Ultimately, the English dub of Tokyo Ghoul: re is a fascinating failure. It is not a bad dub in the traditional sense—Austin Tindle, Jeannie Tirado (as Touka), and Brandon McInnis (as Urie) deliver career-best performances, often surpassing the emotional restraint of the original cast. But a dub cannot fix a broken clock. The sequel’s cardinal sin was compression: reducing a labyrinthine character study into a highlight reel of fights and twists. The English dub, by forcing the actors to sprint through that compressed timeline, makes the wound visible.
The English dub of Tokyo Ghoul:re —the third and final season of the Tokyo Ghoul anime—was produced by (now part of Crunchyroll ). It debuted as a "SimulDub" on April 3, 2018, with episodes initially releasing the same day as the Japanese broadcast. 🎭 Main Voice Cast Tokyo Ghoul-re -Dub-
The introduction of the Quinx Squad brings a new dynamic to the series. They are a dysfunctional family led by Haise. Ultimately, the English dub of Tokyo Ghoul: re
This essay argues that the Tokyo Ghoul: re dub functions as a tragic mirror of the series itself: a collection of brilliant, screaming fragments trying to form a coherent whole. By examining the vocal casting of Ken Kaneki (Haise Sasaki), the translation of the series’ unique linguistic tics, and the atmospheric dissonance of the sound design, we see how the dub inadvertently reveals the sequel’s core failure—the loss of the visceral, body-horror intimacy that defined the original Tokyo Ghoul . The sequel’s cardinal sin was compression: reducing a
The Unsettled Ghoul: How the English Dub of Tokyo Ghoul: re Exposes the Fractured Identity of a Sequel