1000 Ways to Die (Magisterian TV series)

1000 Ways to Die, also known as 1000 Ways to Die: The Wrath of Death, is a Magisterian anthology television series that currently airs on Extreme. Prior to its television airing, it was published on CVplay as Wrath of Death on January 10, 2022. The show, like its American counterpart of the same name, recreates unusual supposed deaths, genuine occurrences, and discredited urban legends, as well as interviews with real medical specialists who explain the science behind each death. The program is narrated by Edgar Groves

The first season was well received, with critics complimenting Groves' grisly narration. Later, the program was brought back for a second season, which premiered on December 10, 2022. VGC bought the naming rights to 1000 Ways to Die from Original Productions on November 5, 2023, allowing them to make use of the name. The program was eventually brought back for a third season, the first under the 1000 Ways to Die name.

Stylization
Wrath of Death, now 1000 Ways to Die, presents stories derived from myths and science in a tongue-in-cheek dark humor approach to death, and the show liberally uses artistic license to significantly embellish or change the circumstances of real-life incidents that resulted in death for greater entertainment value. Not only are the names altered, but so are significant portions of the places, dates, and context.

A reoccurring theme in this show, as in its predecessor, is that of unsympathetic or ignorant people's decisions backfiring on them, culminating in death.

The program is loaded with dark comedy (especially in the narrator), which helps to lighten the usually solemn topic of death. It depicts the deaths through live-action recreations of the events, expert and sometimes witness testimony, as well as graphic computer-generated imagery animations, similar to those used in the popular TV show, to illustrate the ways people have died, similar to the "X-Ray moves" of the 2011 Mortal Kombat reboot and Mortal Kombat X, due to them showing bones being fractured and organs being damaged. The narrator offers context for each death-story, which all conclude with names that are puns on popular figures of speech.