Reportedly, after his first few appearances, H.E.L.P.eR.'s voice sounds have simply been reused over and over.Īstrobase Go!'s post-credits logo sequence changed from episode to episode beginning with season two's second episode ( Hate Floats).
Soul-Bot's voice work is actually Jackson Publick doing a robot impression, which is then processed through audio filters by Doc Hammer to make it sound more mechanical. Soul-Bot is credited with H.E.L.P.eR.'s voice in the credits. Since Publick and Hammer have taken over the Astrobase, Soul-Bot was re-purposed into a therapist, painter's model for Doc Hammer, and occasional guitar player for duets. Soul-Bot is powered by love, which it filters from the air and stores in its chest cavity. Soul-Bot appears in the end credits of many episodes as a 1950s sci-fi style humanoid robot with a heart on its chest with a woman saying “I love you”.Īccording to the Season 2 DVD commentary, Soul-Bot was created to look after the children on Astrobase Go!, which was originally intended to be a futuristic school/space station orbiting the moon.
Soul-Bot is Doc Hammer and Jackson Publick's mechanical companion. Soul-Bot provides the voice of H.E.L.P.eR.