Crash Bandicoot Heads to Netflix in New Animated Series

Reports say WildBrain, makers of Sonic Prime, are quietly developing a Crash Bandicoot animated series for Netflix. No official date or cast yet, but the project taps into the trend of video game adaptations for streaming.

Lena Carter Lena Carter . Comments
Crash Bandicoot Heads to Netflix in New Animated Series

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A beloved video game icon may soon leap from consoles to streaming screens. Recent reports suggest that Crash Bandicoot is being developed as a new animated series for Netflix — and the studio quietly leading the charge is WildBrain, the team behind Sonic Prime.

News outlet What’s On Netflix first flagged the claim: WildBrain, which has delivered family-friendly hits like The Snoopy Show, Carmen Sandiego, and Johnny Test, is reportedly working on a Crash series. Details remain thin. There’s no official Netflix announcement, no cast list, and no release window yet — but the rumor alone has energized fans and industry watchers.

Crash Bandicoot enjoyed a major renaissance in gaming with titles like Crash Bandicoot 4: Its Time to Rumble and the multiplayer Crash Team Rumble. Translating that renewed popularity into a TV series would follow a wider streaming trend: platforms are mining classic game IPs to attract multi-generational audiences. Sonic and Mario adaptations — from the Sonic films to Netflix’s Sonic Prime and the theatrical success of The Super Mario Bros. Movie — have shown there’s appetite for playful, nostalgia-driven takes on franchise mascots.

What to expect from a Crash show

What to expect from a Crash show

A TV adaptation could lean into Crash’s chaotic, colorful world: fast-paced platforming sequences reimagined as kinetic set pieces, slapstick humor, and a cast of familiar characters like Cortex, Coco, and the wumpa fruit. WildBrain’s experience balancing kid-friendly tone with franchise faithfulness (see Carmen Sandiego) suggests the series could appeal to both longtime fans and newcomers.

Context and fan reaction

The Crash franchise has flirted with TV before — a 1997 Universal-produced series was developed but never aired — so this wouldn’t be entirely new territory. Fans online are split between excited nostalgia and cautious hope: will the show capture the original games’ wild spirit or water it down for broad audiences?

A cautious note

Video game adaptations can struggle with pacing and tone when shifting to episodic television. The key will be preserving Crash’s anarchic energy without sacrificing character depth or narrative coherence.

For now, treat the Netflix link as hopeful intel rather than confirmed programming. If true, a Crash Bandicoot series could be another cheerful entry in the ongoing era of video game-to-screen adaptations — and a bright, chaotic addition to Netflix’s animation slate.

"I’m Lena. Binge-watcher, story-lover, critic at heart. If it’s worth your screen time, I’ll let you know!"

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