Voice Changer for Tower of Fantasy: Character Personas
A tower of fantasy voice changer lets you step into the game’s characters during Discord co-op calls, streaming sessions, and cosplay content — right now, in real time, without post-processing. Tower of Fantasy is an open-world anime MMO with a cast that spans icy Aespans, sharp-tongued gunslingers, and sweet-natured samurai warriors, and that variety maps cleanly onto voice changer controls. This guide walks through four key characters with exact preset settings, covers how to set up your audio chain for Discord co-op, and explains where a soundboard fits into the picture. By the end, your virtual microphone will be outputting character voices that your party members recognize immediately.
TL;DR
- A real-time voice changer routes your mic through a virtual audio device — live in Discord, OBS, and Tower of Fantasy simultaneously, no file processing.
- Four character presets covered in depth: Frigg, Tsubasa, Saki Fuwa, King — plus notes on the EN, CN, and JP voice dubs.
- Tower of Fantasy’s anti-cheat does not flag WASAPI-based virtual microphones — no kernel driver is involved.
- Soundboard integration lets you trigger iconic game lines on hotkeys during co-op voice chat.
- Preset switching via hotkeys keeps you in character without interrupting gameplay.
- The full setup from install to first Discord session takes under ten minutes.
Why Tower of Fantasy Has a Strong Voice Changer Community
Tower of Fantasy launched as an open-world anime MMO with a persistent shared world, real-time co-op, and full voice acting across multiple languages. Unlike single-player RPGs where character voice is a passive experience, ToF’s co-op structure puts players in voice channels together for raids, open-world events, and guild activities — which creates a natural reason to use character voice personas during play.
The game’s visual design is squarely in the anime aesthetic tradition: exaggerated character designs, distinctive silhouettes, and voice performances that lean theatrical rather than realistic. That theatricality actually helps voice changer work — the characters are stylized enough that a convincing approximation reads as the character without needing forensic accuracy.
The tof voice changer community organizes around a few overlapping groups. Co-op players who run content together in established guilds use character voices to maintain immersion during long play sessions. Cosplayers need character voices for convention appearances, TikTok reels, and YouTube shorts. Streamers playing ToF content use character voices as part of their streaming persona — it distinguishes their content from the average gameplay video. And the game’s strong anime community means fans already have high familiarity with the source voice performances, so they recognize a good approximation quickly.
For context with the broader HoYoverse-adjacent gaming voice community, the Honkai Star Rail voice changer and Genshin Impact voice changer posts cover similar character preset approaches for those titles — several techniques in this guide transfer directly.
How Real-Time Voice Changing Works for ToF Co-op
Before the presets, the architecture is worth understanding clearly, especially for players new to real-time audio processing.
A voice changer like VoxBooster inserts itself between your physical microphone and your applications. It registers a virtual audio device in Windows that appears as a standard microphone. You then select that virtual device in Discord, in ToF’s in-game voice chat settings if you use it, and in OBS if you stream. Your physical microphone feeds the voice changer process, which transforms the audio in real time and outputs it to the virtual device, which your applications capture.
The result: Discord hears your transformed voice during co-op. Your stream audience hears it on the mic channel. Your physical microphone is unchanged and still accessible for other routing if needed.
Latency is the critical factor. Sub-20ms pitch processing is essentially imperceptible when you are speaking — the feedback loop between your voice and your ears does not register the delay. Above 40ms, the offset becomes noticeable and makes it harder to perform naturally. VoxBooster targets sub-20ms on a standard mid-range CPU without a DSP card.
Because the virtual device uses WASAPI — the standard Windows Audio Session API — it operates at the same layer as any normal audio application. Tower of Fantasy’s anti-cheat system inspects kernel-level drivers and process memory injection, neither of which a WASAPI virtual microphone involves. Running a voice changer during ToF is safe in the same way running any other audio application alongside the game is safe.
For a full walkthrough of Discord voice settings specifically, the voice changer for Discord guide covers platform-specific configuration including input sensitivity and noise suppression interaction.
