Doraemon: Legends of the Anywhere Door

Doraemon: Legends of the Anywhere Door (Japanese:ドラえもんのインタラクティブ：どこのドアの秘密 Doraemon no intarakutibu: Doko no doa no himitsu Translation: Doraemon Interactive: Secrets of the Anywhere Door) is a Japanese 3D platform game created by SquareSoft for the Playstation. It was released on 5 November 1998. An English dub was also created for a release in English speaking countries, unfortunately this version was cancelled and never released due to early criticism and people complaining that this game was almost similar to the video game Croc 2: Legend of the Gobbos. The English dub had a narrator voiced by Michael E. Rodgers, who also voiced Nobu Nobi and some additional characters. The English dub of this video game was based on the 1997-2005 English dub of Doraemon. Some of the characters are voiced by different voice actors in the English dub.

Plot
Doraemon, Nobu, Violet, Zippy, and Giant have transported to an arcade run by evil villains. They have to figure out the secrets of the Anywhere Door and how it got invented. Will Doraemon and his friends solve the mysteries of the Anywhere Door, or will it be too late?

Cast
Cathy Weseluck as Doraemon/Additional Voices

Michael E. Rodgers as Narrator/Nobu Nobi/Additional Voices

Tabatha St. Germain as Violet/Additional Voices

Steven Kynman as Zippy/Additional Voices

Samuel Vincent as Giant/Additional Voices

Trivia
There was no narration in the original Japanese version, but the English dub added a narrator.

Just like the 60-minute film Doraemon: 60 Minutes into the Future, the voice actors for the main characters have been changed. Michael E. Rodgers, Gideon Emery, and Alyson Court are the only voice actors to reprise their roles as their characters.

Footage of the game in its English dubbed form was shown on a video game show for Fox Kids Europe on 4 March 1999 that was presented by Michael E. Rodgers. According to what he said in the video game show, Michael E. Rodgers mentioned that he hated voicing Nobu in the video game due to the bad audio quality, but loved working with the other voice actors.

This video game had three English dubs. The first dub was the cancelled English dub by Fox KIds Europe. The second dub was made in Singapore for Japanese kids to learn English as a second language. The third dub was made in the UK by British anime/cartoon dubbing company Creative Corp. with unknown voice actors voicing the characters, and unlike the cancelled Fox Kids dub and the Singapore dub, the Creative dub had good audio quality and it's script is more faithful to the Japanese version, with name changes and some toned-down gag dialogue not included in the original Japanese version. The Fox Kids Europe and Creative Corp. dubs are unreleased, while the Singaporean dub was released with negative reviews.