Beelzebub Anime Dub Episode 1 -

This is the dub’s secret weapon. In Japanese, Beel’s laugh is a high-pitched “Dah-hah-hah!” Clinkenbeard—who also directs the dub—gives Beel a deeper, more guttural “HEH-heh-heh-heh.” It sounds like a tiny, demonic Dennis Hopper. It’s disarming, weird, and utterly perfect for a child who can destroy a city block.

Sinclair is a legend in the dubbing world (known for Space Dandy and The Disastrous Life of Saiki K. ). His Oga is a revelation. While the Japanese voice actor (Katsuyuki Konishi) plays Oga with a gravelly, intense machismo, Sinclair adds a layer of weary sarcasm. When Oga dryly mutters, “Great. A demon baby. My life is complete,” Sinclair’s timing turns a standard line into a gut-buster. He also nails the explosive rage moments, screaming “SHUT UP!” with the force of a freight train. beelzebub anime dub episode 1

If you love shows like The Way of the Househusband (violent man goes domestic), Gintama (scatological insanity), or One Punch Man (OP character who doesn’t care), then drop whatever you’re doing. Go watch Tatsumi Oga get electrocuted by a laughing baby. You won’t regret it. This is the dub’s secret weapon

The inciting incident is brilliantly stupid. Oga hears a baby crying by the riverbank while heading to school. Assuming it’s abandoned, he goes to investigate, only to find a bizarrely muscular, grinning infant wrapped in green leaves. The moment Oga touches the child, a giant, terrifyingly voluptuous demon maid named Hildegard (Hilda) arrives. She reveals that the baby is Kaiser de Emperana Beelzebub IV—the son of the Demon Lord—and that Oga has been chosen to co-parent him. If Oga refuses or fails to raise Beel, humanity is doomed. Sinclair is a legend in the dubbing world

When Beelzebub first hit the anime scene in 2011, it was instantly hailed as one of the wildest shonen comedies of its era. The premise was absurdly simple yet brilliant: Tatsumi Oga, the toughest first-year at "Hell’s own juvenile detention center" (Ishiyama High), literally fishes a baby out of a river. That baby, however, turns out to be the son of the Demon Lord, and Oga is chosen to be his surrogate father. For years, fans of the subtitled version have worshipped the chaotic scream-laughs of the original. But for the uninitiated or re-watchers craving a fresh take, the English dub offers a surprisingly potent and hilarious alternative.

The dub’s translation of “delinquent lingo” into “jock/nerd/thug” archetypes makes the social hierarchy of Ishiyama High instantly understandable. Plus, the meme potential is huge. Lines like “I don’t do diapers, I do beatdowns” have become cult classics among dub fans. As of 2026, the English dub of Beelzebub is legally available on Crunchyroll (following their acquisition of FUNimation’s catalog) and Amazon Prime Video (via third-party channels). Some regions also have it on Hulu . Be warned: The series was never fully dubbed beyond episode 60—it covers the entire anime run, as the Japanese series didn't adapt the final manga arc. So you get a complete 60-episode experience plus OVAs, all in English.