Tower of Fantasy Voice Dubs: EN, CN, JP Differences
Tower of Fantasy ships with three complete voice casts, and the differences between them matter when you are trying to match a specific character voice.
Chinese (Mandarin) — original dev intent. This is the cast the game was built around, and it generally has the most polished performances. The tonal qualities of Mandarin itself affect character pacing — characters sound more clipped and precise in CN. Frigg in CN sounds particularly cold and formal. King’s CN performance is gruff and direct.
Japanese — classically anime. The JP cast follows anime voice acting conventions more closely: more expressive range, broader tonal shifts, slightly heightened emotional delivery. Saki Fuwa’s JP voice is noticeably sweeter and more dramatic than the EN version. Tsubasa’s JP delivery is sharper and more precise.
English — theatrical and accessible. The EN cast leans into Western dramatic performance conventions. Characterizations are clear and accessible to audiences without anime familiarity. Frigg EN sounds authoritative but slightly warmer than CN/JP. King EN is the closest to a Western action-game gunslinger voice.
Practical takeaway for voice changer presets: Decide which dub you want to approximate before tuning. The EN and JP versions of the same character can have meaningfully different pitch register and pacing — tuning for one and performing for the other produces inconsistent results. The presets below target the EN delivery as a baseline with notes on JP adjustments.
The Four Core ToF Character Voice Presets
Each entry covers: character voice profile, EN voice notes, JP voice notes, CN notes, exact pitch target, EQ shaping, additional effects, and performance tips. Numbers assume a neutral male voice starting point; adjust semitone targets upward by 2 if you are starting from a female voice.
Frigg — Cold Aespan Authority
Character context: Frigg is an Aespan warrior with an ice-element kit and a personality to match. She is commanding, distant, and formal — not cruel, but completely without warmth toward most people. She is one of the game’s most visually striking characters and one of the most requested for voice changer use.
Voice profile: Low for a female character. Measured pace. Almost no pitch variation — Frigg speaks in a controlled register that rarely rises above calm authority or drops below cold warning. Think of a military officer who has never needed to raise their voice because their composure alone communicates consequence.
EN voice notes: The EN performance is authoritative with slightly more theatrical edge than the CN original. Useful for approximating Western fantasy villain or queen archetypes as well.
JP voice notes: The JP Frigg skews even colder and more toneless — less variation, more precision. If you want the most stylized version of the character, JP is the reference.
CN voice notes: The original performance. Crisper, more formal diction, very little warmth even in her rare moments of levity.
Preset settings:
- Pitch: -3 to -4 semitones from neutral male; or -1 to -2 semitones from neutral female
- High-shelf EQ: cut -5 dB above 5 kHz (removes warmth and sparkle — Frigg does not sound warm)
- Low-mid EQ: boost +2 dB at 250 Hz (adds body and weight without muddiness)
- Formant shift: -1 to -2 semitones independently if your tool supports it (crucial for authenticity — purely pitch-shifted voices without formant adjustment sound off at this range)
- Reverb: large room or light cathedral, 14-18% wet (adds the spatial distance that reads as authority and command)
- Dynamics: gentle compression (ratio 2:1, attack 20ms, release 150ms) — keep it loose to preserve Frigg’s controlled natural dynamic
Performance tip: Frigg speaks slowly and deliberately. Cut your natural speech rate by 20-25%. She does not use contractions when formal — “I will” not “I’ll,” “you are” not “you’re.” The formality of the diction is as important as the voice settings.
Tsubasa — Sharp Samurai Precision
Character context: Tsubasa is the archer-samurai of the main cast, disciplined and competitive. She is sharply focused during combat and less guarded in casual conversation — a warmer character than Frigg but still precise and direct. She occupies a mid-range female voice register that makes her more accessible for voice changer work.
Voice profile: Mid-range female voice. Crisp consonants, clean articulation. Emotionally readable — unlike Frigg, Tsubasa shows enthusiasm and frustration clearly. Her voice sits at a natural female mid-register without dramatic high or low extremes.
