Overwatch Voice Actor Champions Fan Demands to Change New Hero Anran’s Design
Fareeha, Overwatch content creator and voice actor for Anran, has publicly supported the community’s call for Blizzard to consider redesigning her new hero’s appearance. The Overwatch streamer-turned-voice actor has stepped up to champion the community’s desire to see tweaks made to Anran’s design.
Blizzard recently surprised its fanbase with a series of massive shakeups in Overwatch 2, least of all by dropping the 2 and rebranding itself back to simply Overwatch. The start of its first year-long storyline, subroles, a revamped UI, and five brand-new heroes are just some of the major features coming in its next season on February 10.
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Anran’s Voice Actor Hopes Overwatch Will Redesign New Hero
However, one of these new heroes in particular has garnered some criticism from the fanbase. Anran Ye, the fiery older sister of aquatic Overwatch support hero Wuyang, makes her debut as a damage hero in Reign of Talon Season 1. That said, her design has not hit the mark with much of the community, leading them to request that Blizzard fix aspects of her model. What’s more, Fareeha, Anran’s voice actor, has stepped up to champion the cause.
Anran is available in Quick Play for her hero trial from now until February 10, when she is officially launched.
When Anran was first revealed for Overwatch during Wuyang’s backstory, she had an atypical face and nose shape that defied conventional beauty standards, granting her a fierce and mature countenance. Additionally, her outfit was sporty and grounded, fitting her determined, tomboyish demeanor. Conversely, her official design features a softer face shape, small nose, and gentler eyes that make her look more like Wuyang’s demure younger sister, if not the sibling of Juno or Kiriko. What’s more, her outfit, while unique in its own right, is far more feminine and ornamental than most players would have expected Anran to wear.
“In her comic and the cinematic, ‘Elemental Kin,’ there was a precedent set by it,” Fareeha said in her statement. “There was an unspoken promise that said ‘we’re going to challenge the beauty standards plaguing this industry’… And I think because of that precedent, people feel understandably let down.” Fareeha claimed Anran’s model has “a look that isn’t congruent with her personality,” leading her to hope that Blizzard might make adjustments to her in the future.
Even before she was cast as the voice of Anran, Fareeha was a prolific performer, storyteller, and content creator for games including Overwatch and Marvel Rivals. With nearly 150,000 followers on Twitch alone, Fareeha is well-known in the Overwatch community.
The fact that Fareeha has stepped up to use her significant platform as a streamer and influence within Blizzard as a voice actor was inspiring to her fans. “This is a hill worth dying on, worth speaking on,” she said, adding that she had ensured Blizzard heard the community’s concerns. While there is no guarantee this will lead to Anran’s model being changed, Fareeha championing “the version of [Anran] that we all wished for” makes it more likely than it would have been otherwise.
Criticism of Other Overwatch Hero Designs
Amidst the hero shooter’s comeback, the critique of Overwatch hero designs seems to be its main pain point. Many female heroes released in the Overwatch 2 era, including Kiriko, Juno, Freja, and Vendetta, have been criticized as overly cute or pretty, similarly to the recent complaints about Anran. Even the other four heroes coming in Overwatch Reign of Talon Season 1 have caught some flak from the community, from Domina’s younger face and Jetpack Cat’s strangely human eyes to Emre and Mizuki looking like they could have been heroes in Valorant.
Either way, Overwatch is drastically speeding up its hero production, with five more heroes planned for 2026, one in every bimonthly season. Gamers will have to see what these characters look like and judge if Overwatch “breaks those molds” to “explore the bounds of what it means to be good,” and “what it looks like to be heroic,” as Fareeha put it.