Age-restricted? YouTube often blocks those trailers inside other sites. Use the button to watch on YouTube — you may need to sign in and confirm your age.
Watch on YouTubeTrailer from TMDb metadata; playback via YouTube. If the player shows a restriction, use "Watch on YouTube" above.
Community reviews
From TMDb members · 2 total- DallasBob2/10
[stares...] ...>sighssighs heavier, fingers holding bridge of nose<.... You know, this social political...thing is **NOT** the way to go. The forced viewing of homosexuality is **NOT** interesting. Gay romance does **NOT** play well to the viewing audience if the viewing…
- Sejian6/10
This review is for season 1. 1. The writing is middling at best and subpar at worse. 2. The voice-acting is fine. 3. The animation is nice. 4. Qwydion is best buddy. She's so bubbly and adorable! **My conclusion:** Meh.. but I'll return for season 2 to see Qwydion again.…
Full text & links on TMDb in the reviews section below.
Rent, buy & download
Official stores and apps (Apple TV, Prime Video, Google Play, and others) let you rent or buy this title; many include offline downloads inside their app after purchase.
Subscription streaming
Netflix
Netflix Standard with Ads
Showing availability for region US. Opens The Movie Database / partner listings — not affiliated withWatchMind.
Dragon Age: Absolution
64%
Series
1
6
AI Analysis
Dragon Age: Absolution (2022) — AI TV series analysis
WatchMind AI generated this AI analysis of Dragon Age: Absolution (2022) — a TV series tagged as Animation, Action & Adventure, and Sci-Fi & Fantasy with balanced tone moods and fast-paced pacing.
Story & themes: With great power at stake, a group of misfits must work together to steal an artifact from a sinister mage. Our models also surface themes such as identity, conflict, and relationships from synopsis and genre signals.
Watch context: Best suited for casual background watching. Expect fast-paced storytelling across 1 season.
Community signal: TMDb members rate Dragon Age: Absolution 64% (102 votes) — solid community ratings for this TV series.
AI verdict
Use this AI analysis as a quick read on Dragon Age: Absolution before you watch — trailer, TMDb reviews, and licensed streaming links on this page help you decide.
Algorithmic AI analysis from genres, synopsis, pacing heuristics, and TMDb community scores — not a generative chatbot. How WatchMind works.
Insights
Audience & engagement
How WatchMind visitors interact with this title — views, saves, sentiment, and taste match when you're signed in, or a device preview while browsing. Aggregates are anonymous; last 30 days.
Early data — charts fill in as more people explore this title.
TMDb audience score
64%
from 102 TMDb votes
Your taste match
Browse a few titles or complete the vibe check — we'll show your match % here.
- Your rating—
- Watch queueNot saved
WatchMind sentiment
No thumbs or dismissals yet. Rate this title to help others see likeness trends.
- Dismissals
- 0
Engagement breakdown
0 unique visitors · no audience notes yet
Views trend (14 days)
Daily title page views on WatchMind
Synopsis
With great power at stake, a group of misfits must work together to steal an artifact from a sinister mage.
Quick facts
- Type
- Series
- Status
- Ended
- Release date
- 2022-12-09
- Seasons
- 1
- Episodes
- 6
- TMDB rating
- 6.4
- TMDB ID
- 203805
Watch & discovery tips
- Read TMDb member reviews in the reviews section, and audience tips from other WatchMind visitors in Audience notes.
- Use Rent, buy & download for official stores; offline viewing is usually inside their apps.
- Browse trending and top-rated series from the main TV page.
- Add titles to your watch queue from this page — order matters; the top pick can surface on your home page when you're logged into the same browser session.
Frequently asked questions
Where can I watch Dragon Age: Absolution (2022)?
Dragon Age: Absolution is available for discovery on WatchMind. You can find official links to rent, buy, or stream from licensed digital stores like Apple TV and Amazon in our "Where to Watch" section.
Is there an official trailer for Dragon Age: Absolution?
Yes, you can watch the official trailer for Dragon Age: Absolution directly on this page. We pull the latest video metadata from TMDb and play it via YouTube integration.
What is Dragon Age: Absolution about?
With great power at stake, a group of misfits must work together to steal an artifact from a sinister mage.
Is there an AI analysis for Dragon Age: Absolution?
Yes. WatchMind publishes an AI analysis on this page — tone, pacing, audience fit, and community scores from TMDb metadata and recommendation models (not a chatbot). Scroll to the AI Analysis section or read the meta description summary.
