Generate natural speech with nine built-in voices
This voice generator gives you a clear starting point: choose one of nine ready-made voices, write what it should say, and select the language of your text. There is no recording to upload and no need to describe an entirely new character from scratch. Each voice has a distinct sound, so you can match the speaker to the mood of a story, lesson, presentation, draft video, product walkthrough, or spoken message. When your result is ready, it appears in a player where you can listen before saving the MP3.
Meet all nine built-in voices
Vivian has a bright, youthful female sound with a slightly lively edge, while Serena feels warmer and gentler. Uncle Fu offers a seasoned male voice with a low, mellow character. Dylan is a youthful Beijing male voice with clear, natural delivery, and Eric brings a lively Chengdu style with a lightly husky brightness. These five are naturally rooted in Chinese speaking styles, with Dylan and Eric offering distinct regional character.
For English, Ryan has a dynamic male sound and strong rhythmic drive, making him a useful choice for energetic material. Aiden is a sunny American male voice with a clear middle range that suits friendly explanations and approachable narration. Ono Anna is a playful Japanese female voice with a light, nimble quality. Sohee is a warm Korean female voice with rich emotion. Together, the nine choices cover gentle, lively, mature, playful, confident, and expressive deliveries without forcing you to build a voice yourself.
Ten supported languages
Every built-in voice can speak English, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, German, French, Russian, Portuguese, Spanish, and Italian. The native label on each voice card shows the language or speaking background where that voice is most naturally at home, but it does not lock the voice to that language. You can select Ryan for Spanish, Sohee for English, Vivian for French, or any other supported combination. For the most familiar accent and flow, begin with a voice whose native label matches your text, then explore other voices when your project benefits from a different character.
How to use the built-in voice generator
- Choose one of the nine voice cards. The highlighted card is the voice that will speak.
- Write the exact words you want to hear in the speech box.
- Select the language that matches your written text.
- Optionally add a short speaking direction, such as warm, cheerful, slow, serious, or energetic.
- Press Generate. If the service is busy, your waiting-list position will appear and remain reserved while the page stays open.
- Listen in the player, then use Download MP3 when you are happy with the result.
The waiting list stays hidden when you first open the page. It starts only after you press Generate, and no later visitor can jump ahead of someone already waiting. As soon as a result is finished, the next waiting request begins. If you are waiting, keep the browser page open so the service knows you are still there.
Use speaking directions to shape the delivery
The speaking direction is optional. Leaving it empty gives the selected voice room to deliver the text in its usual style. Add a direction when you need a particular mood or pace. Short, compatible instructions work well: “speak slowly and gently,” “sound cheerful and welcoming,” or “use confident emphasis.” Avoid combining opposites such as very slow and extremely fast. A focused direction makes it easier to hear what changed when you generate another version.
Ways this tool can help
Built-in voices are useful when you need a consistent speaker without arranging a recording session. Writers can hear dialogue and narration aloud. Teachers can prepare spoken examples for lessons and language practice. Video creators can test timing before final editing. Designers can add temporary narration to a demonstration. Teams can make a presentation draft easier to review, and storytellers can compare a gentle voice with a more energetic one. Because all nine speakers can handle all ten languages, you can also test how the same message feels with different voices while keeping the wording unchanged.
Tips for clearer, more natural audio
Write complete sentences and use punctuation to guide pauses. Commas can create brief breathing space, while full stops separate ideas more firmly. Break very long passages into smaller sections when you want closer control over rhythm. Spell out unusual abbreviations if they might be read incorrectly, and consider writing difficult names the way they sound. Listen to the full result before downloading, especially when the text contains numbers, initials, or specialist words. If something feels too quick or too formal, create another version with a small change to the speaking direction instead of rewriting everything.
Listen first, then keep the MP3 you want
Your finished audio is shown in a player, so nothing downloads unexpectedly. You can play, pause, seek, and review the speech before choosing Download MP3. If you want a different result, select Create another, adjust the voice, language, text, or direction, and generate again. Finished audio is temporary and is automatically removed within 24 hours. Download any version you want to keep before that time; there is no saved profile or permanent online audio library.