To be direct, I can’t find any official record of a character named Raiden Wolf McLean in mainstream anime casts, so it’s very likely the name is either a fan-made creation, an indie or doujin project, or a conflation of multiple characters. I’ve seen this happen a lot—people merge a cool-sounding first name like 'Raiden' with a nickname like 'Wolf' and a Western surname, then assume it’s from some televised series.
When I run into that, I check three places fast: the end credits of the episode or OVA, the official series page (where production and cast are usually listed), and voice-actor databases that separate Japanese and English credits. Smaller projects sometimes only list cast on their funding pages or upload descriptions, so don’t ignore those. It’s a bit of detective work, but I enjoy tracing where these hybrid names come from — sometimes you uncover hidden gems or tiny passion projects with amazing performances.
Weirdly enough, I couldn't find a credited anime character called Raiden Wolf McLean in any of the usual places I check—so my gut says this is probably a mashed-up name, a fan-made character, or something from a very small indie project rather than a widely released TV anime. I dug through the mental rolodex of characters that contain 'Raiden', 'Wolf', or the surname 'McLean' and none of them line up exactly. That makes sense sometimes: fans mix names together (like Raiden from a popular franchise, plus someone nicknamed Wolf, plus a Western surname) and it turns into a hybrid that doesn’t exist in official cast lists.
If you meant a similar-sounding, canonical character, there are a few common culprits people confuse. 'Raiden' is a name used across games and anime-adjacent media (so people often conflate game voice casts with anime casts), and 'Wolf' appears as a title or nickname in shows like 'Wolf's Rain' and in videogame casts. The easiest way I’ve found to untangle this is to look up the specific show’s end credits or check established databases like the ones that list Japanese and English dubbing credits—those usually show the full cast and are pretty reliable. Sometimes a voice actor credited for an English dub is better known than the character, so you might remember the actor and not the show.
Because I’m into tracking down obscure credits, I also check the official series website and the publisher’s press releases; social media posts by the production team or the actor can reveal one-off roles or fan-castings that haven’t been indexed. If Raiden Wolf McLean is from a web animation, indie OVA, or fan audio drama, it might not be in big databases yet—those projects tend to credit via Kickstarter pages, Patreon posts, or direct upload descriptions. If you’re hunting the exact voice, check the video description, the closing credits, or the project’s official channels first. For my part, I love these little mysteries—finding a surprising voice cameo feels like treasure, and even though I couldn't pin Raiden Wolf McLean down this time, tracing the trail is half the fun.
2025-11-12 23:03:47
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The Raven Wolf King: Wolfless
Norisha May
8.2
14.8K
“Wolfless and worthless, that is what you are, Valeria.”
Worthless. Stupid. A waste of space. That is what they all called me.
“You’ll be rejected. No male in his right mind will ever want you.”
And they were right. My love story begins with rejection.
Wolfless, I was born without a wolf soul. But I am more than that. My bloodline carries magic, and soon they will all learn how worthless I truly am.
---
“Let me love you, Valeria.”
“You can’t.”
“Yes, I can and I will. You are mine now. Reject the idea all you want, you have no choice. I will love you.”
“You're the one who rejected me.”
Raphael’s hand clamps gently on my chin. “Don’t run from me again.” He doesn’t even acknowledge my words. “You should know better than to run from an Alpha.”
“What do you want?”
“I wanted to speak with you, but now…” His voice drops as he leans close, his nose brushing my ear. “Now I want you on your knees… taking me all in.”
Shock floods me, but the image forms in my mind, and my knees weaken. My body doesn't hate the thought.
I close my eyes, turn away, but when I dare look back, his gaze is raking down my body, slow and possessive. If I don’t escape, this man will own me.
My hand rises, pressing against his chest. “You broke this. You shattered our bond. You don’t get to have me now. Someone else will.”
I release him, pushing just enough to slip free of his grasp. As I walk away, his voice follows, low: “A mistake I will never make again. I’ll have you. I will win your heart, my beautiful mate.”
WOLFBANE SERIES BOOK 2 ***It is highly recommended you read book 1, Wolfbane, before starting this one for context and to avoid spoilers.***
*TALIA*
You'd think being raised in a brothel would prepare me for anything. You'd be wrong.
I never expected to find my mother murdered in cold blood. I never predicted I'd hunt down the killer and take his life in exchange. And I sure didn't imagine the son of my mother's murderer would turn out to be my mate.
But I guess this is my life now.
Being a werewolf in hiding was no piece of cake, but being a werewolf on the run is even worse…
*ALEX*
I don't think I made a very good first impression.
But to be fair, who meets their mate at their father's murder scene? A murder where she, evidently, is the number one and only suspect.
It's disturbing. It's gruesome. But it's fate.
