While these pay jumps sound fine on paper, they ignore the union's biggest concerns: stunt pay for intense voice sessions and compensation that comes on the back-end, like bonuses based on the amount of copies a game sells or subscribers it has. The snarky folks in the comments will probably call this greed and say the work isn't that hard to do, but Hollywood studios don't bat an eye to offer certain actors as much as 40 percent bonuses for home video royalties -- that's in addition to the huge wages made for appearing in a film.

The voice actors union was right to reject this. The talent it represents, like John DiMaggio and Nolan North pictured above, work with movie and TV studios regularly and just want the same compensation for the same type of work -- not to be treated as second class citizens by the $23.5 billion video game industry. The members will strike starting tomorrow, October 21st.