How many seasons of Dragon Age: Absolution are there?
There are currently 1 seasons of Dragon Age: Absolution documented in the community database.
Cast & crew
Names and photos from The Movie Database (TMDb). Follow links on themoviedb.org for full filmographies.
Audience notes
Quick tips, watch-order ideas, and “worth it?” takes from other WatchMind visitors — not from TMDb. Reply to continue a thread, tap Helpful to surface useful notes, and keep things kind — no spoilers in the first line when you can help it.
Discussion0 notes
No notes yet — be the first to leave a suggestion for the next viewer.
Community reviews
Written by TMDb members — same catalogue as our movie & TV metadata. API terms
[stares...] ...>sighssighs heavier, fingers holding bridge of nose<.... You know, this social political...thing is **NOT** the way to go. The forced viewing of homosexuality is **NOT** interesting. Gay romance does **NOT** play well to the viewing audience if the viewing audience **is NOT gay**; which just **_so happens to be 98% of this country_**, America. Review: Gay ex-slave elf-woman is asked for help by her gay ex-girlfriend human. Gay elf-woman and her gay-human male partner team up to help gay ex-girlfriend and her gay dwarf-man partner to steal mcguffin. **NOTE:** [I am not being facetious nor malicious; this is the literal story.] The theft they are hired to commit has the Gay elf-woman returning to the city in which she lived as a slave. The job also has her face her ex-owner whom she was raised with from childhood. He considers her family, though she never once returned the sentiment the entire series. The two, ofcourse, have to fight because the theft job went bad and the ex-owner just so happens to own the mcguffin. Her ex-girlfriend human was captured, and they end up having to rescue her. All this happens, even after the ex-owner saves Gay elf-woman's life because of the famial connection he (stupidly) harbors for the intolerant, self-absorbed, murdering, cowardly gay-elf woman. So let's get the plot straight: They attempt to steal from the ex-owner for money. It goes bad. Gay-elf lady nearly looses her life. Gay ex-girlfriend human is captured. Ex-owner saves gay-elf lady thieving/murdering life out of (misplaced, IMO) sentiment. And now he's the bad guy because he wants to use magic -- he's good at --, to bring her brother -- whom gay elf lady killed -- back to life, so they all can rule the land. This will be his right, once he proves himself so magically inclined to his peers. It's not that there are bad stories. It is that there are bad writers. And (I don't know if this is "Hollywood" making the calls, but we'll call the shotcallers or showrunners "Hollywood" for the sake argument) when Hollywood puts set boundaries around a story, particularly boundaries (checkboxes) that are not shared by the vast majority of the viewing audience, it takes away from everything the show should be trying to do; that of entertaining. And NO amount of special effects or animation action scenes are going to overshadow that. I didn't finish watching this series. I didn't have to. I lost interest when the gay elf lady refused her "brother's" offer to come home, be there when he brings her actual blood brother back to life and release her girlfriend. _Her_ antagonism shapes and fuels her actions from there, and that is how she became the bad guy (IMO). I mean the ex-owner literally has not had the chance to do anything truly evil (not even in her memory flashbacks), and the gay elf woman is pre-emptively being an assuming a-hole. He _is_ holding her gay ex-girlfriend prisoner, but that is only after they try (and fail) to steal from him! Which, holding the gay human woman in a cell, just happens to be his right. Child-lock this show if you have children under 16 years of age in the house. There are no lessons to be learned here. There are no heroes in this show. 2.5/10 for the animation. -- Bob --
This review is for season 1. 1. The writing is middling at best and subpar at worse. 2. The voice-acting is fine. 3. The animation is nice. 4. Qwydion is best buddy. She's so bubbly and adorable! **My conclusion:** Meh.. but I'll return for season 2 to see Qwydion again. I've seen better writing and storytelling in the form of The Dragon Prince (S01-S03, S04 was shite), and Arcane (which really set the bar for me for mature-audience animation), and similar or worse in the form of Cyberpunk: Edgerunners. Here the writers seem to conveniently forget they've written things in one bit, seesaw with character's intelligence in another bit, and lack consistency with character's actions in an extended bit. I also really didn't like the writing for the twist, I feel like it could've been done much better. _Below is the argumentative portion of the review where I take issue with the other "review" and explain plot points as plainly as I can in a totes short space of time because honestly, we have better things to do. I paused playing Ark and watching Castlevania (for the first time) to watch this in it's entirety because of that review._ **BEWARE! Here there be SPOILERS!