Voice Changer for Enshrouded Co-op: Full Setup Guide
Enshrouded drops you into Embervale as the Flameborn — the last hope of a dying civilization — and immediately asks your squad to hold the Flame Altar, push into fog that kills lesser beings, and fight back an ancient corruption that has swallowed most of the world. The fantasy survival co-op from Keen Games is built on atmosphere: the Shroud is genuinely unsettling, the lore is layered, and the world rewards explorers who engage with it.
What it does not provide is distinct voice work for your party of four. That is where an enshrouded voice changer earns its place.
This guide covers how to build voice presets for each party role, set up Shroud encounter atmosphere modes, configure Discord co-op audio, and keep everything EAC-compatible on Windows 10 and 11.
TL;DR
| Use case | Preset direction | Key setting |
|---|---|---|
| Flameborn narrator | Epic baritone, +0 pitch | Wide reverb, slow compression |
| Warrior | Gruff, -2 to -3 semitones | Low-cut at 200 Hz, boost 500 Hz |
| Mage | Scholarly, +1 semitone | Presence boost 3–5 kHz, dry |
| Healer | Warm, +0 to +1 semitone | Low-mid warmth, light reverb |
| Shroud encounter | Eldritch whisper | Low-pass 4 kHz + pitch mod |
| Discord co-op | Full low-latency audio capture pass | Transform mic as Discord input |
Why Voice Changes Matter in Enshrouded
Enshrouded’s survival game design is denser than most of its genre peers. The world has a named history, faction lore, and enemy types that carry their own mythological weight. When your party descends into a Shroud ruin, the pressure is atmospheric — distant howls, limited visibility, resources draining against the fog timer.
Most squads communicate in flat, neutral voice: “need wood,” “mob left,” “healer down.” This is fine for coordination. It is not fine for the dozen moments per session when the game earns a bit of theatre — the first Shroud boss encounter, a lore vault discovery, a base that finally looks like it belongs in Embervale.
A voice changer in co-op Enshrouded lets each player inhabit a role more fully, adds texture to Discord callouts, and transforms the Shroud from a survival hazard into something genuinely eerie when the atmosphere presets kick in.
Understanding Enshrouded’s Audio Architecture
Before building presets it helps to understand how Enshrouded handles audio on Windows.
Enshrouded uses standard Windows audio capture for in-game proximity voice (if enabled) and does not hook into the audio subsystem in any way that would conflict with voice processing tools. All voice chat in practice happens through Discord, where the game has no involvement at all.
The relevant Windows subsystem is low-latency audio capture — Windows Audio Session API — which handles audio at the session level before any application sees the microphone signal. A low-latency audio capture-safe voice changer intercepts at this layer, transforms the signal, and presents a virtual microphone device to Discord and any other app. No kernel driver is involved, which keeps things fully compatible with Easy Anti-Cheat.
EAC Compatibility: What You Actually Need to Know
Easy Anti-Cheat protects Enshrouded’s session integrity by scanning for unauthorized modifications to game memory, hooks into game process code, and kernel-level drivers that could enable cheating.
Voice processing runs entirely outside this scope:
- Audio capture happens in user-mode Windows processes, not inside the Enshrouded game process
- low-latency audio capture-based voice changers install no kernel-mode drivers
- No game file is modified
- EAC has no visibility into the Windows audio session layer
The practical result: any voice changer running through low-latency audio capture is EAC-compatible with Enshrouded. VoxBooster operates on exactly this model — low-latency audio capture interception with no kernel driver — on Windows 10 and 11.
The Three Core Party Voice Presets
Enshrouded’s skill tree groups players into three functional archetypes. Voice presets should reflect these roles so that party callouts carry immediate character weight.
Warrior — Gruff and Battle-Scarred
The Warrior is your frontline — shield bearer, melee damage, the voice that says “I’ll go first” before anyone else finishes the sentence.
Preset target: A gruff, slightly raspy baritone that suggests someone who has been fighting since before the Shroud. Not theatrical — believable.
Settings:
- Pitch shift: -2 to -3 semitones
- Low-cut filter: roll off below 100 Hz to reduce mic rumble
- Presence boost: 500–800 Hz range for the “chest” quality
- Compression: medium ratio, moderate attack — smooths peaks without killing dynamics
- Reverb: minimal, just a whisper of a cave or stone room
Mage — Scholarly and Precise
The Mage builds arcane towers, summons constructs, and reads the Shroud’s behavior where others see only fog. Their voice should carry the slightly detached quality of someone who is always half-thinking about a problem you cannot see.
