Webvideo Collection Series 4 Packl Access

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Webvideo Collection Series 4 Packl Access

5/5. Worth the price of the pack alone. Volume 4: The Golden Age of Vlogging (2006–2009) This disc tries to capture the earnest, low-stakes vlogging era of Lonelygirl15, LisaNova, and early Philip DeFranco. It’s the weakest of the set.

4.5/5 for pure historical value. Volume 2: Fail Army Origins (Pre-2012) Before FailArmy was a corporate brand, there was just grainy footage of people falling off skateboards and hitting trampoline poles. This disc feels almost anthropological. WebVideo Collection Series 4 Packl

For $24.99 (MSRP), you’re getting four themed volumes: and “The Golden Age of Vlogging.” No streaming subscription required. No buffering. Just pure, unadulterated internet history. Volume 1: Viral Vault (2007–2011) This disc is a time capsule. If you lived through the era of Charlie Bit My Finger, Chocolate Rain, and dramatic chipmunks, this will hit you square in the nostalgia bone. It’s the weakest of the set

Rating: 4.2/5 Stars Format Reviewed: DVD (Region 1) Runtime: Approx. 6 hours total (90 mins per disc) First Impressions: The Unboxing Let’s be honest: physical media for web videos in 2025 feels about as anachronistic as buying a fax machine. But that’s part of the charm. The WebVideo Collection Series 4 Pack arrives in a surprisingly sturdy, eco-friendly cardboard sleeve housing four individual slim cases. The cover art is a glorious throwback to the Wild West of YouTube—think chaotic neon lettering, a surprised cat, a dude yelling into a headset, and a slice of pizza with googly eyes. This disc feels almost anthropological

No “Homestar Runner” or “Happy Tree Friends” due to licensing, but they include a nice text tribute.

3.8/5. Good for a laugh, but skip the last 20 minutes. Volume 3: Animash (The Flash Era) This is the gem of the collection. Before Hazbin Hotel and indie animation on YouTube, there was Newgrounds and Albino Blacksheep. Animash collects the most influential (and bizarre) animated shorts from 2005–2010.

Recommended with enthusiasm for nostalgic millennials and media geeks.

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