Voice Direction

Method

A performance method for guiding voice actors, narrators, participants, or recorded speakers toward the tone and meaning needed for an immersive work.

Description

Voice direction shapes how spoken material is performed and recorded. It considers tone, pacing, emotion, clarity, character, accent, timing, and relationship to the participant. In immersive work, voice may come from a guide, character, narrator, interface, spatial presence, or real person in documentary material.

Typical Use

Used in narrative VR, interactive characters, guided experiences, training simulations, documentary work, onboarding, spatial audio, and voice-driven interfaces.

Scope Note

This method may include performance notes, script readings, recording sessions, pronunciation guidance, timing checks, alternate takes, and review of how voice works in the experience.

Boundary Note

Voice direction should be tested in context, because spoken material changes when it is heard through a headset, in a room, or alongside interaction.

Collaboration Note

Usually involves directors, voice actors, writers, sound designers, producers, narrative designers, spatial audio engineers, and interaction designers.

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