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Trevor Devall

Canadian voice actor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Trevor Devall
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Trevor Devall (born November 10, 1972) is a Canadian voice actor. He worked for various studios in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada for years, before he relocated to Los Angeles, California, United States in 2013. Between 2007 and 2013 he produced the podcast Voiceprint with Trevor Devall and Guests, where he interviewed other voice actors. Starting in 2019, he became more active in the tabletop role-playing games community, starting the actual play YouTube show Me, Myself and Die! where he played solo tabletop role-playing games; as well as launching a Kickstarter campaign for his own tabletop role-playing game system The Broken Empires in 2024.

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Early life

Trevor Devall was born on November 10, 1972[1] in Edmonton, Alberta, the youngest of five children to Theresa and Vernon Devall.[2] He was into theatre and did tap, jazz, and Polynesian dance as a child.[3] He attended the University of Alberta for drama and directed stage productions as well as student films.[3]

Devall moved to Vancouver in 1998 to pursue a film directing career. While working for a talent agency, he made a demo tape for them and began landing work as a voice actor.[3]

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Career

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He is best known for voicing Hot Dog in Krypto the Superdog, Rocket Raccoon in the animated TV series Guardians of the Galaxy, Emperor Palpatine in Lego Star Wars, Pyro in X-Men: Evolution, Dukey in seasons 5 and 6 of Johnny Test, and various characters in the Netflix original series F Is for Family, as well as providing voices in English-language versions of various anime series, most notably as Mu La Flaga from Mobile Suit Gundam SEED, Mukotsu from InuYasha, Scourge from Transformers: Cybertron, Mr. Chang from Black Lagoon, and Aizawa from Death Note. He also voiced Hermiod on Stargate Atlantis and Ravus Nox Fleuret in the Final Fantasy XV video game and Kingsglaive: Final Fantasy XV feature film. Other than that, he voiced Mars in Dota 2 video game. On camera, he played Sir Atticus Moon in Big Time Movie. Devall played the voice of Rocket Raccoon in the animated Guardians of the Galaxy series and various subsequent media.[4]

Me, Myself and Die!

In 2019, Trevor Devall started the Me, Myself and Die! channel on YouTube, focused on actual plays of solo tabletop role-playing games, such as Savage Worlds, Ironsworn and Dominion Rules.[5] In Me, Myself and Die!, Devall plays tabletop RPGs alone, covering both popular systems, as well as bringing attention to indie role-playing games.[6]

The channel also features the series The Sage's Library, in which Trevor Devall reviews and discusses various tabletop role-playing games from his library. The videos cover many TTRPG systems, such as Traveller, Pathfinder or The Burning Wheel.[5]

The Broken Empires

In October 2024, Trevor Devall started a Kickstarter campaign for his tabletop role-playing game called The Broken Empires, with the initial funding goal of US$10,000. By October 3 the project raised over $256,000 from more than 2,000 backers.[7] The game is set in a gritty fantasy setting. Devall developed the system by picking and choosing mechanics from more than 125 other games over the course of four seasons of actual plays on his YouTube channel Me, Myself and Die!.[8]

The game is promised to focus on exploration and intrigue, as well as to offer a lot of flexibility for the characters.[8] One of Trevor Devall's ideas for the game is greater focus on social mechanics. He believes that some tabletop role-playing games, like The Burning Wheel, have too many mechanics for social interaction, while others, like OSR-style games, have none, and hopes to strike the right balance in The Broken Empires. For exploration mechanics, one of the major inspirations was The One Ring Roleplaying Game.[9]

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Filmography

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Animation

Anime

Live-action

Films

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Video games

Voiceprint with Trevor Devall and Guests

Between 2007 and 2013, Devall produced his own podcast, Voiceprint with Trevor Devall and Guests, where he interviewed fellow Vancouver-based voice actors and answered questions from fans. Each episode featured a different voice actor as the episode guest, though some episodes featured other people in the voice-acting business that may not actually be voice actors themselves; or behind-the-scenes looks at the life of a voice actor. Topics usually included how the guest made it into the voice-acting business, what it is like working in the industry, and the general lifestyle of a voice actor. The series concluded after 36 episodes in December 2013. Devall stated in the final episode that he hoped to continue the show with a "second season" following his move to Los Angeles, but this has not come to pass.

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Web series

  • Me, Myself and Die! – Player, GM, and Host
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References

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