Voiced: Pastakudasai

In the Japanese internet lexicon, a “voiced” version usually implies that a track originally built around a short vocal sample or text‑to‑speech has been re‑recorded by a professional voice talent or singer. Think of the difference between a meme‑song that loops a 2‑second clip and a fully‑produced pop single that you could hear on the radio.

For Pastakudasai, a voiced rendition would accomplish three things: pastakudasai voiced


Do not search for "Gura Pasta." Do not search for "Please give me pasta." Go directly to YouTube, Twitter (X), or a soundboard site (like Myinstants or SoundBut) and type exactly: In the Japanese internet lexicon, a “voiced” version

pastakudasai voiced

Rumors circulate that the track could become the opening theme for a new anime series about a college culinary club. While unconfirmed, the synergy would be perfect: a song about asking for pasta, sung by a voice actress who already stars in food‑centric shows. Do not search for "Gura Pasta


  • Verbs with voiced consonants keep them in conjugation:
  • Negative/polite requests (softer) use ~ないでください (Please do not ...):
  • Very polite requests: ~てくださいませんか or ~ていただけますか
  • The authentic clip runs for approximately 4 seconds. It features no background music, just Gura’s raw voice. The waveform should show three distinct spikes for the three repetitions of "Pasta kudasai."

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