How to Add a Voiceover to Your Gameplay Videos (No Microphone Needed)
In our last guide we covered how to record and share your gameplay clips. A raw clip is a great start, but the videos that really pull people in usually have one extra ingredient: a voice walking you through the action. The catch? Not everyone owns a good microphone, likes the sound of their own voice, or wants to re-record a line ten times to get it right. The good news is you can add a clean, professional voiceover to your Brick Breaker videos without any of that.
Why add narration at all?
A voiceover turns a clip into a story. It lets you explain the strategy behind a screen-clearing combo, hype up a clutch save, or guide newer players through a level. Narrated videos tend to hold attention longer and are far easier to follow than silent footage with on-screen text alone â which matters whether you're posting to YouTube, TikTok, or a tutorial channel.
Step 1: Write a short script
Watch your trimmed clip once and jot down what's worth saying. Keep it conversational and tied to what's on screen â "watch how the ball threads between these two rows" beats a generic intro. A 30-second clip usually needs only three or four sentences. Write the way you talk; it reads more naturally once it's spoken aloud.
Step 2: Generate the voiceover with AI
Instead of recording yourself, you can turn your script into studio-quality narration using an AI text-to-speech tool. I've been using AnySpeech for this â you paste in your script, pick from over 100 natural-sounding AI voices across 50+ languages and accents, and it generates a clean MP3 in seconds. That language coverage is handy if you want to reach an international audience, and there's even a voice-cloning option if you'd rather narrate in a consistent custom voice without sitting at a mic every time. Export the audio as MP3 and you're ready for the next step.
Step 3: Combine the audio with your clip
Drop your gameplay video and the new voiceover track into any free editor â CapCut, iMovie, or the built-in Photos app on Windows all work. Line the narration up with the on-screen action, lower the game's original audio so the voice sits on top, and export. If your editor spits out a format a platform doesn't like, our previous guide shows how to convert it to MP4 or GIF in a couple of clicks.
Step 4: Publish and iterate
Post your narrated clip, see which lines land, and tweak your script next time. Because the voiceover is generated from text, fixing a mistake is as easy as editing a sentence and regenerating â no re-recording required. Need fresh footage to narrate? Jump into Block Breaker or browse the full game library.
Final thoughts
A great voiceover used to mean owning gear and being comfortable on the mic. Now all it takes is a few sentences of script and an AI voice generator. Write it, generate it, sync it, and ship it â your gameplay videos will sound like they came from a full production setup. Go set a high score worth narrating.