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Virtual Reality Voiceover: where it’s going, how to do it

Technology, Voiceover Styles

shadow girl in nature Virtual realtity Kim Handysides voiceover
Credit: Catalyst music

Sound whether music, soundscape or voiceover narration, is critical to making virtual reality realistic. We are more forgiving of visual elements, be it animation, CGI, even imperfect video. But sound orients us to place and space and directs and manipulates emotional input. Sound becomes the anchor to the real. Looking at expanding applications of virtual reality, one thing is emerging in terms of voiceover. Realism is the key.

 

Break it Down – VR Sound

 

Like in film, a soundscape in virtual reality has multiple layers. There’s the ambient sound, the rain, wind, reflective surfaces, crickets, even. Sometimes a music score used to build tension and provide relief, give emotional cues to the one engaging with the VR. Orientation is also very important. Where is the noise coming from? Behind you? To the left on the ground? Speech, whether in the form of a scene the user participates in or a guide or narrator works best when it is compelling, convincing and enhances the realism the piece is trying to portray.

 

Voiceover in VR

 

mouth whisper in ear Virtual reality sound Kim Handysides voiceover
Credit: canddi.com

Narration and voiceover in virtual reality is the antithesis of announcer-speak. Because the sound is at furthest a surround sound system in a room, and more often coming through headphones tucked less than an inch away from an eardrum, the voice has to respect that proximity. The two positions we encounter most in narration are the immediate scene laid out before the player/user. A film type of vocal reference is most used for these dramatizations. The other voiceover position is the guide, friend, comrade at arms or occasionally, the intimate foe. The proximity and intimacy makes the voiceover very powerful. A light touch and a soft approach is an incredibly effective counterpoint to the rest of the stimulus being fed to the user. And with everything on the leading edge, conversational narration and a storytelling voiceover delivery is key

 

Voiceover Supported VR Applications

 

As costs decrease and technology becomes more accessible, VR is being envisioned in a myriad of applications. Here is a sampling of areas where VR is being produced. All of which feature voiceover.

 

Directories & guides to stores – marine, grocery, catalogues

 

Games – entertainment

 

Tour guides – Museums, cities

 

Education – recreating historical civilizations, science microscopic-astronomic explorations

 

Real Estate – sales, proposals, development

 

Surgery – simulation

 

Physical therapy – simulations

 

Flight & aerospace simulators

 

Military – safely replicate dangerous training situations

 

Car – engineers test safety applications in VR setting & sales letting customers test drive vehicles

 

Sports – training to streaming

 

Mental health – primary method for treating PTSD and phobias

 

Awareness – National Autistic Society made film on what it feels like to be autistic

 

Geography – Google Expeditions for kids or Marriot’s Travel Brilliantly i.e. to Hawaii

 

Language skills – Imperial College in China for Mandarin

 

Woman wearing VR glasses pixel fragmentation Kim Handysides voiceover
Credit: Dude Solutions

VR is still new, but expanding rapidly. Even though gaming is still a huge arm of its production, it’s fascinating to watch its early evolution unfold. What VR productions have you been part of? What style voiceover did you use? Do you see another area it’s being used that I haven’t mentioned here?

 

 

Kim Handysides is a female voiceover artist who has played character or narrators in over 3 dozen virtual reality productions in the last year.

 

 

Filed Under: Technology, Voiceover Styles Tagged With: character, conversational narration, headphones, narration, sound, soundscape, storytelling voiceover, virtual reality, virtual reality voiceover, voiceover in VR, VR, VR applications

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. David Huotari says

    August 14, 2020 at 6:55 pm

    Absolutely wonderful write up on VR and VO. I believe in many respects VR is one of the huge “waves” of the future. I am glad to see how you relayed VO plays a significant role in it. I look forward to reading/hearing more on this topic. Thank you for the work you are doing in this arena!

    Reply
    • Kim Handysides says

      August 25, 2020 at 11:35 am

      Thanks so much for checking in David!

      Reply
      • Bro Radley says

        November 17, 2020 at 2:25 pm

        I love my VR experiences and I am a new voiceover artist. What does a VR VO Demo real sound like? Are there specific types of style that VR developers are looking for when listening to VR VO Demo reals? Or would it be pretty much the same as a normal game demo reel?

        Reply
        • Kim Handysides says

          November 22, 2020 at 3:31 pm

          Thanks for the inquiry – there are so many styles of VR – from a VR experience teaching surgical technique to games to virtual storefront shopping to documentary-like experiences and the applications keep growing. I think a demo might show “close up” reads of a variety of those applications. But imho I would only produce a VR demo after you’ve ticked all the other demo boxes.

          Reply

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