Preset target: Clear, mid-range, precise enunciation — the voice that provides exposition naturally.
Settings:
- Pitch shift: +1 semitone (adds a slight clarity without thinning)
- Presence boost: 3–5 kHz for intelligibility and academic sharpness
- Reverb: dry to minimal — Mage voices read better without ambience
- No low-frequency boost — the scholarly quality lives in upper mids
Healer — Warm and Present
The Healer holds the party together: resurrection tokens, buff auras, the constant “watch your HP” callouts. Their voice needs to cut through in Discord while still feeling warm — not a sergeant, a medic.
Preset target: Warm, slightly forward in the mix, conversational authority without volume.
Settings:
- Pitch shift: 0 to +1 semitone
- Low-mid warmth: gentle boost at 250–400 Hz
- Light reverb: just enough to suggest the Healer is calling from nearby cover
- Compression: gentle, keeps the voice present without sounding processed
The Flameborn Narrator Preset
If your group has a designated lore-reader, storyteller, or anyone who narrates what the party has found in a ruin — the Flameborn narrator voice earns its keep.
Enshrouded’s opening sequence gives you the tone: epic, deliberate, the voice of the last survivor of something great. This is not a character voice for combat — it is for lore moments, base-naming ceremonies, or the opener at a session.
Preset target: A full, resonant baritone with a sense of space around it.
Settings:
- Pitch shift: 0 (use your own pitch as foundation, or -1 for more gravitas)
- Wide reverb: long pre-delay (30–50ms), large room size — sounds like reading in a vault
- Slow compression: lets natural sentence dynamics breathe
- EQ: boost 120–250 Hz for fullness, cut 4–8 kHz to reduce brightness
Bind this to a single hotkey and use it sparingly. It hits harder when it is reserved for actual lore moments rather than background banter.
Shroud Encounter Atmosphere Voice Effects
The Shroud is Enshrouded’s central environmental threat — a corrupting fog that drains life, mutates creatures, and hides the worst of what Embervale has become. Narratively, it is the game’s antagonist environment. Sonically, it should feel like that.
When your party enters a major Shroud zone — a dungeon entrance, a boss chamber, a corrupted ancient site — switching to an atmosphere preset changes the emotional register of every callout.
The Eldritch Whisper Preset
Goal: Makes your voice sound like it belongs to the Shroud — half-heard, unsettling, present but distant.
Settings:
- Low-pass filter: hard cut above 4 kHz (removes clarity, leaves only the dark frequency body)
- Pitch modulation: very slight oscillation (±0.3 semitones at 0.3–0.5 Hz) — adds organic unsteadiness
- Distortion/saturation: hairline, just enough to add texture without intelligibility loss
- Long reverb tail: 2–3 second decay, high diffusion
- Volume: slightly lower than your normal voice level — Shroud voices don’t shout
Usage: Assign to a dedicated hotkey. Switch in when the party hits a Shroud entrance. Switch back to your role preset at the boss door so tactical callouts stay clear.
The Corrupted Entity Variant
For players who encounter lore-significant Shroud enemies and want to voice their lines mid-session (solo DM-ing a co-op story session):
- Pitch shift: -4 semitones
- Ring modulation: subtle — adds an inhuman harmonic texture
- Heavy reverb with long pre-delay
- Bitcrusher: light reduction in bit depth suggests corrupted transmission quality
Discord Co-op Squad Configuration
Most Enshrouded squads run Discord for voice chat — in-game proximity voice exists but Discord’s reliability, noise suppression, and push-to-talk are preferred.
Routing the Voice Changer Through Discord
- Install your voice changer and verify it creates a virtual microphone device in Windows Sound settings
- In Discord: Settings → Voice & Video → Input Device → select the virtual microphone
- Test with Discord’s mic test — you should hear your transformed voice in playback
- Disable Discord’s own noise suppression (Krisp) if your voice changer handles noise cancellation — stacking two noise processors degrades audio quality
Managing Multiple Presets During a Session
Hotkey management is the operational core of co-op voice changing:
- Assign each preset to a function key (F1 Warrior, F2 Mage, F3 Healer, F4 Narrator, F5 Shroud Whisper)
- Use a physical button pad or macropad if you want physical switching without reaching for function keys
- Keep the Shroud atmosphere preset on a non-adjacent key to avoid accidental activation during a combat callout
Push-to-Talk vs. Open Mic Considerations
Voice changing works on both configurations, but open mic benefits from:
- Noise suppression tuned to your environment before the session
- Slightly higher output gain — transformed voices can be quieter than raw input
- A consistent speaking distance from the microphone (3–6 inches)
Push-to-talk is simpler — the transform only runs when the mic is active, reducing CPU overhead slightly.
