The Most Ridiculous Game Show You’ve Ever Seen Streaming For Free

All five seasons of Most Extreme Elimination Challenge, more affectionately known to its fans as MXC, are currently streaming for free on Tubi, and you don’t know what you’re missing if you’re partial to laughing at hundreds, if not thousands of people getting seriously injured for the love of the game. An egregious exercise in overdubbing, Most Extreme Elimination Challenge repurposes footage from ‘80s Japanese game show Takeshi’s Castle without any regard to the original gameplay or storytelling of its source material.
Hosted by its two charismatic commentators, Vic Romano (voiced by Victor Wilson) and Kenny Blankenship (voiced by Chris Darga), MXC is extreme, insensitive, and cringe-inducing as you watch its contestants run through and fall off of complex yet shoddily built obstacle courses while jokes are made at their expense.
Chaotic And Charismatic Commentators Calling The Shots

Most Extreme Elimination Challenge is hosted by Vic Romano, a disgraced media personality who often alludes to his troubled past of substance abuse and debauchery, and somehow manages to be the straight man against Kenny Blankenship, who dropped out of high school and only sits beside him because his father owns the network.
Though Vic and Kenny’s relationship is adversarial at first blush, they bond over the games they subject their contestants to while providing off-the-wall commentary as they bumble their way through the field of play in order to win, or, at the very least, not get eliminated.
The Field Of Play

As for the gameplay in Most Extreme Elimination Challenge, each episode features two teams competing against each other, like “Meat Handlers vs. Cartoon Voice Actors,” “Cops vs. Cons,” “Real Mafia vs. Video Game Industry,” and “Country Music Superstars vs. The World of James Bond,” to name a few. Whenever a contestant takes a particularly nasty spill on obstacle courses like the Log Drop or Rotating Surfboard of Death, Vic and Kenny review the footage with the help of their “MXC Impact Replay,” during which Kenny often rewinds the tape repeatedly for his own personal amusement while Vic tries to move things along.
Each episode of Most Extreme Elimination Challenge ends with a compilation of the “Most Painful Eliminations of the Day” as a means to celebrate a game well played by the participants who didn’t make it to the final round.
Rapid-Fire Joke Delivery Warrants Repeat Watches


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Unlike quiz game shows, which are only really good for a singular viewing once you know the answers, Most Extreme Elimination Challenge warrants repeat watches because of how many tasteless zingers are belted out in such a short amount of time. Produced by John Cervenka, Christopher Darga, Mary Scheer, and Victor Wilson of the LA-based Groundlings comedy troupe, MXC is fertile ground for the comedians to belt out one-liners at an unthinkable rate as contestants get pummeled into submission by each and every absurd obstacle they find themselves facing.
Given my level of immaturity, I find myself having to frequently pause and rewind while watching Most Extreme Elimination Challenge because too much laughter at one joke means missing out on the next one. Strongly rooted in low-brow humor and sexual innuendos, I’m not ashamed to report that I found myself gasping for air after a contestant climbed to the top of a dangerous platform and yelled “finger it!” before falling to her elimination and getting ripped to shreds by Kenny’s commentary.
If you’re not one for shock-humor, then Most Extreme Elimination Challenge may not be for you. But if you’re just looking to kill some brain cells while bearing witness to countless contestants slipping, sliding, and smashing into obstacles (or each other), then you’ll feel right at home streaming this ridiculous game show in all of its unhinged, perverse, and immature glory.
As of this writing, you can stream all five seasons of Most Extreme Elimination Challenge for free on Tubi.