Voice Changer for PUBG Mobile: Stay Anonymous
Using a voice changer for PUBG Mobile is one of those things that sounds straightforward until you start looking into it. PUBG Mobile is a phone game — there is no Windows client — and Android does not give third-party apps the kind of system-level audio access that makes real-time voice changers work cleanly. So the answer is more nuanced than “just install this app,” and most guides skip the nuance entirely.
This post covers the realistic options: playing PUBG Mobile on PC through an Android emulator and routing a proper Windows voice changer into it, using Discord voice with your squad from a PC while you play on your phone, and what the on-device Android options actually look like (spoiler: limited). You will get a comparison table, exact setup steps, and honest notes on what works and what does not.
TL;DR
- PUBG Mobile has no PC client — voice changing on PC requires an Android emulator.
- Route a Windows voice changer through the emulator’s custom audio input for in-game voice effects.
- Discord alongside mobile play is the easiest path if you already coordinate with a squad there.
- On-device Android voice changers exist but are unreliable for real-time use; emulator method is far more stable.
- VoxBooster works via WASAPI virtual mic — no kernel driver, anti-cheat safe.
Why PUBG Mobile Voice Changing Is Different from Other Games
Most voice-changer guides assume you are playing a Windows game like Valorant, CS2, or Fortnite. Those games run natively on Windows, so you simply set your voice changer’s virtual microphone as the input device and you are done in two minutes.
PUBG Mobile is developed for Android and iOS. Krafton does not publish a native Windows version — the official PC experience is through their own lightweight emulator called PUBG Mobile PC Emulator (also called GameLoop), though many players prefer third-party emulators for performance reasons. On a real phone, your options for intercepting audio before it hits PUBG Mobile’s voice channel are quite limited without rooting the device.
This is not a problem without a solution. It is just a problem that requires choosing the right approach for how you play.
The Three Realistic Methods
Method 1: Android Emulator on PC with a Windows Voice Changer
This is the highest-quality approach if you play PUBG Mobile on your PC. You run the game inside an Android emulator — BlueStacks, LDPlayer, or PUBG’s own GameLoop — and tell the emulator to use your voice changer’s virtual microphone as its audio input. The emulator passes that audio into PUBG Mobile exactly as if you had spoken into a microphone, so in-game voice chat picks up your altered voice.
The advantages here are significant: you get all the reliability and low latency of a proper Windows voice changer, access to full AI neural voice conversion features, soundboard integration, and noise suppression — the works. Emulator performance has improved enormously in 2025-2026; on a mid-range PC you lose maybe 5-10% frame rate versus native Android on a flagship phone.
Method 2: Discord Party Chat from PC, Phone Stays on Game
If your squad uses Discord to coordinate (common in competitive play), you do not need to touch PUBG Mobile’s in-game voice at all. You run PUBG Mobile on your phone, mute in-game voice, and join your Discord voice channel from a Windows PC with your voice changer active. Your teammates hear the changed voice over Discord; you communicate normally while playing on the phone.
This is arguably the most practical setup for players who already use Discord for squad play. It requires zero configuration on the Android side and takes advantage of Discord’s superior voice quality and features.
Method 3: On-Device Android Voice Changer
Several apps on the Google Play Store claim real-time voice changing. The honest picture: they work by routing audio through an accessibility service or virtual audio buffer, which introduces latency (often 300-800 ms), and the system may restrict microphone access for security reasons depending on Android version. Results vary wildly by device and Android version.
For casual fun — prank calls, non-competitive social voice chat — they can be amusing. For PUBG Mobile where voice timing matters for callouts, the latency makes them impractical. We focus on Methods 1 and 2 throughout this guide.
Comparison Table: Voice Changer Methods for PUBG Mobile
| Method | Voice Quality | Latency | Effort to Set Up | Works On Phone? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emulator + Windows voice changer | Excellent | Under 20 ms | Medium (one-time) | No — PC required |
| Discord from PC + phone gameplay | Excellent | Under 20 ms | Low | Phone plays, PC does audio |
| On-device Android app | Poor to fair | 300-800 ms | Low | Yes |
| No voice changer (vanilla) | Native mic quality | Near zero | None | Yes |
What Is an Android Emulator (and Which One Should You Use)?
