Voice Acting in The Legend of Zelda Series


 * See also: List of Voice Actors

As in the grand majority of video games, voice acting is an integral part of the plot, providing a human-like interface and relatable sound to in-game characters and beings. is known for its overall lack of voice acting. However, small voice clips recorded by Japanese voice actors and actresses are used for main and non-player characters since. Since these voice clips contain few legitimate words, most of them are kept for all language releases. Non-canon media occasionally contains full voice acting, which is dubbed over for different language releases.

Link
Link is perhaps the most famous in the franchise in terms of voice acting. For the most part, Link does not speak, but grunts, exclaims, and makes other throttal sounds during different situations, whether it be in battle or in conversation. Link has yet to receive proper voice acting, and does not even speak in the most recent installments in the series. However, the exclamation Link provides during battle is in fact voiced by real human voices.

Nobuyuki Hiyama voiced Adult Link in, , , and. He is also credited in voicing Fierce Deity Link in, as well as and  in the. Because Adult Link and Child Link in require different speech registers given their age, a unique voice actor was used for each era of Link's life in the game. Fujiko Takimoto is the original voice actor that voiced Young Link, Deku Link and Zora Link in, and Super Smash Bros. Melee, as well as later young incarnations of Link from ,  and the GBA remake of. She also voiced in the Soul Series.

Link was given much more expression in, given the art style and the storyline, and hence was given a new voice than that of. Sachi Matsumoto is the voice actress who voiced Link and Aryll in, Link and Shadow Link in , Link in , and Toon Link in. She also voiced the Skull Kid in. is a title that received yet another voice actor by the name of Akira Sasanuma to portray Link, also in Super Smash Bros. Brawl. Takashi Ōhara voiced Link in SS undefined. Mitsuki Saiga voiced Link (as well as Ravio, due to his relationship to Link) in.

In non-canon media, Jonathan Potts is the voice actor that portrays Link in, while Jeffrey Rath provides actual speech to the young hero during the infamous cutscenes of the Philips CD-i titles, and. In, he was voiced by Yūki Kaji.

Princess Zelda
In terms of Princess Zelda, the list of voice actors is much smaller, mainly because Jun Mizusawa provided voice acting for the princess not only in, but , Super Smash Bros. Melee, and Super Smash Bros. Brawl. Mizusawa is also credited with the voicing of Sheik in. changes to Hikari Tachibana as the voice of Princess Zelda. Yu Shimamura voiced Zelda in SS -, and reprises the role in the Japanese version of, this time speaking actual words. In other versions of, Zelda has been dubbed by Patricia Summersett (English), Jessica Ángeles (Mexican Spanish), Nerea Alfonso (European Spanish), Adeline Chetail (French), and Julia Casper (German). Ayumi Fujimura gives her voice in. In terms of non-canon media, Cyndy Preston provides Zelda with legitimate words in The Legend of Zelda TV series, as does Bonnie Jean Wilbur in the Philips CD-i titles, Link: The Faces of Evil and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon. In Hyrule Warriors, she is voiced by Saori Seto.

Ganon
The voice acting for Ganon is even more slim, given his narrow span of appearance time in every Zelda title to date. For the most part, the voice of Ganon in the console titles is Takashi Nagasako, and Len Carlson takes over the voice of the evil king in the TV series.

Midna
Akiko Koumoto is the Japanese voice actress who voiced the Twilight Princess character Midna. Strangely, Midna only speaks gibberish. Some have been able to make words out of Midna's gibberish, although these are strings of words without any meaning. It has been speculated that Midna's speech is indeed English, but with all the words mixed and reformatted to make it sound like gibberish.

Other Voices in the TV Series
Because The Legend of Zelda TV series enabled voice acting across the board, characters like Link, Zelda, and even objects like the Triforce of Power and Wisdom are given speech where they otherwise would not, had it been a video game. Elizabeth Hanna and Allan Stewart Coates are the actors who give words to the Triforce of Power and Wisdom, respectively, and Colin Fox is the man providing the voice to King Harkinian.

Other Voices in the Philips CD-i Titles
Other voice actors credited with contributing their words to characters from Link: The Faces of Evil and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon are Jeffrey Nelson, Mark Berry, Natalie Brown, Karen Grace, Josie McElroy, Marguerite Scott and Paul Wann.