It takes a special kind of madness to reimagine a cult-classic like Regular Show, but the 2026 CGI film dares to take the absurd brilliance of the series and amplify it into something both nostalgic and groundbreaking. From the very first frame, it declares its mission: “It’s anything but regular.” That promise holds true across every sequence, balancing cosmic stakes with the offbeat humor that made the original show iconic.

Mordecai and Rigby return, now rendered in stunning CGI, their banter sharper than ever. The visual transformation doesn’t strip away their charm—it magnifies it. Every exaggerated reaction, every lazy shrug, every frantic scream lands with a fresh energy that feels cinematic yet faithful. Watching them stumble, argue, and ultimately rise to the occasion in a battle for reality itself is like seeing old friends in a brand-new light.
The plot wastes no time pulling them from slacker antics into apocalyptic chaos. A glitch in reality begins warping their world, turning the mundane park into a kaleidoscope of cosmic arenas. The brilliance lies in the contrast: one moment Mordecai and Rigby are playing video games on a couch, the next they’re facing down multiversal annihilation. That tonal whiplash, absurd yet perfectly balanced, is the essence of Regular Show.

Supporting characters also shine in this reimagining. Pops radiates innocence even as the universe crumbles, Skips brings wisdom (and plenty of fists), while Benson’s eternal rage finds new comedic peaks in the middle of chaos. Muscle Man and Hi-Five Ghost, unlikely as ever, deliver some of the most unexpectedly heroic moments—charging into battles that are as ridiculous as they are epic.
The CGI animation is breathtaking, pushing the surreal concepts of the original into fully realized, larger-than-life spectacles. The highlight reel is endless: Rigby piloting a weaponized arcade cabinet through a neon wormhole, Mordecai dueling an 8-bit villain that grows into a skyscraper-sized monster, and entire armies clashing in a cosmic war that feels like Saturday morning cartoons colliding with big-budget blockbusters.
Yet for all its visual grandeur, the film never forgets its heart. Beneath the explosions, pixelated kaiju, and wormhole chases, Regular Show (2026) remains a story about friendship and the struggle to grow up without losing yourself. Mordecai and Rigby may bicker and slack off, but when it matters most, their loyalty is unshakable. That emotional thread grounds the chaos, reminding us why these characters mattered in the first place.

Humor remains razor-sharp, walking the line between absurdity and sincerity. One moment has Muscle Man trying to rally troops with his infamous “My mom!” jokes, the next delivers a surprisingly heartfelt reflection from Pops about the fragility of reality. The film captures the essence of J.G. Quintel’s original vision—laugh-out-loud comedy wrapped in unexpected profundity.
The voice cast, anchored by Josh Keaton (Mordecai) and William Salyers (Rigby), breathes life into the new format. Their timing and chemistry remain impeccable, making every quip and meltdown feel authentic. Surrounding them, the returning voices of Pops, Skips, Benson, and the gang add a comforting continuity for longtime fans, bridging the jump from 2D to CGI with ease.
Directorially, the pacing is tight, balancing absurd set-pieces with quieter, reflective beats. There’s never a sense of being overwhelmed by spectacle because the film knows when to pause, when to let characters simply exist in their own eccentricities before the next wave of chaos hits. That rhythm keeps the film from becoming just another noisy CGI adventure.

By the time the glitching multiverse reaches its breaking point, the audience is strapped in for a finale that’s equal parts heartfelt and insane. The last act—where laughter, heroism, and emotional resonance collide—is a testament to why Regular Show has endured. It knows how to make you laugh at the ridiculous, then sucker-punch you with sincerity when you least expect it.
With a score of 8.3/10, Regular Show (CGI Reimagining – 2026) is a triumph of nostalgia and innovation. It honors its absurd, beloved roots while proving it can evolve into something bigger without losing its soul. For fans, it’s a joyous reunion. For newcomers, it’s an invitation into a universe where nothing is ordinary—and that’s exactly the point.