzi's father, architect of the hydraulic doors protecting the Worker Drone colony, and leader of the colony's defense force[citation needed]
  • Thad (Sean Chiplock), Uzi's friendly jock schoolmate[citation needed]
  • Lizzy (Katie Hood in episode 1 and Caitlin Dizon from episode 2 onward), Uzi's popular classmate who bullies her and befriends V[citation needed]
  • Doll (Emma Breezy), Uzi's Russian-speaking classmate who harbors a vendetta against V for murdering her parents. Like Uzi, Doll can manipulate the Absolute Solver and has much more control over it than Uzi does.[5]
  • Cyn (Allanah Fitzgerald), a Worker Drone who serves as the Disassembly Drones' system administrator and the host of an evil, reality-altering computer program called the Absolute Solver (also voiced by Fitzgerald)[5]
  • Tessa Elliot (Steph Crothers),[a] a human girl who salvages N, V, J, and Cyn before the former three's remodeling into Disassembly Drones. An adult version of Tessa appears on Copper 9 as a JC Jenson technician, but is later revealed to have been killed as a child by Cyn, who impersonates Tessa while wearing her skin.[5]
  • Nori Doorman (Darcy Maguire), Uzi's mother and one of the Absolute Solver's hosts. Initially stated to have been killed by a Disassembly Drone, she is later revealed to have sent her consciousness to her own mutated core to survive.[citation needed]

Production

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Liam Vickers had previously achieved online attention for his 2D animated series CliffSide and Internecion Cube, both currently unfinished.[‡ 2] He first pitched Murder Drones to Glitch Productions with some early concept art and story, before becoming the series' writer and director.[‡ 3]

Murder Drones is animated on Autodesk Maya and Unreal Engine.[‡ 4] Including the pilot, the series lasted 8 episodes. It pushes into darker territory while making it more photorealistic than previous shows on Glitch.[1] This series (alongside Meta Runner) also marks to many fans a departure from the Machinima style often associated with Glitch, as its co-founder Luke Lerdwichagul is well-known for his Super Mario parodies on the channel SMG4.

On August 6, 2021, Liam released the full version of "Disassembly Required", the song that plays in the teaser.[‡ 5] The video description reveals the character seen in the teaser to be "V", one of the titular Murder Drones. By the time the series was announced, it had been worked on for one year until February 18, 2022, when Glitch Productions announced that the full series was in development now at the studio and would be released later in 2022.[‡ 6][6][non-primary source needed] The show ended with the eighth and final episode released on August 23, 2024.[‡ 7]

On May 16, 2025, all eight episodes of the series were made available on Amazon Prime Video.[7]

Episodes

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Every episode is written and directed by Liam Vickers.

