Randy Cunningham 9th Grade Ninja - Season 1 File
Season 1’s slow-burn reveal of The Sorcerer (voiced with delicious ham by John DiMaggio) is a masterclass. For the first half, we only see his floating mask or hear his whisper. He isn’t trying to kill Randy; he is trying to humiliate him. The arc culminates in "Night of the Living McFizzles" where Randy realizes that every monster he fought was a test.
The fight choreography in Season 1 is kinetic. When Randy uses the "Ninja Sense" (that green, Spidey-sense aura), the backgrounds invert into neon wireframes. It felt like playing a Tony Hawk game mixed with a manga. The soundtrack, full of synth drops and electric guitar riffs, makes mundane scenes—like Randy sneaking past a teacher—feel epic. Randy Cunningham 9th Grade Ninja - Season 1
Stay sneaky, Norrisville.
In the golden age of early 2010s animation, shows were caught between the surreal chaos of Adventure Time and the gross-out grit of Annoying Orange . Buried in that weird middle slot on Disney XD was a show that deserved a longer life: Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade Ninja . Season 1’s slow-burn reveal of The Sorcerer (voiced
(Minus one point because the "McFizzle" product placement is aggressively early-2010s Disney.) The arc culminates in "Night of the Living

