The Guild Is Coming Back as a Movie — Here's Why That's a Big Deal
Felicia Day has confirmed that The Guild — the groundbreaking web series that ran from 2007 to 2013 — is being revived as a feature-length film. The original cast is returning, and for a generation of gamers and internet culture devotees, the announcement feels like a genuine homecoming.
What Is The Guild, and Why Does It Matter?
The Guild was a self-funded, independently produced web series created by Felicia Day that followed a group of online gamers navigating their real lives while raiding dungeons together. It was one of the first web series to prove that creator-driven, digital-native storytelling could build a massive, loyal audience without a traditional network behind it.
At its peak, the show:
- Had millions of viewers per episode across YouTube and Microsoft platforms
- Spawned a hit music video, "Do You Wanna Date My Avatar," that charted on iTunes
- Won multiple Streamy Awards and a Writers Guild Award
- Became a cultural touchstone for gaming communities at a time when gaming culture was still finding mainstream legitimacy
Felicia Day wrote, produced, and starred in every season — a remarkable feat that made her one of the defining voices of early internet content creation.
What We Know About the Movie
Day announced the film project with confirmation that the original cast is on board, including Felicia Day as Codex, Sandeep Parikh as Zaboo, Jeff Lewis as Vork, Jade Raymond's production connections, and the rest of the Knights of Good. While full production and release details are still emerging, the reunion itself signals that this isn't a soft reboot — it's a direct continuation built on genuine affection for the source material.
The timing is notable. The film arrives as:
- Gaming has fully gone mainstream, with over 3 billion gamers worldwide and gaming culture woven into music, film, and fashion
- The early YouTube era is being reassessed as a golden age of authentic, creator-led content
- Audiences are increasingly hungry for stories that reflect gamer identity with nuance and humor, not mockery
Why This Reunion Hits Differently
The Guild wasn't just a funny show about awkward gamers. It was one of the first pieces of media that treated online friendships as real, meaningful relationships — a concept that was still being debated seriously when the series launched in 2007. Day's Codex was a flawed, anxious, deeply human protagonist at a time when female leads in gaming-adjacent content were almost nonexistent.
For fans who grew up watching the show on early YouTube, the movie represents something beyond nostalgia. It's a validation that the stories they cared about — the ones made by creators who looked like them, played the games they played, and understood the community they belonged to — were worth telling all along.
If the film captures even a fraction of what made the series special, it won't just be a reunion. It'll be a reminder of what independent storytelling can do when it's built from the inside out.
Sources
Sources are included for transparency and verification.
REDDIT-ANNOUNCEMENT · Reddit r/videos – The Guild movie announcement discussion
https://www.reddit.com/r/videos/comments/1t4vqic/felicia_days_the_guild_is_coming_back_as_a_movie/GUILD-HISTORY · The Guild – Series background and cultural impact
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Guild_(web_series)