No.TitleStoryboard byOriginal release date
1"Pilot"Liam VickersOctober 29, 2021 (2021-10-29)
The human population of the planet Copper 9 is wiped out by a planetary core collapse, leaving behind their robotic workforce, the Worker Drones. The workers are massacred by a trio of Disassembly Drones from Earth—designated N, V, and J—ostensibly sent by the interstellar corporation JC Jenson in response to the workers' newfound independence; the survivors retreat into a bunker fortified by the worker Khan Doorman. Uzi, Khan's rebellious daughter, leaves the bunker to salvage parts for a railgun to use against the Disassembly Drones. She tests her weapon on N, who regenerates with short-term amnesia and malfunctioning optic sensors. Mistaking Uzi for a new teammate, N tries to befriend her until J restores his memory and vision, and Uzi escapes. N infiltrates the bunker, kills the guards and attacks Uzi, but falters after Khan shuts them out to protect the other survivors. J installs a corrupting virus on N for questioning their directive before following V circumventing the backup doors. Uzi repairs N, and together they prevent the others from wiping out the colony, destroying J and capturing V. Heartbroken by Khan's betrayal, Uzi banishes herself with N and V and declares vengeance against the humans of Earth.
2"Heartbeat"Liam Vickers, Matthew Peckham, and Jarrad RumbleNovember 18, 2022 (2022-11-18)
J's mutated heart emerges from her remains and produces an eldritch worm monster that kills several Worker Drones. Uzi and N are informed of the incident by Uzi's classmate Thad while trying to repair the Disassembly Drones' space pod. Returning to the bunker to investigate, they learn about a supposed reboot program called the Absolute Solver, symbolized by an insignia that has begun appearing in place of Uzi's right eye; Uzi concludes that J is using the Solver to repair herself with the drones' assimilated matter. They are soon attacked by the worm-like Solver, which proclaims J and the other drones to be its puppets. The Solver unnerves Uzi with disturbing, lifelike holograms, including one of itself killing Khan. N rescues Uzi as her damaged railgun explodes, causing the Solver to vanish. Frightened and confused by the Disassembly Drones' true nature, Uzi shuns N and returns to Khan. Meanwhile, Uzi's Russian-speaking classmate Doll telekinetically crushes a robotic cockroach while glancing at a photograph of V, with the Solver symbol appearing over Doll's right eye.
3"The Promening"Liam Vickers, Robin French, and Cameron Qayoom-TaylorFebruary 17, 2023 (2023-02-17)
Uzi is approached by Doll and her friend Lizzy to receive a makeover for the upcoming school prom. However, Uzi escapes upon discovering that Doll is targeting her in a recent string of disappearances at school, while Lizzy is conspiring to let V into the bunker. Meanwhile, N refuses to participate in V's plan to slaughter the prom-goers for their own sustenance, leading V to go alone. Uzi and N reconcile and head to the prom to stop V. Against the trio's expectations, V is crowned prom queen as part of a trap devised by Doll, whose parents were murdered by V. Uzi and N rescue V, overcoming Doll's reality-bending Solver powers before V shoots Doll. Doll later regenerates and attacks the group again, but flees when Uzi manifests her own Solver powers against her. Meanwhile, the human JC Jenson technician Tessa Elliott and a living J arrive on Copper 9 to perform "maintenance work".
4"Cabin Fever"Matthew Peckham and Cameron Qayoom-TaylorApril 7, 2023 (2023-04-07)
Uzi travels to the abandoned Camp 98.7 to investigate a set of collars with significance to her mother, Drone 002, a.k.a Nori. Uzi's class is forced to come along as part of a field trip, with N and V acting as supervisors. Uzi eventually finds the "keybug", a golden robot cockroach designed to activate an elevator in the Cabin Fever Labs. When she returns to the campsite, a startled classmate fires at Uzi with an arrow, which her Solver powers turn into a living organic mass. Uzi flees into one of the cabins, where she grows fleshy wings and a tail similar to those of the Disassembly Drones. Against V's wishes, N searches for Uzi and finds an instructional video cassette titled "Zombie Drones". Overcome with a craving for the drones' oil, Uzi kills several of her classmates and battles a hostile V before N intervenes, calming Uzi and returning her to normal. Uzi, N, and V leave with the other survivors, bringing the keybug and video cassette with them.
5"Home"Liam Vickers and Neda LayJune 9, 2023 (2023-06-09)
N relives his repressed memories as a Worker Drone servant at Tessa's mansion alongside V, J, and a malfunctioning "zombie" drone named Cyn. After ignoring several cryptic messages instructing him to enter the mansion's basement, N establishes contact with Uzi, who has hacked into the comatose N and V's minds to keep their memories from being erased by Cyn, the Solver's host and the Disassembly Drones' administrator. With Tessa and J's help, Uzi and N evade a monstrously mutated V and unlock the basement, where they discover evidence of Cyn remodeling N and the other servants into Disassembly Drones. Uzi's hacking is interrupted when Doll intrudes to take the keybug, which Uzi begrudgingly gives her to save N and V. While the past Cyn takes control of the other drones and massacres the humans in the mansion, the present Cyn attempts to use V to lobotomize N in Uzi's absence, but N returns V to her senses before Uzi overrides Cyn's administration. Sometime later, Doll brings the keybug to Tessa and J at the frozen Camp 98.7 lake, where Uzi, N, and V find them.
6"Dead End"Neda LayAugust 18, 2023 (2023-08-18)
Tessa and J ally with Uzi's group, revealing Cyn as the one who sent the Disassembly Drones to Copper 9. Doll immediately takes the keybug back and enters the nearby Cabin Fever Labs alone, leading the group to give chase while J stays behind to guard Tessa's ship. The group is quickly captured by Alice and Beau, two cannibalistic Worker Drone lab subjects who have used the facility's Velociraptor-like Sentinels to kill the other subjects and intruding Disassembly Drones. During their escape, Tessa privately reveals to N that Cyn has already destroyed Earth, and urges him to save the universe over Uzi, who risks being possessed by Cyn the more she uses her Solver. After the Sentinels kill Alice and Beau, Doll traps the group in the elevator hallway with more Sentinels and descends further down, damaging the elevator in the process. When the others are cornered inside the elevator, V remains outside and severs its cables to save them while the Sentinels surround her, against N's request.
7"Mass Destruction"Neda Lay and AD TaezaMarch 29, 2024 (2024-03-29)
Uzi, N, and Tessa are separated underground when Uzi's Solver triggers a cave-in. N encounters Nori's sentient heart, who owns a patch on a crucifix-shaped USB drive used for "exorcising" the Solver from its hosts. Doll is mortally wounded by Cyn while demanding the patch from Tessa to cure herself. Tessa follows the dying Doll to a cathedral where she finds and attacks Uzi. N decapitates Tessa and gives the drive to Uzi, but Cyn possesses Uzi and destroys the drive. Uzi regains control when N provokes her and Nori into bickering by confessing that he and Uzi "hang out", although Uzi accidentally kicks Nori down a pit into Copper 9's core in the process. Tessa reattaches her head and reveals herself as Cyn, having been disguised with the real Tessa's corpse. Cyn eats Doll's heart and drags Uzi and N into the pit with her. Above ground, J is confronted by Khan, Thad and Lizzy after destroying the Disassembly Drones' landing pods under Cyn's orders, dropping her spaceship key into the pit. Before falling, Uzi throws N to safety with the key. Uzi later awakens in outer space, where she sees the planet's exposed core.
8"Absolute End"Neda Lay, AD Taeza, Robin French and Liam VickersAugust 23, 2024 (2024-08-23)