An Android emulator is a program that creates a virtual Android device on your Windows PC. It runs a full Android environment — apps, system, audio stack — inside a window on your desktop. From PUBG Mobile’s perspective, it is running on a normal Android phone.
The main options for PUBG Mobile in 2026:
BlueStacks 5 — the most popular, widest compatibility, clear settings menus. Most guides reference it. Has a dedicated “PUBG Mobile” game mode that pre-configures controls.
LDPlayer 9 — slightly lighter on RAM, good performance on lower-end hardware. Clean audio routing settings.
GameLoop (PUBG Mobile PC Emulator) — Krafton’s own emulator, officially endorsed. Less flexible for audio input customization but the most “official” option.
MuMu Player 12 — solid performance, good for devices with lower VRAM. Less popular than BlueStacks but well-maintained.
For voice changer purposes, BlueStacks 5 and LDPlayer 9 are the easiest to configure because their audio input settings are clearly labeled in the GUI. GameLoop works but requires a registry edit to point audio input at a custom device, which is less beginner-friendly.
Step-by-Step: Emulator + VoxBooster Setup
Step 1: Install and Configure VoxBooster
Download and install VoxBooster on your Windows PC. Open the app. In the Input section, select your real microphone (the one you speak into). In the Output section, you will see “VoxBooster Virtual Mic” — this is the virtual audio device that other applications will pick up.
Choose your voice effect. You can use pitch shift for a simple gender swap, one of the preset voice profiles, or AI neural voice conversion to clone a specific voice type. See all available effects.
Activate the voice changer using the toggle or the assigned hotkey. Speak into your real mic and verify in the VoxBooster UI that the input meter is moving. The output going to the virtual mic is the altered voice.
Step 2: Install Your Emulator
Download BlueStacks 5 from the official BlueStacks site. Install it and complete the initial setup. Sign into a Google account when prompted (required to access the Play Store). Download PUBG Mobile from the Play Store inside BlueStacks, sign in with your PUBG account, and launch the game once to confirm it runs correctly.
Step 3: Point the Emulator at VoxBooster’s Virtual Mic
In BlueStacks 5:
- Click the Settings gear icon in the right sidebar.
- Go to Audio.
- Under Microphone, open the dropdown.
- Select VoxBooster Virtual Mic (it appears here because Windows sees it as a standard audio device).
- Click Save.
In LDPlayer 9:
- Open LDPlayer settings (gear icon top right).
- Navigate to Audio.
- Set the microphone input to VoxBooster Virtual Mic.
- Apply and restart LDPlayer if prompted.
Step 4: Verify Inside PUBG Mobile
Launch PUBG Mobile inside the emulator. Go to Settings > Audio and make sure voice chat is enabled and microphone permission is granted for the emulator. Join a lobby or a match with a friend and ask them to confirm they hear the changed voice. If they hear nothing, check that the emulator’s microphone permission is allowed at the Windows level (Windows Settings > Privacy > Microphone).
Step 5: Set Up Hotkeys (Optional but Recommended)
VoxBooster supports global hotkeys for toggling effects on and off, switching presets, and triggering soundboard clips. You can assign keys that do not conflict with PUBG Mobile’s emulator keybindings — function keys (F9-F12) are usually safe. The soundboard feature lets you drop grenades sound effects, callout cues, or reaction sounds into voice chat with a single key press.
Step-by-Step: Discord Method
This setup takes about two minutes if you already have Discord installed.
- Install VoxBooster on your Windows PC and pick your voice effect.
- Open Discord on your PC. Go to User Settings > Voice & Video.
- Under Input Device, select VoxBooster Virtual Mic.
- Your squad joins a Discord voice channel. You join from your PC.
- Start PUBG Mobile on your Android phone. Mute in-game voice chat in PUBG settings (optional — prevents echo if you also enable phone mic on Discord).
