Actor Matthew Lillard has been a busy man as of late. With promotion for Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 and the arrival of Scream 7’s first trailer, his villainous side has been getting a workout. However, the benevolent geek business tycoon has also been indulging in his love of Dungeons & Dragons
Find Familiar Spirits, the award-winning craft whiskey company co-founded by actor Matthew Lillard and producer Justin Ware, has just unveiled its newest release: Quest’s End NPC. This new adventure is a premium bourbon designed to bring more adventurers to the gaming (and spirits) table. The new
It's time to embark on a legendary quest! In exciting news, Critical Role is joining forces with Quest's End Whiskey to craft a limited-edition whiskey fit for adventurers and fans alike! You read that correctly. Critical Role is collaborating with celebrity actor and gaming entrepreneur Matthew
Quest’s End Whiskey brings together two beloved elements: Whiskey and Geek Culture! Created by a team including actor and Beadle & Grimm co-founder Matthew Lillard, as well as screenwriter Justin Ware, and Blue Run Spirits co-founder Tim Sparapani. Then, partnered with fantasy illustrator Tyler
Quest’s End Whiskey combines two of my favorite things: Whiskey and Geek Culture! From Matthew Lillard, actor and co-founder of Beadle & Grimm, along with screenwriter Justin Ware and Blue Run Spirits co-founder Tim Sparapani, fantasy illustrator Tyler Jacobson, as well as Dungeons & Dragons game
Remaking Faces of Death is a hell of a move in 2026. Although, this movie doesn't really remake that diabolical film from 1978, it instead takes inspiration from it and it even exists in the universe that this film takes place in. So getting that out of the way so that the horror "diehards" who
The trailer for A24's The Drama does a great job of keeping things intentionally vague. We meet Charlie (Robert Pattinson) and Emma (Zendaya), a couple about to get married who seem like they know everything about each other… until they very clearly don’t. One drunken night at dinner with
When Margaret Atwood returned to Gilead almost 35 years later, with her book The Testaments, the sequel to her seminal The Handmaid’s Tale, they said she could never match its genius. The story more than matched her 1985 dystopian classic, winning the 2019 Booker Prize, feeling horrifically timely