Thmyl-labh-ben-10-protector-of-earth-llandrwyd-mn-mydya-fayr May 2026

Ben 10: Protector of Earth is an action video game based on the animated series Ben 10 (2005–2008). It was developed by High Voltage Software and published by D3 Publisher in 2007 for the PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable (PSP), and Nintendo Wii.

Critics gave Protector of Earth a lukewarm 65–70% average. Common complaints: short campaign (4–5 hours), repetitive enemy AI, and camera issues. However, fans loved it. It sold over 1.5 million copies worldwide.

Why does it endure?

Released on the PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable, Nintendo Wii, and DS, Protector of Earth arrived at a time when the "beat-'em-up" genre was king. Developers High Voltage Software didn't try to reinvent the wheel; instead, they polished it to a mirror sheen. The premise was simple: Vilgax, the series' primary antagonist, has stolen the essence of the Omnitrix, leaving Ben Tennyson with only a handful of alien forms to fight his way through legions of robots and drones to get them back.

What made the game work wasn't just the combat, but the authenticity. In an era where licensed games were often notorious for being rushed cash-grabs, Protector of Earth felt like an interactive extended episode of the show. The voice acting was spot-on, the character models were faithful to the Man of Action art style, and the writing captured Ben’s cocky-yet-heroic personality perfectly. thmyl-labh-ben-10-protector-of-earth-llandrwyd-mn-mydya-fayr

For practical use:


For 2007, the cel-shaded art style was a smart choice. It resembles the cartoon without pushing hardware limits. Character models are expressive, environments (forests, mines, cities, alien ships) are varied but linear. Ben 10: Protector of Earth is an action

The voice cast includes the original show’s actors: Tara Strong (Ben), Meagan Smith (Gwen), Richard McGonagle (Grandpa Max), Steve Blum (Vilgax), and Dee Bradley Baker (aliens/Animo). The soundtrack is adrenaline-fueled rock with orchestral boss themes.