- Play on your phone; communicate over Discord from your PC.
Your teammates hear your voice changer output through Discord. You hear them through your PC speakers or headset. Game audio from your phone plays through the phone’s speaker or earphones as usual.
This method is excellent for organized squads who already rely on Discord over in-game chat for clear, stable voice communication. It also lets you use Discord voice filters and push-to-talk independently of what PUBG Mobile is doing.
Voice Effects That Work Well for PUBG Mobile
Not every voice effect is equally useful in a competitive game. Here is a practical breakdown:
Robot voice — popular for the anonymity factor; teammates can still understand callouts clearly. Works great for squad play. See the dedicated robot voice guide.
Deep voice / male voice — lowers pitch significantly, sounds more authoritative. Good for players who want to sound older or more experienced. Minimal intelligibility impact.
Pitch shift up (female voice) — works well for privacy. Keep pitch shift moderate; too high and callouts become hard to parse quickly.
AI neural voice conversion — the most convincing effect. Transforms voice character, not just pitch. Takes a second or two to warm up on first load but runs with sub-10 ms latency once active.
Radio voice — adds the classic tactical radio crackle effect. Fun for themed squad play. Check the radio voice guide for settings.
Effects to avoid in competitive matches: heavy echo, reverb, or anything that smears consonants. You need teammates to understand “two in the building, north side” instantly. Distorted voice effects are better for casual or social lobbies.
A Note on PUBG Mobile Anti-Cheat
PUBG Mobile uses Battleye on the PC emulator side. Battleye is a kernel-level anti-cheat that scans for software injecting into the game process or reading game memory.
A voice changer that operates entirely at the Windows audio layer — routing sound through a standard virtual audio device registered with the OS — does not interact with the game client at all. VoxBooster uses WASAPI and registers a standard Windows audio device; it has no kernel driver and injects nothing into any process. From Battleye’s perspective, the emulator’s microphone input is just a regular mic.
The advice to be cautious about is running any software that hooks into the emulator’s process itself. Voice changers that work at the audio device level are categorically different from cheat tools that patch game memory. There are no documented ban cases from using audio routing tools of this type.
That said: always use voice effects for fun, privacy, or social play. Using voice changes to deceive or manipulate other players maliciously runs against the spirit of good sportsmanship, regardless of what the rules say.
Comparing VoxBooster to Other Options
Several voice changers exist for Windows. Voicemod and MorphVOX are the most-used alternatives. Here is how the emulator setup experience differs:
Voicemod — well-known brand, works fine with emulators using the same virtual mic routing. The free tier limits you to a rotating selection of effects; the paid tier gives full access. Interface is polished and beginner-friendly.
MorphVOX Pro — older software, stable. Limited AI voice conversion; mainly pitch/formant based. Works with emulators, slightly more complex setup.
Clownfish Voice Changer — free, installs at the Skype/system audio level. Works but can have compatibility issues with newer Windows versions and some emulators.
VoxBooster — WASAPI-based virtual mic, AI neural voice conversion, soundboard with hotkeys, noise suppression and speech-to-text in the same package. Sub-10 ms latency. 3-day free trial with no feature limits. Competitive on pricing against the subscription-only alternatives.
The main differentiator for the PUBG Mobile emulator use case is latency and how cleanly the virtual mic device appears to the emulator. VoxBooster’s virtual mic registers as a standard Windows audio device, which all major emulators recognize without additional drivers.
Troubleshooting Common Issues
Emulator shows no microphone input: Make sure Windows has granted the emulator microphone permission. Go to Windows Settings > Privacy & Security > Microphone > turn on “Let desktop apps access your microphone.” Restart the emulator.
Voice changer is active but teammates hear original voice: The emulator is using the wrong input. Double-check the emulator audio settings and confirm VoxBooster Virtual Mic is selected, not your real microphone. Also verify VoxBooster’s voice changer toggle is on, not just the app being open.
High latency or audio crackling: Make sure VoxBooster’s WASAPI mode matches your system’s sample rate. In Windows Sound settings, set all audio devices to the same sample rate (48000 Hz is standard). Emulators sometimes reset audio sample rates — check after each emulator update.
