Zootopia hit theaters this weekend, scoring the biggest opening ever for a non-Pixar Disney animated movie. And while it hasn’t yet been released in all foreign markets, the film about a mammal metropolis is already breaking records around the world.

Wonder how some movies can translate so seamlessly across borders? There’s a strategy behind it: Filmmakers will change scenes and details in their international versions to resonate with those audiences.

In Reddit’s Movies community, redditor BeardedCoffeeMonkey shared this tweet from animation enthusiast Ryshat’s Corner.

In the US, Canada and France, Zootopia’s news co-anchor is a moose named Peter Moosebridge, voiced by real-life newscasting icon Peter Mansbridge. (“As a Canadian who can choose to turn his inner monologue to Peter-Mansbridge-mode at will, this was a good choice of voice,” writes redditor ASK_ME_ABOUT_INITIUM.) But in international versions, Moosebridge is swapped with animals more familiar to the particular region. In Japan, viewers will instead see a tanuki, a Japanese raccoon dog. The Australian version (which was also distributed in New Zealand) has a news-reading koala, voiced by Australian singer David Campbell. China gets a panda, while Brazil gets a jaguar.

Found the #Zootopia Brazil/jaguar newscaster! Voiced by journalist Ricardo Boechat. Now to just find the UK/corgi. pic.twitter.com/f1OwB4BshH — Ryshat's Corner (@RyshatsCorner) March 6, 2016

Production companies know that such cultural nuances are important. In Pixar’s Inside Out, there’s a scene where Baby Riley is disgusted by broccoli. But that detail makes no sense in Japan because Japanese kids like broccoli.

Pixar artist David Lally showed the different versions on Twitter.

All of the broccoli in #InsideOut was swapped w/ green peppers for Japan. Peppers are 'Disgust' there, not broccoli! pic.twitter.com/EuK0Ld5Fk7 — David Lally (@davidmlally) July 22, 2015

Inside Out director Pete Docter explained the change.

“We learned that some of our content wouldn’t make sense in other countries. For example, in Japan, broccoli is not considered gross. Kids love it. So we asked them, ‘What’s gross to you?’ They said green bell peppers, so we remodeled and reanimated three separate scenes replacing our broccoli with green peppers.”

There are other variations in Inside Out. In one scene, Bing Bong looks at a sign, points to the letters “D-A-N-G-E-R,” and says, “It’s a shortcut.” In some editions, Pixar reanimated him to point to the letters from right to left, instead of left to right, if the language calls for it.

And in some versions, the father daydreams about soccer instead of hockey since soccer is more prominent in many parts of the world.

@davidmlally the same for the Dad day dreaming shot. He is thinking of soccer not hockey. pic.twitter.com/RhoWgrYs6r — Noah Hendrix (@noahhendrix) July 23, 2015

Other films also have altered scenes in their foreign versions. In the US edition of Cars 2, the cameo character Jeff Gorvette is voiced by NASCAR champ Jeff Gordon. But in other countries, the character is replaced by other famed racing drivers—Mark Winterbottom in Australia, Fernando Alonso in Spain, Vitaly Petrov in Russia, Jan Nilsson in Sweden and Memo Rojas, Jr. in the Mexican-Spanish release. (The equivalent character in the Chinese version is named Long Ge, but the voice actor is unknown.)

In Monsters University, the cupcakes that spell out L-A-M-E are changed to faces in some versions as the joke doesn’t translate everywhere.

See the full discussion in the original Reddit thread.