EN voice notes: Clean, determined delivery. The EN performance emphasizes competitiveness and confidence.
JP voice notes: The JP Tsubasa is sharper — consonants are more precise, delivery is faster, and the samurai warrior archetype comes through more strongly. The JP version benefits from faster speech rate when performing.
CN voice notes: The CN Tsubasa is the most emotionally contained of the three — still warm by her standards, but more composed than EN or JP.
Preset settings:
- Pitch: 0 to +1 semitones from neutral female; +2 to +3 from neutral male (Tsubasa’s voice sits close to a natural female mid-register — dramatic pitch shift hurts the effect)
- High-shelf EQ: gentle boost +2 dB above 4 kHz (adds the clarity and presence of a clear speaking voice)
- Low cut: high-pass filter at 100 Hz (removes chest weight that conflicts with the clean samurai aesthetic)
- Presence boost: +2 dB at 2-3 kHz (adds forward articulation — this is where consonant clarity lives)
- Reverb: minimal or none — Tsubasa is present and immediate, not spatial
- Compression: medium-fast (attack 12ms, release 80ms, ratio 3:1) — tightens delivery and adds confidence
Performance tip: Tsubasa puts emphasis on action verbs and targets. “I will NOT miss this shot” rather than “I will not miss THIS shot.” The emphasis pattern communicates the competitive focus. For JP performance, shorten pauses between sentences by about 30% compared to your natural speaking pace.
Saki Fuwa — Sweet Female Warmth
Character context: Saki Fuwa is warm, enthusiastic, and affectionate — one of the friendlier characters in Tower of Fantasy’s main cast. Her voice is light and sweet without crossing into squeaky or childlike. She represents the archetypal supportive companion archetype common in anime MMOs, and her voice is one of the most distinctly recognizable in the game.
Voice profile: Mid-to-high female register. Bright, warm timbre. Clear pitch variation — Saki Fuwa’s voice moves up on positive surprises and affectionate moments. She sounds like she is genuinely glad you exist.
EN voice notes: The EN version is warm and pleasant, leaning into nurturing warmth over dramatic excitement.
JP voice notes: The JP Saki Fuwa is more expressively anime — wider pitch range, more melodic inflection, more pronounced sweetness. The JP version is the most recognizable to anime fans globally.
CN voice notes: The CN version sits between EN and JP in expressiveness — warm and clear with controlled pitch range.
Preset settings:
- Pitch: +3 to +4 semitones from neutral female; +5 to +7 from neutral male
- High-shelf EQ: boost +3 dB above 5 kHz (adds brightness and warmth)
- Low cut: high-pass filter at 150 Hz (removes chest weight entirely — Saki Fuwa has no bass)
- Low-mid EQ: slight boost +1.5 dB at 800 Hz (adds a warmth that prevents the bright EQ from sounding thin)
- Formant shift: +1 semitone if available (adds natural vocal tract lightness without additional pitch change)
- Reverb: minimal, under 5% wet — her voice is close and personal
- Compression: medium (ratio 3:1, attack 15ms, release 100ms) — keeps energy consistent without clipping peaks
Performance tip: Saki Fuwa’s warmth lives in rising intonation on names and affectionate phrases. Let your voice naturally rise on the last syllable of a greeting or compliment. She uses the listener’s name more than most characters — practicing with direct address helps the voice settle into the character register quickly.
King — Deep Gunslinger Presence
Character context: King (full name: King of Spades) is a brooding gunslinger with a dry wit and a voice that operates in the lower male register. He is confident without being loud, sarcastic without being mean, and serious without being humorless. His archetype — the cool, slightly world-weary gunman — is familiar enough that the voice changer work has a clear target.
Voice profile: Low male register. Unhurried pace, controlled dynamic range. King sounds like he has seen enough action that nothing surprises him anymore. His humor is delivered deadpan, which means the voice barely changes — the words do the work.