Echo during Discord method: If you have your phone near your PC, the phone’s mic may pick up Discord audio from your PC speakers. Use headphones on your PC so Discord audio stays in the headset, not in the room.
BlueStacks cannot find VoxBooster Virtual Mic: Restart VoxBooster first, then restart BlueStacks. The virtual mic device registers with Windows at VoxBooster startup; BlueStacks enumerates devices at launch, so order matters.
Low-Latency Voice Changing: Why It Matters in Gaming
A voice changer that adds 300 ms of delay is not just annoying — it breaks the conversational rhythm that squad coordination depends on. If your callout arrives half a second after you said it, teammates may have already made the wrong decision.
This is why the emulator-plus-Windows-voice-changer method is so much more practical than on-device Android apps. Windows WASAPI audio processing, when implemented correctly, keeps end-to-end latency well under 30 ms — usually under 10 ms for the voice transformation step itself. You can read more about how latency is measured and what to look for in the low-latency voice changer guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you use a voice changer in PUBG Mobile?
Yes, but method depends on how you play. On PC via an Android emulator like BlueStacks, you can route a Windows voice changer into the emulator’s microphone input. On a real phone, voice changing is limited to Discord or party chat — there is no practical on-device real-time voice changer for Android.
Does PUBG Mobile ban players for using voice changers?
PUBG Mobile’s anti-cheat targets gameplay cheats, not audio tools. A voice changer that works at the OS audio level — like routing a virtual microphone — does not interact with the game client at all. No ban cases from voice changers alone have been publicly documented.
What Android emulator works best for PUBG Mobile with a voice changer?
BlueStacks 5 and LDPlayer 9 are the most commonly used emulators for PUBG Mobile in 2026. Both allow you to set a custom audio input device in their settings, which is how you point them at VoxBooster’s virtual microphone.
How do I make my voice sound like a girl in PUBG Mobile?
On PC with an emulator, open your voice changer software, select a female voice preset or use AI voice cloning, set the output as your microphone in the emulator’s audio settings, and join a PUBG Mobile voice channel. The effect is real-time and teammates hear the changed voice.
Is there a voice changer app for PUBG Mobile on Android?
There are Android apps that claim real-time voice changing, but results are inconsistent and latency is often noticeable. The practical, reliable path is playing on PC via emulator and using a Windows voice changer like VoxBooster, or using Discord alongside mobile play.
Can I use VoxBooster with PUBG Mobile?
Yes. Run PUBG Mobile in an Android emulator on your Windows PC, point the emulator’s microphone input to VoxBooster’s virtual mic, and your voice effects are live in-game. Alternatively, join your squad’s Discord server from your PC and use VoxBooster there while playing on your phone.
Does a voice changer affect game performance in the emulator?
VoxBooster’s audio processing is designed to stay under 10 ms latency and uses minimal CPU. Running it alongside an emulator adds negligible load compared to the emulator itself. A modern mid-range PC — Core i5 or Ryzen 5, 16 GB RAM — handles both without issues.
Conclusion
Getting a voice changer working with PUBG Mobile takes one more step than with a standard PC game, but it is not complicated once you understand the architecture. The game runs on Android; your voice changer runs on Windows. Connect them through an emulator’s audio input setting and the two systems talk to each other without any friction.
The emulator + Windows voice changer path gives you the best possible result: low latency, high-quality voice transformation, and access to all the extra features — soundboard, noise suppression, AI voice conversion — that a proper desktop app offers. The Discord method is even simpler if your squad already coordinates there and you do not mind playing on your phone while your PC handles voice.
For Free Fire players looking at the same question, the voice changer for Free Fire guide covers the same emulator approach with game-specific notes.
VoxBooster is worth trying whether you end up using it long-term or not — the 3-day trial has no feature limits, so you can run through the full emulator setup and decide with real information rather than guesswork.
Download VoxBooster — 3-day free trial, full features, no credit card required.