Tales of Vesperia’s Japanese Speech Styles & English Typos

13 Comments

A reader sent in a question about Tales of Vesperia, a really fun Japanese RPG from 2008:

In Tales of Vesperia, the character Raven often refers to himself as “”ol’ Raven”” and I was wondering. What does he call himself in the Japanese version? Or more along the lines what kind of dialect does he have?

I actually played Tales of Vesperia many years back – I translated the anime movie prequel, in fact!

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To prepare for translating the movie, I played through the English version of the game, taking reams and reams of notes to make sure my translation matched every little nuance in the game. In all, I spent maybe two or three months on the project, even though it was like a simple 90 minute movie.


Anyway, in the English version of the game, everyone calls the Raven character “old man” throughout the game, even though he’s not THAT old. In fact, even Raven himself often refers to himself as “ol’ Raven” a lot too. So what does he call himself in Japanese? Here’s a random sample from early in the game:

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Basically, rather than call himself “ol’ Raven”, he just calls himself “old man” like everyone else calls him. This sort of thing happens all the time in Japanese, but it doesn’t work quite as well in English.

For example, “You just leave it up ta old man.” has a bit of oddness to it. Using “this old man” instead is a solution, but overuse of it might eventually become strange too. Even more so if a voice actor has to say it out loud over and over. So the use of “ol’ Raven” instead is a nice localization solution that matches his character AND is memorable.

As for his speech style, he definitely talks in a less standard, more “carefree” style, for a lack of a better explanation. I wanna say it’s a light Nagoya-style dialect based on his usage of stuff like ~だわな and ~わ, but he actually doesn’t talk much in the anime so I’d need to play the game in Japanese to get a better feel for it. From videos and such that’s how it seems to me, at least.


I actually have so many fond memories of digging into this game’s translation that it’s partly what inspired me to start my Legends of Localization stuff in the first place. It was neat how parts of the localization really shone – the English lyrics in the intro song, the phrasing of certain things, the script direction in some scenes… but then there’d be sudden, jarring typos and oddities too. Here are some for fun:

These are just some random pictures I took years ago – there are a lot more little issues like this that pepper the game regularly. But otherwise I could tell from my own work on the movie that the game had a quality translation, both in writing and in its thoughtful localization choices.

So what happened? I’ve heard from acquaintances who worked on the game – and from the localization grapevine in general – that although 8-4, Ltd. handled the bulk of the project, some last-minute materials were given to a cheaper and completely different company, hence the final clash in quality.

If you found this article interesting or helpful and know any other fans of Tales, consider linking them to this article. I appreciate it!
13 Comments
  1. Man, basically everything 8-4 does is golden. I legitimately can’t think of anything translated by them that’s not great.

  2. Wow, I played the game years ago and I hadn’t realized all of this was in there.

  3. Thank you for doing this. It was very interesting.
    I never noticed the typo’s before but now I’m sure I’ll see them whenever I next play it.

  4. I played the game for the first time this summer, the translation seemed excellent, like you though i noticed the typos, thankfully they are fairly rare, but it’s really jarring.

  5. Tales games have legit translations. I’m playing through the newly-released Tales of Xillia and it’s just sublime. Interestingly in this game, the Japanese theme song’s lyrics were kept as is. I think that’s the first time that’s happened, since:

    with Symphonia, Eternia and Legendia, they replaced the theme song with an orchestrated-style overture. In Abyss, they used an instrumental version of the song, and in Vesperia and Graces, they re-wrote the lyrics in English.

  6. Also, while I’m here, I’m gonna ask another Vesperia-related question. What’s the deal with Patty’s constant use of ‘なのじゃ’ and other such phrases of hers? I know Patty wasn’t included in the Xbox 360 release, so she doesn’t have any lines written in English for her at all. I think she’s supposed to speak like an old-timey pirate or something, but my Japanese-fu is so very weak, I cannot comprehend.

    Here’s the first video I found while trying to search for it and it’s lol-worthy so I thought I’d post the link:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iosXPAEvdVM

  7. I happened to screencap a bunch of typos and posted them here:
    http://forum.tales-cless.org/tales-series/vesperia-typos-and-other-interesting-things/

    I noticed the typos were mostly from sidequests but I noticed you caught that Teagle one that was from the main quest. Even though I wasn’t intentionally looking for these things (at first), you can see how easy it was to spot them from the amount I found.

    Though you, Mato, have the translator’s eye and caught stuff that I missed. Good on you, bad on the proofreaders.

    1. Whoa, cool! Thanks for the link!

      For the most part whenever I saw a typo or mistake I was like, “Meh, too lazy to take a picture.” so those ones above were from the rare few that I wasn’t lazy 😛

  8. Actually, I hate it when authors use strange spelling like “sez” to mark a character as stupid, especially when it would be pronounced exactly the same as whatever accent the author considers normal.

  9. Hi there! I have a question about a different RPG, Valkyrie Profile: Covenant of the Plume for DS.

    The game’s written, at least in English, in a very melodramatic and old-timey style. It almost invokes the feeling of being a play of some kind.

    http://i.imgur.com/rr5T8QR.png http://i.imgur.com/r9HnpC7.png http://i.imgur.com/Cva3LFN.png

    So, I was just curious – was the Japanese version written in a comparable ‘old timey, dramatic’ style, or was this entirely an invention of the localizers?

  10. To answer your question in your annotation, no they did not get the same guy. Raven was voiced by Joe J. Thomas in the game. Jonathan Brooks voiced him in the anime.

    1. Cool, thanks for the info! He had such a small part in the movie that it’s not surprising I guess.

  11. “How does a little girl know such a fancy word?” What a strange criticism, expendable is not a complicated word or concept.