EN voice notes: The EN King leans into Western gunslinger archetypes — slightly gravelly, deliberate, world-weary. The EN version is the most accessible for audiences unfamiliar with anime delivery conventions.
JP voice notes: The JP King is smoother and more classically cool — less gravel, more controlled baritone, closer to the composed action hero archetype in anime.
CN voice notes: The CN King sounds gruff and direct — the most subdued of the three, with the least stylized character voice and the most naturalistic performance.
Preset settings:
- Pitch: -3 to -5 semitones from neutral male (King’s register is genuinely low — do not underdo it)
- Low-mid EQ: boost +3 dB at 150-200 Hz (adds chest resonance and weight)
- High-mid EQ: cut -2 dB at 2-3 kHz (removes the “tense” quality that conflicts with King’s cool composure)
- High-shelf EQ: gentle cut -2 dB above 7 kHz (keeps the sound warm and settled, not bright)
- Reverb: small room, 6-10% wet (adds just enough spatial depth to feel grounded without sounding cavernous)
- Dynamics: slow-attack compression (attack 30ms, release 180ms, ratio 3:1) — preserves the low-end weight
Performance tip: King speaks in shorter sentences than most characters. He does not explain himself unless necessary. Cut your natural impulse to add context — if the statement makes sense as a short punch, deliver it short. The deadpan delivery means no vocal uptick at the end of statements, even light jokes. Everything is flat and certain.
Character Voice Comparison Table
| Character | Role | Pitch Target | EQ Profile | Reverb | Starting Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frigg | Cold commander | -3 to -4 ST | Cut highs, body boost at 250Hz | Large room 15% | Hard |
| Tsubasa | Sharp samurai | 0 to +1 ST (female) | Clarity boost, high-pass 100Hz | Minimal | Easy |
| Saki Fuwa | Sweet support | +5 to +7 ST (male) | Bright + warmth boost, high-pass 150Hz | Under 5% | Easy |
| King | Deep gunslinger | -3 to -5 ST | Low-mid chest boost, hi-mid cut | Small room 8% | Medium |
ST = semitones relative to a neutral voice starting point. Adjust +2 for female starting voice on male targets, -2 for male starting voice on female targets.
Discord Setup for Tower of Fantasy Co-op
Tower of Fantasy’s co-op content — Joint Operations, Dimensional Trials, Apex League team content, and open-world event participation — regularly puts guild members in voice chat together for extended sessions. A voice changer adds a persistent character persona to these sessions. Here is the Discord-specific setup.
Step 1 — Install VoxBooster before launching Discord. The virtual microphone device needs to register in Windows before Discord scans available audio devices on startup. If you install after Discord is already open, restart Discord.
Step 2 — Set Discord input device. Go to User Settings > Voice & Video > Input Device. Select VoxBooster Virtual Microphone (or the equivalent device name). Do not select your physical microphone here — Discord should receive only the processed output.
Step 3 — Disable Discord’s built-in noise suppression. Discord uses Krisp for noise suppression, which can conflict with voice changer output, especially on low-register characters like Frigg and King where the pitch processing significantly alters the spectral shape of the audio. Use your voice changer’s built-in noise suppression instead — it runs before pitch and EQ processing in the correct order.
Step 4 — Set input sensitivity to manual. In Discord’s Voice & Video settings, switch from Automatic to Manual sensitivity and set the threshold around -70 dB. Automatic sensitivity can gate out the slightly modified signal that a voice changer produces, especially after heavy EQ cuts on characters like Frigg.
Step 5 — Test in a private channel first. Before joining a guild voice session, test in a private voice call or a server channel where only trusted members are present. Ask a friend to confirm the voice reads as the intended character. Common issues: reverb level too high (sounds like a phone call underwater), pitch shift too extreme (sounds mechanical rather than characterful), or noise gate cutting syllables.
Step 6 — Bind presets to hotkeys. If you play with multiple characters or want to switch between in-character and normal voice during long sessions, hotkey preset switching is essential. Set at least one hotkey for your primary character preset and one for “bypass” (passthrough with no processing) so you can drop character quickly when needed.
