Yu-Gi-Oh! (partially found alternate English dub of anime series; early 2000s): Difference between revisions

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'''''Yu-Gi-Oh!''''', known as '''''Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters''''' in Japan, is the second animated adaptation of Kazuki Takahashi's manga series of the same name. Produced by Studio Gallop, the anime ran for 224 episodes between April 2000 and September 2004 on TV Tokyo in Japan. A well known English version was produced by the New York City-based 4Kids Entertainment between September 2001 and June 2006.
'''''Yu-Gi-Oh!''''', known as ''Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters'' in Japan, is the second animated adaptation of Kazuki Takahashi's manga series of the same name. Produced by Studio Gallop, the anime ran for 224 episodes between April 2000 and September 2004 on TV Tokyo in Japan. A well known English version was produced by the New York City-based 4Kids Entertainment between September 2001 and June 2006.


Another English dub was produced exclusively for the South East Asian market. Recorded at Voiceovers Unlimited and Yuan Production Holdings in Singapore, this dub was produced for IMMG and MediaLink Pacific.<ref>[http://aidb.com/?ltype=list&cat=name&target=v&offset=150&order=&company_no=18355 AWN's Animation Industry Database] Retrieved October 27, 2017.</ref><ref>[http://immg.co.id/immg-sing/detail-merchandising.html immg] Retrieved October 27, 2017.</ref> The dub starred Chuck Powers, Dwayne Tan, Christian J. Lee, Alison Lester and Brian Zimmerman. Powers directed the first two seasons, while Zimmerman handled the third.<ref>[http://singaporeanyugioh.webs.com/voiceactors.htm Voice Actors - Singaporean Yu-Gi-Oh!] Retrieved October 27, 2017.</ref> It's not known how many episodes were dubbed, though an interview with one of the voice actors mentions that production ceased about 80 episodes from the finale.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20130726121717/http://www.freewebs.com:80/singaporeanonepiece/aninterviewwithzoro.htm An Interview with Zoro! - The Singaporean One Piece Dub!] Retrieved October 27, 2017.</ref> Unlike the 4Kids dub, this version was presented without censorship.
Another English dub was produced exclusively for the South East Asian market. Recorded at Voiceovers Unlimited and Yuan Production Holdings in Singapore, this dub was produced for IMMG and MediaLink Pacific.<ref>[http://aidb.com/?ltype=list&cat=name&target=v&offset=150&order=&company_no=18355 AWN's Animation Industry Database] Retrieved October 27, 2017.</ref><ref>[http://immg.co.id/immg-sing/detail-merchandising.html immg] Retrieved October 27, 2017.</ref> The dub starred Chuck Powers, Dwayne Tan, Christian J. Lee, Alison Lester and Brian Zimmerman. Powers directed the first two seasons, while Zimmerman handled the third.<ref>[http://singaporeanyugioh.webs.com/voiceactors.htm Voice Actors - Singaporean Yu-Gi-Oh!] Retrieved October 27, 2017.</ref> It's not known how many episodes were dubbed, though an interview with one of the voice actors mentions that production ceased about 80 episodes from the finale.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20130726121717/http://www.freewebs.com:80/singaporeanonepiece/aninterviewwithzoro.htm An Interview with Zoro! - The Singaporean One Piece Dub!] Retrieved October 27, 2017.</ref> Unlike the 4Kids dub, this version was presented without censorship.

Revision as of 10:32, 29 October 2017

Yugioh duel monsters.jpg

Promotional art for the series.

Status: Partially Found

Yu-Gi-Oh!, known as Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters in Japan, is the second animated adaptation of Kazuki Takahashi's manga series of the same name. Produced by Studio Gallop, the anime ran for 224 episodes between April 2000 and September 2004 on TV Tokyo in Japan. A well known English version was produced by the New York City-based 4Kids Entertainment between September 2001 and June 2006.

Another English dub was produced exclusively for the South East Asian market. Recorded at Voiceovers Unlimited and Yuan Production Holdings in Singapore, this dub was produced for IMMG and MediaLink Pacific.[1][2] The dub starred Chuck Powers, Dwayne Tan, Christian J. Lee, Alison Lester and Brian Zimmerman. Powers directed the first two seasons, while Zimmerman handled the third.[3] It's not known how many episodes were dubbed, though an interview with one of the voice actors mentions that production ceased about 80 episodes from the finale.[4] Unlike the 4Kids dub, this version was presented without censorship.

This dub aired on Channel i and Kids Central in Singapore as well as Cartoon Network Asia in various countries.[5][6][7] Multiple home video releases are known to exist. A series of VCDs were released in the Philippines by Ban Kee Trading, in Malaysia by PMP Entertainment, and by IMMG in Singapore.[8][9][10][11][12] However, all releases have since gone out-of-print and are now difficult to obtain. Clips and a handful of full episodes have shown up online.

Cast

  • Chuck Powers - Yugi Muto, Yami Yugi, Bakura, Yami Bakura, Grandpa, Marik Ishtar, Yami Marik, Shadi, Bonz, Gozaburo Kaiba, Crump (Big 5), Johnson (Big 5)
  • Brian Zimmerman - Tristan Taylor, Maximillian Pegasus, Weevil Underwood, Rex Raptor, Bandit Keith, Isono, Arthur Hawkins, Labyrinth Brothers, Player Killer, Arkana, Loomis, Gansley (Big 5), Nesbitt (Big 5), Lector (Big 5), narrator
  • Dwayne Tan - Joey Wheeler, Saruwatari, Croquet, Mako Tsunami
  • Christian J. Lee - Seto Kaiba, Mokuba Kaiba, Duke Devlin
  • Alison Lester - Tea Gardner, Mai Valentine, Ishizu Ishtar, Serenity Wheeler, Rebecca Hawkins
  • Taaz Gill - Marik Ishtar, Yami Marik
  • Chio Su-Ping - Noah Kaiba[13]

Gallery

Surfaced content

Series intro.

Series ending theme.

Episode 33.

Episode 34.

Episode 35.

Episode 36.

Episode 37.

Episode 38.

Episode 39.

Episode 40.

Episode 41.

Episode 42.

Episode 43.

Episode 44.


Episode clip.

Episode clip.

See also

  • Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters ALEX - The sole piece of Yu-Gi-Oh! animation not released in Japan unsurprisingly has a lost Japanese audio track.
  • Yu-Gi-Oh! Zexal - The third Yu-Gi-Oh! spinoff series received an unreleased English dub produced in Los Angeles.

References