Balto: Wolf Adventure

Balto: Wolf Adventure is an action-adventure game based primarily on the 1995 film of the same name and it's 2002 sequel, Wolf Quest (along with elements taken from the 2005 sequel, Wings of Change) that was published by Sierra Entertainment and released on February 15th, 2005 for the PlayStation 2, Xbox, Nintendo GameCube, Game Boy Advance, Nintendo DS and PlayStation Portable.

Voice Cast
The scenes taken from the movies act as FMVs in the console version. Therefore, archival recordings of the characters' voice actors (even if one's reprising his role and the other one is not) from those scenes can be heard most of the time (excluding the music by James Horner and Adam Berry, which were both replaced by Mark Mancina's own composed music, which is the only time in the Balto series that Mancina had composed the score for (console version only)).


 * Maurice LaMarche - Balto
 * Jodi Benson - Jenna
 * Charles Fleischer - Boris
 * Tara Strong - Rosy (replacing Juliette Brewer)
 * Jim Cummings - Steele (reprising his role from the original Balto film.)
 * Phil Collins - Muk & Luk (reprising his roles from the original Balto film.)
 * Earl Boen - Nikki (replacing Jack Angel)
 * Danny Mann - Kaltag (reprising his role from the original Balto film.)
 * Wally Wingert - Star (replacing Robbie Rist)
 * Lacey Chabert - Aleu
 * Jess Harnell - Nava (replacing David Carradine)
 * Mark Hamill - Niju
 * Kath Soucie - Dingo (replacing Nicolette Little)
 * Debi Derryberry - Saba (replacing Melanie Spore)
 * Sean Astin - Kodi (acts as a narrator for some cutscenes along with Balto and Jenna)

Trivia

 * This is the only time in the entire Balto franchise that Phil Collins had wrote songs for, including his cover of Steve Winwood's "Reach for the Light", which plays during the end credits and is also a music video as an extra feature you could unlock by playing through the game.
 * This is also the only time Phil has not only ever had a voice acting role, but is also a songwriter on the same project.
 * There were plans for a Japanese release, but they were later scrapped, due to the original film not being well-known in Japan.