Devilman- Crybaby -dub- -

The true test, however, is Ryo Asuka. Kyle McCarley, known for more stoic roles like Mob in Mob Psycho 100 , takes the character on a terrifying arc. He begins with a cold, rational, almost clinical tone—a strategist who sees people as pieces on a board. But as Ryo’s god complex shatters into the revelation of his true identity as the angel Satan, McCarley’s performance fractures beautifully. His final, anguished scream of Akira’s name is not a mimicry of the Japanese version; it is an equally devastating, uniquely American take on cosmic regret. It is a performance that understands Ryo’s tragedy: that his love was always real, but his methodology was monstrous.

Griffin Puatu as Akira Fudo gives a career-defining performance. He masterfully walks the line between gentle, crybaby weakness and monstrous, sorrowful strength. His transformation is not just physical; Puatu’s voice shifts from a soft, hesitant tenor to a guttural, pained roar during his Devilman battles. Crucially, he nails Akira’s defining trait: his tears. When Akira cries, Puatu’s voice cracks with genuine, unforced vulnerability, making the character’s innate humanity believable even as he rips demons apart with his bare hands. Devilman- Crybaby -Dub-

Despite these minor flaws, the Devilman: Crybaby dub is a powerful achievement. Why? Because it allows a viewer to look at the screen without being chained to the bottom of it. This is crucial for a show where the visuals are the primary storytelling vehicle. The haunting, fluid demon designs, the shocking stillness of a character’s death, the abstract, trippy rave sequences—these require your full visual attention. A good dub frees your eyes to witness Yuasa’s artistic chaos without missing a beat of emotional context. The true test, however, is Ryo Asuka