If you’ve played any major video game in the last decade, chances are you’ve heard Elias Toufexis’s voice. The Canadian-American actor, best known as the gravelly voice of Adam Jensen in Deus Ex, recently sat down to discuss how the industry has evolved – from recording in professional studios to directing Fortnite sessions from his home booth in LA.
“My friend Carrie always said to me, ‘You were no plan B Elias,'” Toufexis recalls with a laugh. From Montreal theater to becoming one of gaming’s most recognizable voices, acting was always the only path. These days, he juggles multiple roles: voice actor, performance capture artist, voice director, and writer. “I make a living as an actor, most definitely. But it’s not to the point where I don’t have to work anymore… I was just on Star Trek, okay, what’s next? Because I have to pay my bills.”
The pandemic forced a seismic shift in how voice work gets done. Toufexis invested in a professional home booth – a decision that saved his career during COVID. “I remember Ubisoft giving me a job in the middle of COVID when everything stopped for Phoenix Rising. It paid for everything that I was losing.”
The transition brought unexpected challenges. As a voice director, he’s dealt with actors recording near airports and neighbors taking marathon showers that interfered with sessions. Perhaps most surprisingly, even motion capture has gone remote. During peak COVID, a team set up a limited mocap rig in his garage.
While the flexibility is liberating – “I could be living in somewhere in New Mexico for a hundred bucks a month and do everything I’m doing now” – Toufexis is candid about what’s been lost. Audition callbacks now happen over Zoom with connections cutting out. “I’m reading with nobody. I’m in my house and I’m like, how is this conducive to a good performance?”
His Netflix series Blood of Zeus exemplifies this change. The first season was recorded with actors together in-studio. Now? “The last two seasons have been just me here, just doing it by myself.”
Despite voicing iconic characters and appearing in Star Trek: Discovery, Toufexis describes actors as “contract workers, like roofers.” This reality led him to diversify into directing and writing. “I did Star Trek. I’m the main bad guy for a whole year… and it hasn’t really led to other jobs. I still have to hustle.”
On AI replacing voice actors, Toufexis takes a nuanced view. His main concern is for newcomers losing entry-level opportunities like background voices in games. “Who’s gonna hire an actor to yell ‘grenade’ in the background anymore?” But he’s confident about performance: “AI’s never gonna have connection. You’re not gonna find amazing choices and heartfelt performances from a computer.”
His advice to aspiring voice actors? “If you know you’re actually good at this, not if it’s just your dream, but you’re literally good at it, then never give up. Because the cream rises to the top.”
As the industry evolves, Toufexis remains committed to the human element of performance, whether in a motion capture studio or his home booth. Because ultimately, it’s about connection – something no technology can replace.
Blood of Zeus Season 3 is available on Netflix now.
Elias Toufexis is a Canadian-American actor renowned as one of gaming’s most recognizable voices and a versatile science fiction television performer. Born October 27, 1975, in Montreal to a Greek-Cypriot family, he’s earned the title “The Canadian Andy Serkis” from Variety magazine.
Starting in Montreal theater, Toufexis graduated from Dawson College before attempting New York’s off-Broadway scene. His breakthrough came in 2004 with “The Five People You Meet in Heaven,” leading to steady television work including Supernatural and Smallville.
His career-defining moment arrived in 2011 as Adam Jensen in Deus Ex: Human Revolution. The role’s impact was so significant that he was replaced from Far Cry 3 because publishers feared character confusion. He won Canadian Videogame Awards for both Deus Ex games, with his wife Michelle Boback playing Megan Reed in the franchise.
Television highlights include dual roles in The Expanse (Kenzo Gabriel and the Hybrid creature) and L’ak in Star Trek: Discovery’s final season. His video game portfolio spans over 40 titles including Assassin’s Creed, Splinter Cell, Call of Duty, and Starfield’s Sam Coe.
As a performance capture pioneer, Toufexis brings theatrical training to digital performances, though he noted the industry became a “disaster zone” in 2024 due to mass layoffs. Recognition includes being ranked Montreal’s #3 most popular actor and appearing as a Jeopardy! clue.
Currently residing in Los Angeles with his family, Toufexis became a U.S. citizen in January 2025. He continues voice directing (including Bungie’s Marathon), commercial work for major brands, and animation roles like Seraphim in Netflix’s Blood of Zeus. Despite industry challenges, he advocates for actors’ rights regarding AI while hoping to join the Star Wars and Marvel franchises.