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  • Voice Acting
  • Voice acting
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  • Voice acting is a term used to describe acting, usually for animated films, where the actor's voice is the only thing present, not his/her image.
  • The next Bloons Tower Defense game will feature full voice acting. Monkeys, bloons, and anything else that talks during cutscenes will use voice acting. Towers will also have "catchphrases" they will say when purchased or upgraded. Some bloons (and many bosses) may have things they say during rounds as well. Commentary Mode features sarcastic commentary between and during rounds, which is eventually revealed to be given by the Commentator Bloon.
  • Voice acting is the art of providing voices for animated characters (including those in feature films, television series, animated shorts, and video games) and radio and audio dramas and comedy, doing voice-overs in radio and television commercials, audio dramas, dubbed foreign language films, video games, puppet shows, and amusement rides. A list of voice acting by one voice actor, one director, or on one subject, is sometimes called a voxography.
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abstract
  • Voice acting is a term used to describe acting, usually for animated films, where the actor's voice is the only thing present, not his/her image.
  • The next Bloons Tower Defense game will feature full voice acting. Monkeys, bloons, and anything else that talks during cutscenes will use voice acting. Towers will also have "catchphrases" they will say when purchased or upgraded. Some bloons (and many bosses) may have things they say during rounds as well. Commentary Mode features sarcastic commentary between and during rounds, which is eventually revealed to be given by the Commentator Bloon.
  • Voice acting is the art of providing voices for animated characters (including those in feature films, television series, animated shorts, and video games) and radio and audio dramas and comedy, doing voice-overs in radio and television commercials, audio dramas, dubbed foreign language films, video games, puppet shows, and amusement rides. Performers are called voice actors, voice actresses or voice artists, and may also involve singing, although a second voice actor is sometimes cast as the character's singing voice. Voice artists are also used to record the individual sample fragments played back by a computer in an automated announcement system. At its simplest, this is just a short phrase which is played back as necessary, e.g. the Mind the gap announcement introduced by London Underground in 1969. In a more complicated system such as a speaking clock, the voice artist usually doesn't actually record 1440 different announcements, one for each minute of the day, or even 60 (one for each minute of the hour), instead the announcement is re-assembled from fragments such as "minutes past" "eighteen" and "pm". For example, the word "twelve" can be used for both "Twelve O'Clock" and "Six Twelve". So far voice artists have been preferred to speech synthesis because they sound more natural to the listener. A list of voice acting by one voice actor, one director, or on one subject, is sometimes called a voxography.