Voicemod, Clownfish, MorphVOX — none of them run on ChromeOS. On a Chromebook the browser IS the app platform, and this voice changer runs entirely in the tab. Pick a preset below, tap the button, and hear yourself disguised in real time.
Search for "voice changer" and every big name assumes you're on Windows or a Mac. On ChromeOS, none of them are an option — and the Play Store substitutes aren't the same thing.
Voicemod ships desktop apps for Windows and Mac, plus iOS and Android mobile apps. There is no ChromeOS version and never has been.
Clownfish, MorphVOX, Voice.ai — every desktop voice changer targets Windows (a few add Mac). Zero of them ship for ChromeOS.
The Android voice-changer apps you can sideload from the Play Store are recorder-style: you record a clip, then apply an effect to the recording. Fine for a meme, useless for a conversation.
Speak into your Chromebook's mic and hear yourself disguised in real time — under 100 ms of delay, while you're talking, not after.
Honest section. A Chromebook can do most of what a Windows voice changer setup does, but not all of it, and it's better to know the difference up front.
ChromeOS has no virtual audio cable. On Windows or a Mac you can install VB-CABLE or BlackHole and pipe a disguised voice into Discord, Zoom, or another tab's call as if it were your microphone. There is no equivalent system-wide routing on ChromeOS, so you can't feed this page's output into the Discord Android app or another tab's call.
If your Chromebook supports the Linux container (Crostini), you can run Linux apps with PulseAudio loopback routing — the same approach Linux desktop users take. The steps are on the voice changer for Linux page. It works, but it's a project. For most Chromebook users, the built-in voice rooms are the practical answer.
No spin. Honest in every column.
| Voicemod | Play-Store recorder apps | This page | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Runs on ChromeOS | No — Windows & Mac only | Some (if Play Store is enabled) | Yes — any Chromebook |
| Live real-time (vs record-then-play) | Yes, but not on ChromeOS | No — record a clip, then apply an effect | Yes (<100 ms) |
| Price | Free tier + Pro at $2.49/mo (billed annually) or $39.99 lifetime | Free with ads / in-app purchases | Free |
| Account | Required (email) | Varies; Google account for Play Store | None |
| Install | Desktop installer (Windows/Mac) | Play Store download | None — it's a web page |
| This page | On a Chromebook, the browser tool wins by default: nothing else on this list gives you live voice disguise on ChromeOS. Pick Voicemod only if you also own a Windows or Mac machine and want its bigger voice library there. | ||
No. Voicemod ships desktop apps for Windows and Mac and mobile apps for iOS and Android, but there is no ChromeOS build and never has been. A browser-based voice changer is the Chromebook equivalent: the same real-time preset idea, running in the tab instead of a desktop app.
It runs in the browser with no install and no admin rights, so there is nothing to download or unlock. One caveat: if your Chromebook is managed by a school or employer, the administrator may block microphone access for websites. That's a device policy setting, not a limitation of the tool.
Not directly. ChromeOS has no virtual microphone, so you can't pipe the disguised voice into the Discord app the way Windows and Mac users do with a virtual audio cable. Instead, use the built-in voice rooms at /hideme/ to talk with friends disguised — no other app needed. Advanced users can also set up the Linux container (Crostini) with PulseAudio loopback — see the Linux guide.
It's live. You speak and hear your disguised voice in real time with under 100 ms of delay — not the record-a-clip-then-apply-an-effect flow that most Play Store voice changer apps use.
No. It's a plain web page. It works on any Chromebook with a browser and a microphone, including models and managed profiles where the Play Store is disabled.
Four presets — Deep, Bright, Distant, and Robotic — and all four are free and unlocked. No trial rotation, no Pro tier.
ChromeOS and any modern browser first, plus iOS, Android, macOS, and Windows — same tool, same code, same privacy.