And I'll do anything to see the mysterious woman with distinctive blue eyes again…
*Content warning: This is a paranormal romance novel with dark themes containing mature adult content, offensive language, and graphic violence, and may not be suitable for young readers.*
Naomi is known for being smart and reserved, when she is fated to be the mate of the Alpha she's had a crush on for years. Naomi feels like luck is finally on her side. Until that reality crashes around her and she finds herself alone, banished from her pack and pregnant.
After starting a new life Naomi is led to wonder can she truly leave her old pack behind and the Alpha that hurt her?
When he comes crashing back into her life It seems that the life she planned for herself and her son and what destiny wanted are two very different things.
As the Alpha's daughter, Ivy has one goal, get gifted her wolf on her eighteen birthday, and lead her pack as her Father's heir, but when the full moon goes down and she realizes she might not be getting her wolf, she is attacked by her pack and barely escapes with her life.
Betrayed by everyone she once loved and cared for, Ivy has one more option, cut her hair and disguise as a boy, infiltrate an all-boys- alpha academy and find the professor who can help her get her wolf back.
But her plans come crashing down when she makes an enemy of the most dangerous and deadly Lycan's son in the realm. Aiden Khalnai.
He threatens to destroy her, and she knows it doesn't matter what she does or how much she hides because Aiden always make good of his promises.
Nineteen year old Raven belongs in the Whitlock pack, but still without her wolf, she is constantly reminded and insulted for being different to everyone else. Raven is headstrong and always on the wrong side of the Luna and her old high school enemy, Violet. With only her family to defend her and a shaded past, Raven often questions everything about her life in the pack. But, when an old friend from her past tries to become close to her and with an uprising against the pack, Raven's whole world tears apart. But, this is just the beginning for Raven as it catapults her into her own journey of discovering the truth and mystery of who and what she will become.
Aiden Althea, a half-vampire and werewolf, was raised to believe that the werewolves are responsible for the death of his parents. He loathes their race and would do anything to destroy their world. He goes on a killing spree, suppressing the werewolves at ease and satisfying his revenge for his parents. Aiden wipes half the race of the werewolves and would have wiped more if his fated mate was not the Luna of the Blood Moon Pack. What would he do when he discovers that his heart is in fact stronger his mind?
Man, Bandit Wolf’s voice in the English dub is chef’s kiss—it’s none other than Ian Sinclair! If you’ve heard his work in 'Space Dandy' or 'Dr. Stone,' you’ll recognize that smooth, charismatic tone instantly. What’s wild is how he flips between suave and unhinged so effortlessly, making Bandit Wolf such a memorable villain. Sinclair’s got this knack for balancing menace with dark humor, like when Bandit Wolf taunts the heroes with that signature chuckle. Honestly, it’s one of those performances where the actor becomes the character.
Fun fact: Sinclair’s also a prolific ADR director, which explains why his delivery feels so polished. He understands pacing and timing like few others, and it shows in Bandit Wolf’s chaotic energy. I’ve rewatched scenes just to catch his little ad-libs—tiny growls or breathy pauses that add so much texture. If you’re into dub actors who elevate their roles, this one’s a masterclass.
Okay, if you mean the big, memorable wolf from 'Princess Mononoke', that role in the English dub went to Gillian Anderson. I still get chills thinking about her deep, mournful delivery as Moro — she brings such gravitas to the wolf-goddess, making the character feel ancient and tragic at once.
The English dub that Disney released in the late '90s paired Anderson's Moro alongside Claire Danes as San and Billy Crudup as Ashitaka, and the casting really leaned into star power to sell the emotion and scale of the film to Western audiences. Moro's voice work stands out because it balances raw animal fury with maternal sorrow, and Anderson's theatrical tone helps the scenes land hard. For me, her performance is one of the reasons the English dub still holds up; it gives the wolf a real personality rather than just being a creature in the background.
Got this one locked down: Raven Branwen in 'RWBY' is voiced in the English cast by Lindsay Jones. I always find it wild how voice actors can stretch across characters — Lindsay is best-known for giving life to Ruby Rose, but she’s part of that core group who shaped the show’s sound, and her work on Raven brings a different, rougher edge that really sells Raven’s wandering, hardened vibe.
Hearing Raven for the first time, I was struck by how the performance contrasts with the rest of the cast. The voice carries age and wear without losing subtlety, which helped make Raven feel mysterious and dangerous. If you pay attention to the credits in the episodes where Raven appears, Lindsay Jones is listed there. On top of that, Rooster Teeth often leans on a tight-knit set of performers who swap into new parts when the story asks for it — that familiarity sometimes leads to those cool little vocal echoes between characters, which is a fun rabbit hole to go down if you enjoy voice work. All told, Lindsay’s take on Raven is one of those performances that made me want to rewatch scenes just to catch the smallest inflections.