Having merged with Copper 9, Cyn begins consuming the broken pieces of the planet. Uzi reunites with Nori, who explains the Solver can be stopped if Cyn's heart is destroyed. N rescues Uzi in Cyn's spaceship, which Cyn destroys; Uzi and N affirm their relationship as they fall back towards the planet. J reveals her allegiance to Cyn and attacks Khan, Thad and Lizzy, but V intervenes, riding a Sentinel she managed to tame. Uzi and N reunite with V while battling Cyn, who repeatedly attempts to possess Uzi again via callback. N and V eventually knock J into a chasm, while Uzi rips out Cyn's heart, causing Cyn's body to melt; when Uzi's Solver fails to destroy the heart, she resorts to swallowing it, imparting her with the Solver's abilities while allowing her to retain her sense of self.

The drones resume their normal lives and hold a funeral for Doll; meanwhile, J begins repairing her spaceship, and the Solver, whose consciousness now inhabits Uzi's tail, harmlessly pesters her.

Reception

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Critical reception

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Prior to the release of the pilot episode, Lauren Rouse of Gizmodo Australia praised the character designs and visuals.[1] After the series concluded in 2024, the filmology website IMDb rates it at 7.8/10 using a weighted average based on roughly 4000 reviews.[8] Writer GiovanH criticized the show for being hard to follow, especially for first-time viewers, which he partially attributed to an apparent compressing of the plot into eight episodes as a result of Glitch Productions' perceived limited budget. He noted that several minute factors worked against each other to make the story harder to understand, such as pacing, excessive humour and poor character recognizability. Despite this, he praised the plot, animation quality, voice acting and soundtrack. He noted that the characters themselves are the most appealing aspect of the show to the fandom, and wrote that "it really intentionally embraces the edgy random mid-2000s teen vibe, and I’m not holding that against it. It gives the show some fun character. The whole show is really kind of a love letter not just to fandom, but that particular cringy dorky teenager version fandomhood".[9]