** * "Child-lock this show if you have children under 16 years of age in the house." This series is listed as **TV-MA** here and on IMDB and **16+** on Netflix. **These official ratings mean that this series is meant for mature audiences, AKA adults.** Which irresponsible parent allows their child to consume media made for adults? That's a rhetorical question and yes, this was a spoiler for someone! * As a non-American, my take on population statistics as used like this is that they expect you to have zero empathy or compassion towards anyone who is on the receiving end. It makes sense that the review seems to completely miss the blatant xenophobia and slavery on full display in this series because to acknowledge it would require at least a shred of humanity. 2% of America's population is almost 7 million souls but I suppose it's fine to pretend people don't exist. 7 million is totes a big spoiler number because 2% looks really small. * While having homosexual characters, this first season of this series presents homosexuality as a non-issue in this universe. No one cares that the main character is lesbian or that her buddy is gay. There is no political discussion about the plight or persecution of homosexuals, which is what reviews like the one in question usually complain about, yet when this doesn't exist, the complaint becomes the mere existence of homosexuals, which is where the buck really stops. Spoiler, two protagonists are homosexual, one protagonist turned antagonist is homosexual, and one protagonist is possibly bisexual. * The lesbian elf protagonist hates her human "brother" because she and her actual twin brother were slaves to his family, abused since childhood, and raised to be his personal assassins/bodyguards. Her life at the hands of his family directly led to the death of her twin brother, an act which she herself had to do when he was sacrificed to demonic possession to save her slave-master's son's life, AKA her slave-master "brother", after he botched some sort of magical initiation which hadn't been failed by one of his ilk "in 300 years" (not so good at some magic maybe?). It's not a stretch to understand why she wouldn't want anything to do with him even though he wants to resurrect her real brother even if we ignored the alluded-to horrible consequences of using Blood Magic to do it. Return to slavery? Resurrect her brother to slavery? * The presumed heterosexual human antagonist is shown to be reckless, unwilling to listen to reason and willing to put others at risk as a result of his own hubris, all within the first five minutes of the audience meeting him, and his behavior becomes more abhorrent the more time we spend with him. He is willing to use prohibited magic he can't possibly understand or control to resurrect his "adoptive" slave brother. He is willing to murder his "sister's" girlfriend as punishment if she refuses to return "home". I suppose evil is fine to some as long as it ain't gay. Bad writing is bad writing. LGBTQIA+ and diverse characters don't equate bad writing, nor does it make up for bad writing. No amount of "checkbox" and "quota" buzzwords changes this because media without buzzword characters exist and there there be trash too. I assume if a clearly asinine and homophobic rant is allowed to remain on this website, masquerading as a review (along with others that the reviewer has submitted), then mine should too. Cheers!
More to explore
Hand-picked from TMDb similar and recommended lists for Dragon Age: Absolution. Each link opens a full WatchMind page with synopsis, trailer, community reviews, and official store links—so you can compare tone and audience overlap before you pick what to watch next.

The Banished Court Magician Aims to Become the Strongest
Action & Adventure · Animation

The Convenience Store

From Old Country Bumpkin to Master Swordsman
Action & Adventure · Animation

The Beginning After the End
Action & Adventure · Animation

The Foolish Angel Dances with the Devil
Animation · Comedy

I've Been Killing Slimes for 300 Years and Maxed Out My Level
Animation · Comedy

RWBY
Action & Adventure · Animation

Devil May Cry
Action & Adventure · Animation

The Legend of Vox Machina
Animation · Sci-Fi & Fantasy

DOTA: Dragon's Blood
Action & Adventure · Animation

SAINT SEIYA: Knights of the Zodiac
Action & Adventure · Animation

Suicide Squad Isekai
Action & Adventure · Animation






