
Age: 35
male
Maxwell Braden "Max" Mittelman (born September 5, 1990) is an American voice actor who has provided voices for English-language versions of anime, as well as in video games and animated shows. Some of his major roles include Saitama in One-Punch Man, Kousei Arima in Your Lie in April, Hikari Sakishima in A Lull in the Sea, King from The Seven Deadly Sins, Ritsu Kageyama in Mob Psycho 100, Inaho Kaizuka in Aldnoah.Zero, Atsushi Nakajima in Bungo Stray Dogs and Io Flemming in Mobile Suit Gundam Thunderbolt, Kira Yamato in Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Remastered and Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny Remastered, Nacht Faust from Black Clover, Haruto Kurosawa in Coppelion and Plagg from Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir. In video games, he voices McBurn and Lechter Arundel in The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel II, Shigure Rangetsu in Tales of Berseria, Ryuji Sakamoto in Persona 5, Troy Calypso in Borderlands 3, Peter Boggs in Grounded, Fidel Camuze in Star Ocean: Integrity and Faithlessness, Andy Arlington in Maya & Miguel, Claude Wallace in Valkyria Chronicles 4, Louis in Code Vein, Red XIII in Final Fantasy VII Remake and Arataki Itto in Genshin Impact. Mittelman and fellow voice actors Ray Chase and Robbie Daymond formed video game company Sassy Chap Games to develop the 2025 dating sim Date Everything! Description above from the Wikipedia article Max Mittelman, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Max Mittelman

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for Blurr in Transformers: Armada (Studiopolis Dub)
Suggested by giorenzo

Transformers: Armada, known in Japan as Super Robot Life-Form Transformers: Legends of the Microns (超ロボット生命体トランスフォーマー マイクロン伝説, Chō Robotto Seimeitai Toransufōmā Maikuron Densetsu), is a Japanese anime series[3] which debuted on August 23, 2002. As the first series co-produced between the American toy company Hasbro and their Japanese counterpart Takara, Armada begins a new continuity/universe for Transformers, with no ties to any of the previous series, including its direct predecessor Transformers: Robots in Disguise in 2001.[4] It inspired two sequels, Transformers: Energon and Transformers: Cybertron.