Robbie Reyes /Ghost Rider

Chains wrapped in hellfire announce Robbie Reyes long before his opponent sees him coming. As the anchor of the Samurai Outriders, the fifth and final team confirmed for Marvel Tōkon: Fighting Souls, he leads a group that Arc System Works itself admits did not start out united.

Robbie Reyes’s Role and Playstyle

Forget Johnny Blaze; this incarnation of Ghost Rider is the East Los Angeles mechanic whose body became host to a vengeful spirit, and that backstory shapes how he fights. Long-range chains and building hellfire stand in for flashy acrobatics here, giving him a zoning-heavy approach few other characters on the roster share. A Vengeance Gauge climbs the longer a match drags on, and once it fills, his damage output spikes. Producer Takeshi Yamanaka has described the Samurai Outriders as a team pulled together by circumstance rather than camaraderie, and Robbie’s position as its reluctant leader sits right at the center of that friction. Episode Mode is set to explore what actually binds him to Blade, Loki, and Deadpool.

Who Voices Robbie Reyes in Marvel Tōkon: Fighting Souls?

Giancarlo Sabogal handles the English performance, stepping back into a role he already knows from Marvel’s Midnight Suns. Elsewhere, he has worked on Spider-Man 2, Starfield, and Psychonauts 2. Katsuyuki Konishi provides the Japanese voice, an actor whose career includes Kamina in Gurren Lagann, Tengen Uzui in Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba, and Laxus Dreyar in Fairy Tail.

Robbie Reyes /Ghost Rider Voiced by

English

Raised between Los Angeles and Miami with Peruvian and Italian roots, Giancarlo Sabogal sharpened his character work through early sketch…...

Japanese

Katsuyuki Konishi was born on 21 April 1973 in Wakayama, Japan. He is an actor, known for Gurren Lagann (2007),…...
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