The voice changer for Discord guide has a deeper walkthrough of Discord audio settings including server bitrate, advanced voice processing toggles, and OBS integration for streamers who record Discord calls.
Soundboard Integration for ToF Content
A soundboard pairs naturally with a ToF voice changer setup. While the voice changer processes your live microphone, the soundboard plays pre-recorded clips — game character lines, iconic phrases, ability sound effects — on hotkeys through the same virtual microphone channel your Discord or OBS hears.
Practical uses for ToF soundboard clips:
- Trigger King’s dry one-liners after a successful PvP kill during a voice call
- Play Saki Fuwa’s support affirmations while actually healing teammates
- Use Frigg’s cold warnings when you are about to start a difficult boss fight
- Trigger Tsubasa’s combat lines to signal readiness before a Joint Operation
Setting up soundboard clips in VoxBooster:
- Add short audio clips (WAV or MP3, under 10MB each) to the soundboard panel
- Assign each clip a hotkey via the hotkey binding panel — use keys that do not conflict with ToF keybindings
- Set output to the same virtual microphone channel the voice changer uses
- Enable monitor output at low volume so you can hear your own clip timing
Copyright note: In-game audio is copyrighted by Perfect World and Level Infinite. For Discord community use and in-stream commentary, short clips generally fall under commentary and reaction fair use. Do not upload compilations of game audio as standalone content to video platforms.
Streaming ToF With a Character Voice
Streaming Tower of Fantasy with a character voice persona is one of the more effective ways to differentiate ToF content on Twitch and YouTube. The game has a competitive content space and many streamers play without a distinguishing audio personality — a consistent character voice is a recognizable hook that builds repeat viewers.
What works well for ToF streaming:
- Character-specific lore commentary. Running content in Frigg’s cold analytical mode while explaining game lore reads as genuinely on-brand.
- Co-op event streams. Joint Operations and event content are inherently collaborative — streaming them in a character voice with guild members responding naturally creates authentic-feeling group content.
- Character comparison content. “Playing through [character]‘s story chapters while sounding like [character]” is a consistent format that landing page visitors recognize immediately.
- Reaction content. Reacting to new simulacra reveals, story trailers, or patch notes in a character voice creates fan-service content that performs well with game-specific audiences.
Technical setup for streaming:
- Route the virtual microphone output to OBS as the mic source — this captures the transformed voice on the mic audio track
- Run a second audio track in OBS with your physical mic as a backup — useful if the voice changer crashes mid-stream
- Keep reverb conservative for streaming (8-12% max) — compression from Twitch and YouTube encoding already softens audio; adding heavy reverb on top muddies the character signal through stream encoding
- Test your preset on Twitch’s audio preview or with a short test stream before going live with a long session
For streaming-specific voice effect techniques, the best voice effects for streaming guide covers OBS audio routing in depth. For the Japanese voice changer techniques that underpin the JP dub character voices, the Japanese voice changer guide has additional notes on approximating anime voice aesthetics.
AI Voice Conversion for Tower of Fantasy Characters
Beyond pitch-shift and EQ presets, AI voice conversion offers a different approach: processing your live voice through a model that reproduces the spectral and timbral characteristics of a target voice style. The parametric approach and the AI approach are complementary rather than competing.
Where AI conversion adds value for ToF characters:
- Characters like Frigg require both precise formant positioning and specific timbral quality that parametric EQ approximates but does not fully capture
- Long streaming or co-op sessions where maintaining a consistent voice preset without vocal fatigue matters
- Characters with complex voice signatures — Frigg’s cold spatial quality, King’s settled low-frequency presence — where the interaction between formants and pitch is non-trivial
Where parametric presets are better:
- Quick switching between multiple characters mid-session
- Situations where absolute voice accuracy matters less than recognizable character traits
- First-time setup where you want to test and tune quickly
VoxBooster includes real-time AI voice conversion alongside its traditional pitch-shift and EQ tools. For most ToF co-op use, the parametric presets are sufficient. For content creation where voice accuracy is the product, AI conversion produces more consistent results across long sessions.
