
Troff: I, honestly, have no idea where this came from. Xananab: Dan the man has done quite a few strange voices on The Simpsons, voices I think would do this oddity justice. Hollander) was pretty much his only role.

I looked up his roles on Behind the Voice Actors and this (along with Dr. This guy could have some serious future ahead of him when it comes to voicing big guys. Jess Harnell and Diedrich Bader were both shot down and, the more I looked at this guy's face, the more I thought of Ron Perlman's more thuggish characters. Ninja Kong: Again, I struggled with this one. Where better to turn for intimidating voicework than Luke Skywalker himself? Karate Kong: I actually had a bit of a hard time with this character, going through guys like Wally Wingert and Sab Shimono, but I couldn't imagine any of them sounding threatening. He's done a ton of deep-voiced characters and I think that'd work here, too. And just look at Greg and his dreadlocks. Kitted out in extensive cyborg prostheses, the new Raiden expresses his limitless angst in the best way possible: through bouts of efficiently showy violence to put Solid Snake (or Adam Jensen) to shame.Dread Kong: Okay, we all knew that we needed a black guy for this role. Now: Eidos' Deus Ex: Human Revolution borrowed liberally from Metal Gear's stealth-action playbook, so it's only fair that the series steal a little bit back-such as turning to a lithe, cybernetically-enhanced badass for the protagonist of the latest installment, Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance. Did you love the lengthy Codec angst-fests with his two-dimensional girlfriend? The openly stupid nude scenes? Oh, it was all gold.

Just ask players who got partway through the series' first PS2 iteration to find control shifting to this whiny, decidedly sub-Solid Snake longhair. Then: Metal Gear is always good for fine-tuned gameplay, labyrinthine plot twists and the odd controller-hurling burst of frustration.

Raiden (Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty/Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance)
