Reigen’s sleazy sales pitches sound like they belong on late-night infomercials. The Body Improvement Club’s chants sound like they came out of an 80s high school locker room. The humor lands because the dialogue feels natural to an English ear, even when the visuals are absolutely bonkers. Here is a technical reason to watch the dub: the sound mixing.
If you have been putting off this masterpiece because you heard the subtitles are the "only way to go," you are missing out on one of the funniest, most emotionally resonant, and surprisingly nuanced English dubs of the last decade. Whether you are dyslexic, a multitasker, or just love hearing great voice acting, the Mob Psycho 100 dub is not just a "good alternative"—it’s a definitive version. A show like Mob Psycho lives and dies on the chemistry between its two leads: Shigeo "Mob" Kageyama (the emotionally repressed psychic god) and Arataka Reigen (the lovable con-man fraud). Mob Psycho 100 -Dub-
But the English dub is a labor of love that elevates the material. It turns Reigen into one of the greatest comedic characters in anime history and gives Mob a vulnerability that breaks your heart. Reigen’s sleazy sales pitches sound like they belong
Niosi steals every single scene. Reigen is a character who talks constantly —bluffing, lying, sweating, and scheming. The English script gives Niosi the freedom to ad-lib and time his delivery with the rapid-fire animation. His panicked rants are peak comedy ("I'm the one who's been getting scammed! I hired a middle schooler!"). But when the mask slips in Season 2’s infamous "Reigen Arc," Niosi delivers a monologue about loneliness and self-hatred that is so raw, it rivals the original voice actor. It’s an award-worthy performance. One reason the Mob Psycho dub works so well is that the scriptwriters understood the assignment. They didn't try to translate Japanese idioms literally; they localized the energy of the show. Here is a technical reason to watch the