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Collection: Oddworld
1
As well as Lorne Lanning, other members of the development team voiced characters in each game as well.
Collection: Oddworld
1
The Producer of the Games, Lorne Lanning, voiced various characters in the series including Abe himself.
Kirby Triple Deluxe
1
Queen Sectonia is voiced by Makiko Ohmoto, the same voice actor as Kirby.
Kid Icarus: Uprising
1
In the game's reveal trailer and an early demo, Pit was voiced by Troy Lund. Lund's voice was replaced with Antony Del Rio's in the final game.
person CuriousUserX90 calendar_month June 8, 2014
Super Smash Bros. Melee
subdirectory_arrow_right Star Fox Adventures (Game)
1
Since Star Fox Adventures was in development at the same time as Melee, the cast of that game would voice Fox (Steve Malpass), Falco (Ben Cullum), and Peppy and Slippy (Chris Seavor) within the English versions of the Corneria and Venom stages, despite both of them being based on Star Fox 64.
Star Fox 64 3D
1
The Western dub for Star Fox 64 3D notably brought back many of the original voice actors from the N64 version to reprise their respective roles for the first time in years, those being:

•Mike West (Fox, James)
•Lyssa Browne (Slippy, Katt, Spyborg)
•David Frederick White (R.O.B, Pigma, General Pepper, Attack Carrier Pilot)
•Ja Green (Leon, Shogun Pilot, Sarumarine Captain, Forever Train Conductor, Area 6 Commander)

For unknown reasons, David Frederick White goes uncredited.

The rest of the cast, however, were recasted:

•Falco, Andrew, Meteo Crusher Pilot, and Caiman, all originally voiced by Bill Johns, were now voiced by Mark Lund, Mike West, Jaz Adams and Jay Ward respectively.
•Wolf, Bill Grey and Granga, all originally voiced by Jock Blaney, were now voiced by Mike West, Jaz Adams and Mark Lund respectively.
•Peppy and Andross, both originally voiced by Rick May, were now voiced by Jaz Adams and David Frederick White respectively.
person CuriousUserX90 calendar_month June 8, 2014
Sonic & Sega All-Stars Racing
1
This is the last Sonic-related game to use the 4Kids Entertainment voice actors, who, with the exception of Mike Pollock, were replaced with the Studiopolis and Funimation voice actors.
Photos with Mario
1
When Mario says "It's-a-me, Mario!" on the Title Screen, it's the exact same sound clip used in Super Mario 64.
Franchise: Dr. Seuss
1
Charles Martinet, who is well known for voicing Mario and Luigi also provided the voices for The Cat in the Hat and Yertle the Turtle in several Dr. Seuss-themed educational games.
Sonic Advance 3
1
This is the last game for which Deem Bristow recorded the voice for Dr. Eggman, though some of his clips were reused in Sonic Riders and Sonic Riders: Zero Gravity after his death in 2005. This is also the last Sonic game to use the original English voice actors before being replaced with the 4Kids Entertainment voice actors.
Super Smash Bros. Melee
1
DK's voice clip's were originally meant to be recycled from Donkey Kong 64, performed by Grant Kirkhope. But much like the original Super Smash Bros., it was decided giving DK a more realistic gorilla voice would better fit the game.
Donkey Kong Jungle Beat
1
The build of the game shown at E3 2004 used Grant Kirkhope's voice samples of Donkey Kong. In the final game he was voiced by Takashi Nagasako.
A Hat in Time
1
Attachment YouTuber Jon Jafari (also known as JonTron) voiced the Jazzy Penguin in the game's prototype. He was originally asked to voice a different character, but the developers thought his voice didn't match the proposed character, and instead made him the voice of the Jazzy Penguin. However, Jafari's lines as the Jazzy Penguin were scrapped at some point during development, and he instead voiced the secretary of Dead Bird Studio in the final game.
person KnowledgeBase calendar_month April 27, 2014
Super Mario Sunshine
1
Attachment The option to turn off closed captions during cutscenes does not appear in the Japanese release, likely due to them having extensive English voice acting in all versions of the game.
Mario Kart 64
1
Attachment Twice as many people are credited as voice actors in the Japanese version compared to the American version, with Charles Martinet being the only one to provide voices for both versions of the game.
Mario Kart 64
1
Attachment Charles Martinet's name is misspelled "Charles Martinee" in the credits of the Japanese version.
Mario Kart 64
1
Luigi, Peach, Toad and Wario's voices were changed in the Western releases of the game from those used in the original Japanese version, which were already in English done by non-English speaking voice actors. It's thought that Nintendo of America felt the original voice clips did not properly represent the characters, or were simply of poor quality. However, the original Japanese voices were later used in the first two Mario Party games in the worldwide releases, as well as Mario Kart: Super Circuit.
Super Mario Galaxy 2
subdirectory_arrow_right Super Mario Galaxy (Game)
1
Attachment Yoshi was originally planned to appear in Super Mario Galaxy, and was featured in proposal documents for the game from 2005. However, he was removed due to the developers thinking that "it would've been too much all at once." They said that, "if you're going to put Yoshi in a game, he has to be a main element, but [Super Mario Galaxy] had spherical land forms and gravity shifts and lots of elements that were entirely new" and, "Even if we had used him, we might have only been able to use him on a single stage."

Despite this, it was decided early on in the development of Super Mario Galaxy 2 to include Yoshi in the game, because his control scheme could act as a new main element of a new game and a "multiplication" of the elements from the previous game. The Wiimote controls for Yoshi were also formed early in development, with Shigeru Miyamoto taking pride in the tongue pulling mechanic used for eating fruit, fighting enemies and flipping switches, saying it "isn’t like anything you've ever experienced before." The rest of Yoshi's controls were shaped based on internal feedback from "everybody's love" for Yoshi, listing the development team, Mario Club Inc., and Nintendo of America as primary influencers for what the image of Yoshi should be, but tried to avoid making him too powerful. The developers also had composer Kazumi Totaka record new voice lines for Yoshi for the first time in ten years, and was reported as feeling "a little uneasy" and worried that Yoshi would sound like he had aged, but these were not concerns to them and the recordings were used in the game.
person gamemaster1991 calendar_month December 14, 2013
Mario Party
1
Some of the game's voice clips are copied from the Japanese version of Mario Kart 64. This is true for all versions of the game.
Super Smash Bros.
1
Attachment Charles Martinet is misspelled as Charles Martinee in the game's credits.
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