Awards and nominations

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In 2023 and 2024, the series earned a nomination for a Webby Award in the category of Best Animated Video and won it in the same category in the 2024 edition.[10] It was also nominated for the Scripted (Series & Channels) category for the 2025 edition, later winning that category.[11]

Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
2023 Webby Award Animation (Series & Channels) Video Murder Drones Nominated [10]
One Voice Awards UK 2023 Animation - Best Character Performance - Female Elsie Lovelock - "Uzi - Murder Drones" Won [12]
2024 Webby Award Animation (Series & Channels) Video Murder Drones (Episode 6 – "Dead End") [13]
2025 Webby Award Scripted (Series & Channels) Murder Drones (Episode 7 & 8 – "Mass Destruction" & "Absolute End") [11]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Credited as Daisy Rose

References

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  1. ^ a b c Rouse, Lauren (October 25, 2021). "This Aussie Animation Studio Has Made a New Horror Comedy About Murder Drones". Gizmodo Australia. Archived from the original on February 28, 2023. Retrieved February 27, 2023.
  2. ^ Asarch, Steven (January 26, 2022). "The trippiest gamer on YouTube reveals the one line he'll never cross". Inverse. Archived from the original on February 4, 2023. Retrieved February 27, 2023.
  3. ^ Tilley, Ava (September 15, 2023). "Murder Drones was an indie series that was worth the watch". The Central Trend. Retrieved September 15, 2023.
  4. ^ Schmidt, Ben (November 4, 2021). "Review: Murder Drones "Pilot"". Bubbleblabber. Retrieved August 7, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Cento, Salvatore (June 16, 2023). "Murder Drones: How This Post-Apocalyptic Series Revolutionized YouTube". MovieWeb. Retrieved August 7, 2023.
  6. ^ Schwarz, John (October 9, 2021). "Glitch Productions Reveals Murder Drones Complete With New Teaser". Bubbleblabber. Retrieved September 11, 2023.
  7. ^ Sarto, Dan (May 16, 2025). "Prime Video Licenses Glitch Productions' Murder Drones Web Series". Animation World Network. Retrieved May 16, 2025.
  8. ^ "Murder Drones (2021–2024) – Ratings". IMDb. Retrieved May 27, 2025.
  9. ^ "The Imperfections of Murder Drones". blog.giovanh.com. January 12, 2025. Retrieved February 19, 2025.
  10. ^ a b "2023 Webby Awards Video Winners". The Webby Awards. Retrieved September 8, 2023.
  11. ^ a b "MURDER DRONES - Episode 7 & 8". The Webby Awards. Retrieved April 23, 2025.
  12. ^ "The One Voice Awards 2023 UK Winners Are". One Voice Conference. Retrieved May 1, 2024.
  13. ^ "2024 Webby Awards Video Winners". The Webby Awards. Retrieved September 8, 2023.

Primary sources

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In the text, these references are preceded by a double dagger (‡):

  1. ^ MURDER DRONES - Episode 4: Cabin Fever. Retrieved March 31, 2024 – via YouTube.
  2. ^ "Liam Vickers Animation - YouTube". YouTube. Retrieved October 18, 2023.
  3. ^ @glitch_prod (April 23, 2022). "During the show's inception When @LiamVAnimation first pitched Murder Drones to us this was the oriiiiginal concept art for Murder and Worker Drones. The idea was to give the worker drones no mouths for quicker animation but that was changed for style" (Tweet). Retrieved October 18, 2023 – via Twitter.
  4. ^ Murder Drones. Glitch Productions. November 30, 2021. (YouTube playlist. See episodes 1-8 credits.)
  5. ^ Vickers, Liam (August 6, 2021). "Murder Drones - OST - Disassembly Required". YouTube. Retrieved January 8, 2024.
  6. ^ "Murder Drones". Glitch Productions. Archived from the original on February 28, 2023. Retrieved February 27, 2023.
  7. ^ GLITCH (August 23, 2024). MURDER DRONES - Episode 8: Absolute End. Retrieved August 24, 2024 – via YouTube.
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