The plastic is cracked. The paint is chipped. And it’s perfect.
When Sei’s father leaves behind a message about the joy of building Gunpla, the music swells, and Williams plays the scene completely straight. The tears are real. The dub earns its emotional climaxes because it spent the previous twenty episodes making you laugh. By the time the final battle arrives, you’re invested not in spite of the jokes, but because of them. For purists who demand a rigid, honor-bound translation, the Gundam Build Fighters dub will feel like vandalism. For everyone else, it is a breath of fresh ozone. In a franchise often accused of taking itself too seriously, this English dub is a reminder that Gundam is also a commercial for plastic models. And sometimes, the best way to honor a legacy is to laugh with it.
For decades, the Gundam meta-series carried the weight of expectation. It was the "War and Peace" of mecha anime: a grim, sprawling epic about the horrors of conflict, the grey morality of politics, and teenagers forced into cockpits. Enter Gundam Build Fighters (2013). A show where the worst consequence of losing a battle is having to buy a new model kit. On paper, it was sacrilege. In practice, it was a love letter to the franchise.
The original Japanese version of Build Fighters is charming but earnest. It treats the children’s plastic robot battles with the same life-or-death intensity as Mobile Suit Gundam . The English dub, however, leans into the absurdity. It adds pop-culture references, deadpan snark, and wrestling-style bravado that feels less like a Saturday morning cartoon and more like an Adult Swim parody that accidentally became the real thing. NYAV Post is famous for its tight-knit pool of New York-based talent, and Build Fighters is a reunion tour. The lead, Sei Iori, is voiced by Sarah Anne Williams (Lisbeth in Sword Art Online ), who plays the shy builder with a nervous energy that perfectly contrasts his partner. Reiji, the alien (yes, alien) fighter, is voiced by Griffin Burns (Cyril in Pokémon Journeys ). Burns gives Reiji a wild, throaty, knucklehead persona—equal parts Goku and Johnny Bravo.