Jennifer Walden of
Post Magazine reviewed the web series as having "rapid-fire jokes, action, and plot-points" that cover as much ground as an episode that is 30 minutes long. The TV series was also well received. Emily Ashby of
Common Sense Media gave the series 3 out of 5 stars; saying that, "Nonsensical, imaginative fun rules the day in this unpredictable animated series." But added that, "
Welcome to the Wayne is best treated as a sugary-treat kind of addition to kids' media diets since the content is more about garnering laughs than it is about anything outright educational." Damon Cap of BSC Kids compared the series to
Gravity Falls, adding that, after viewing the first episode, is "a lot of potential and excitement on who this is going to turn out." Cap added that once Ansi came across the library, they knew the show would be "good" and "great to watch." Television Business International said that the series kept the "hand-drawn art style" used in the web series, while "using innovative animation techniques to create a unique visual aesthetic." Peter Jurado of
ComicsVerse said that the show takes you "back to the city" like
Hey Arnold!, highlights the value of knowledge, and is unique in its own way, even though it has some similarities with
Gravity Falls, as a "new mystery with a lot of heart." Jurado also praised the return to the 22-minute format and the fact that the characters are young enough that they don't "automatically judge somebody."
Librarian Burkely Hermann argued that in this series, a "special and magnificent library" is central, going beyond positive depictions in recent years, with the chief librarian as a
Black woman named Clara Rhone, voiced by Harriett D. Foy. This included episodes, he wrote, where "the issues of underfunded libraries and the value of knowledge," were central, as was the focus on librarians as gatekeepers, and others which made clear the value of librarians, and libraries, as "places of knowledge and diversity."
Accolades ==References==