Star Wars Zero Company voice cast header image featuring a battle droid, a Togruta character, and portraits of Dee Bradley Baker and Vic Michaelis

Star Wars: Zero Company Voice Cast: What We Know So Far

Star Wars: Zero Company still has one of those cast lists that feels more like a slowly opening blast door than a full reveal.

The game itself is official: it is a single-player turn-based tactics game from Bit Reactor, made in collaboration with Respawn Entertainment and Lucasfilm Games, set in the twilight of the Clone Wars. Players step into the role of Hawks, leading an unconventional squad through a shadow-war story built around both authored characters and customizable recruits.

What is not fully official yet is the voice cast. Publicly, Lucasfilm and EA have told us a lot about the game’s setting, squad structure, and major characters, but they have named surprisingly few actors so far. That makes this a good moment for a proper “what we know so far” check-in.

Vic Michaelis is the newest reported name

The newest actor connected to the game is comedian Vic Michaelis. In a February interview, Michaelis said they were working on a video game coming out this year and added, “I’m playing Roona in Star Wars: Zero Company.” Since then, reporting around the game has tied that role to the character Runa Blask, making Michaelis the freshest publicly identified name in the cast.

That is a pretty fun addition for a game that already looks like it wants a mix of grit, Clone Wars tension, and a few sharper personalities around the edges. Runa has not exactly had the full Lucasfilm spotlight yet, but this is the kind of late-breaking casting detail that makes it feel like more names could start dropping soon.

Dee Bradley Baker and Matt Wood look like the familiar voices

The other two names most consistently attached to the game so far are Dee Bradley Baker and Matthew Wood. Coverage around the reveal has identified Baker as the voice behind Trick and the broader clone presence, while Wood is tied to the game’s battle droids. That would make a lot of sense on pure Star Wars logic alone, given how closely both actors are associated with those voices already.

This is also where Zero Company starts to feel very Clone Wars in the right way. If Baker and Wood are indeed part of the game’s vocal backbone, then even a brand-new tactical RPG gets some immediate connective tissue to the wider animated era fans already know.

The official character list is bigger than the actor list

Lucasfilm has already introduced several key characters on the official game page and in the game announcement. Besides Hawks, the current lineup includes Trick, Luco Bronc, Cly Kullervo, and Tel-Rea Vokoss, with the official write-up describing them as authored characters players can combine with custom-made squad members.

That is the strange part: we know a decent amount about who these characters are, but not much yet about who is playing them. So right now, the actor side of the story is still much thinner than the character side.

Why the full cast may still be under wraps

EA has already explained one major reason the voice situation may be unusually messy: Hawks and the different squad members are customizable, including their voices, alongside appearances, classes, and names. That strongly suggests the game likely has multiple voice options for at least some of its player-shaped characters, which means the eventual cast list may be broader than fans expect.

In other words, this may not be the kind of RPG where Lucasfilm rolls out one neat hero cast and calls it a day. There are probably still several performers waiting in the wings, especially if custom squad voices are a real part of the game’s structure.

The short version

So, as of now, the publicly known or widely reported voice names for Star Wars: Zero Company are:

Vic Michaelis, linked to Runa Blask.
Dee Bradley Baker, linked to Trick / clone voices.
Matthew Wood, linked to battle droids.

Everything else still looks mostly locked down.

Which, honestly, probably means this story is not finished at all. The game is still slated for 2026, and if Lucasfilm starts peeling back more of the cast one name at a time, Zero Company may end up having a much deeper voice bench than it is showing right now.