For a broader look at how AI voice technology works in the gaming context, the anime voice changer guide covers the underlying principles with additional character archetypes beyond Tower of Fantasy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a Tower of Fantasy voice changer for Discord?
Yes. A real-time voice changer like VoxBooster installs a virtual microphone that you select in Discord’s Voice & Video settings. Your transformed voice is then heard in every call and server channel — no file processing required. Latency is typically under 20ms on a mid-range Windows 10/11 CPU.
How do I sound like Frigg from Tower of Fantasy?
Frigg’s voice is cold, authoritative, and low for a female character. Drop pitch 3-4 semitones, cut highs above 5 kHz to remove warmth, and add a large-room reverb at 15-18% wet. Speak slowly and let the preset carry the character weight — rushing the delivery breaks the icy effect.
What is the best tof voice changer for co-op play?
Any voice changer that uses a WASAPI-based virtual microphone works cleanly alongside Tower of Fantasy’s anti-cheat because it operates at the standard audio device layer, not the kernel level. VoxBooster fits this requirement and adds hotkey-based preset switching so you can stay in character across long co-op sessions without touching settings mid-game.
Does a voice changer interfere with Tower of Fantasy anti-cheat?
No, provided the voice changer uses a standard virtual microphone without kernel-level drivers. Anti-cheat systems like the one Tower of Fantasy uses monitor executable memory and kernel drivers — not audio devices. VoxBooster runs entirely through WASAPI and installs no kernel components.
What voice languages does Tower of Fantasy support?
Tower of Fantasy ships with English, Chinese (Mandarin), and Japanese voice acting. The EN cast tends toward dramatic, theatrical delivery; the JP cast generally sounds more classically anime; the CN cast delivers the closest to the original dev intent. When tuning a voice changer preset, decide which dub you want to match — the pitch and pacing differ noticeably across the three.
Can I use a Tower of Fantasy voice changer for cosplay videos?
Yes. Record with a real-time voice changer active — the virtual mic feeds directly into OBS or any recording software. For short-form content on TikTok or YouTube Shorts, lean into each character’s most recognizable trait (Frigg’s cold authority, Saki Fuwa’s sweet brightness) so the character registers immediately rather than requiring a long listening sample.
Which Tower of Fantasy characters are easiest to voice changer?
Saki Fuwa and King are the most accessible starting points. Saki Fuwa’s sweet mid-high female voice needs only moderate pitch-up and bright EQ. King’s deep gunslinger baritone needs only a pitch drop and low-mid boost. Frigg is hardest because the cold authority requires both precise formant work and deliberate performance to avoid sounding like an ordinary pitch-shifted voice.
Conclusion
A tower of fantasy voice changer setup is worth building if you play co-op regularly, create ToF content, or cosplay the game’s cast. The four characters in this guide — Frigg’s icy command, Tsubasa’s sharp precision, Saki Fuwa’s warm energy, King’s grounded baritone — cover the most-requested voice personas in the game’s community, and each requires a meaningfully different approach to pitch, EQ, and reverb. Working through all four is a practical education in what voice changer controls actually do.
The tof voice changer setup itself is straightforward: install, configure the virtual mic in Discord or OBS, load a preset, tune to taste. The total setup time from install to first Discord call in character is under ten minutes. Refining a preset to the point where party members immediately recognize the character takes longer — an hour or two across a few sessions — but the iteration is part of the process.
If you want to run through the full setup, VoxBooster covers the complete chain: real-time pitch and EQ with formant control, AI voice conversion, soundboard with hotkeys, and noise suppression — all through WASAPI, no kernel driver, anti-cheat safe. A 3-day free trial gives you enough time to build and test every preset in this guide and run a real co-op session before deciding whether it fits your workflow.
Download VoxBooster — free 3-day trial, no credit card required.