Streaming Your Enshrouded Session: OBS Setup
If you stream or record Enshrouded co-op sessions, capturing your transformed voice in OBS requires one additional routing step.
In OBS:
- Add an Audio Input Capture source
- Select the virtual microphone your voice changer creates as the device
- OBS captures the transformed signal — exactly what your party hears in Discord
This means your stream audio reflects your character voice rather than your raw voice, which adds production quality without any live post-processing. low-latency audio capture routing ensures the transform is applied before OBS reads the signal.
Comparison: Voice Effect Approaches for Enshrouded
| Approach | Processing latency | EAC safe | Preset switching | AI persona |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| low-latency audio capture voice changer (VoxBooster) | <15ms DSP / 80–150ms AI | Yes | Hotkey, instant | Yes |
| Hardware pitch pedal | <5ms | Yes | Manual knob | No |
| DAW plugin chain | 20–60ms | Yes | Manual preset load | No |
| Browser-based voice changer | 100–400ms | Yes | Web UI only | Limited |
VoxBooster’s low-latency audio capture architecture with sub-300ms AI processing is the right fit for Enshrouded co-op: no kernel driver means EAC compatibility, hotkey switching keeps voice role changes inside gameplay rhythm, and AI-based fantasy persona generation handles the character voices that go beyond simple pitch shift.
Building Your First Session Voice Profile
A practical starting point for a new Enshrouded squad:
Step 1 — Assign roles before the session. Know who is Warrior, Mage, Healer. The voice preset should match the build, not be chosen arbitrarily.
Step 2 — Build presets before the session. Spend 15 minutes in voice changer settings before the session starts, not during. Test each preset by speaking actual callouts: “watch the left,” “taking fire,” “need a heal.”
Step 3 — Set hotkey bindings. Pick keys that do not conflict with Enshrouded’s default bindings. Function keys and numpad keys are clean choices.
Step 4 — Test through Discord. Have one party member listen while you cycle presets. Confirm each voice is recognizable and intelligible at normal call volume.
Step 5 — Designate the Shroud key. Agree on which player activates the Shroud atmosphere preset and at which moments — boss rooms, major Shroud dungeon entries, story-significant finds.
Common Setup Mistakes and How to Fix Them
Transformed voice is too quiet in Discord. Increase output gain in the voice changer by 3–5 dB. Transformation can reduce perceived volume compared to raw input.
Warrior voice sounds muddy, not gruff. The pitch shift is too deep combined with a boost at 200–400 Hz. Reduce to -2 semitones and add a high-pass filter at 120 Hz to clear the mud.
Shroud whisper is unintelligible. The low-pass cutoff is too aggressive. Move it from 2 kHz to 4 kHz. Intelligibility needs the 2–4 kHz range intact.
Echo or reverb stacking in Discord. Discord’s built-in echo cancellation is processing the reverb from your voice changer as ambient echo. Disable Discord’s echo cancellation and let the voice changer manage reverb entirely.
EAC flagging or Enshrouded launch issues. This is not the voice changer — voice changers do not interact with EAC. Check for other software running kernel drivers (audio interfaces with signed drivers are fine, but certain older utility software is not).
Enshrouded Voice Changer FAQ
See the FAQ section at the top of this post for detailed answers to common questions.
The short version: low-latency audio capture voice changers are fully EAC-compatible with Enshrouded, Discord routing takes three steps, DSP effects add under 15ms of latency, and your presets carry over to any other co-op survival game your squad plays next.
Enshrouded rewards squads that lean into its world — the Flameborn mythology, the Shroud’s weight, the sense that Embervale was once something worth saving. A voice setup built around that world makes every session land with more gravity, without adding anything to your system that does not belong there.
Related guides: Voice Changer for D&D — AI Voice Changer for Games — Discord Voice Filters — Best Voice Changer for Discord — Voice Changer for VR