Funimation is shutting down — and taking your digital library with it - In which the anime fandom learns to own nothing and be happy

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Crunchyroll is shutting down Funimation for good on April 2, 2024. Former Funimation users will not be able to access digital copies previously purchased through that service. Also, legacy subscription prices will increase, nearly by double in many cases ($54.95 to $99.99 annually).

Original | archive

Funimation is shutting down — and taking your digital library with it​

Funimation is migrating existing subscribers to Crunchyroll when it shuts down in April.​

By Emma Roth, a news writer who covers the streaming wars, consumer tech, crypto, social media, and much more. Previously, she was a writer and editor at MUO.
Feb 8, 2024, 4:03 PM UTC

Funimation is shutting down on April 2nd, 2024. The anime streaming service will start migrating existing subscribers to Crunchyroll — a move that will not only affect subscription prices, but will also wipe digital libraries.
A support page on Funimation’s website says the service will automatically transfer existing subscribers to Crunchyroll, noting that the transfer “may vary depending on your specific payment platform, subscription type and region.” But the page — unhelpfully — doesn’t say how much subscribers will have to pay following the transition, only that legacy subscribers will see a price increase. You’ll have to check your email to see how much you’ll have to pay.

Since I’m a legacy subscriber, my price is going up. Instead of paying $5.99 per month for the Funimation Premium Plus plan I was grandfathered into, I’ll have to pay $9.99 per month for Crunchyroll’s Mega Fan plan. (For some reason, my email lists my new price as $12.49 Canadian, which is how much Canadian users have to pay for the Mega Fan plan.)

I’m not the only one getting a price increase, either. In a post on X, one user says they’ll see their yearly subscription price go from $54.95 to $99.99. However, the user notes that they were also grandfathered into an older Funimation plan, which is why the price hike is so steep. Another user on the same legacy plan as me will also see the same jump from $5.99 to $9.99 per month. We’ve reached out to Crunchyroll for more clarification about the new prices Funimation subscribers will have to pay but didn’t immediately hear back.

To make matters worse, Crunchyroll won’t support the digital copies redeemed through Funimation. This promotion allowed users to redeem digital copies of a Funimation Blu-ray or DVD they purchased, giving them the ability them to store and view the show or movie through the streaming service. Funimation said users could keep the copies “forever” — but that’s clearly not the case now.

According to Funimation’s support page, Crunchyroll “does not currently support Funimation Digital copies, which means that access to previously available digital copies will not be supported.” In other words, all those digital copies are going away, too, which is a massive bummer for anyone who purchased — and later sold — eligible DVDs or Blu-rays, hoping to store the digital copies on Funimation forever.
The writing has been on the wall for Funimation for quite some time. When Sony acquired Crunchyroll in 2021, it made plans to combine Crunchyroll and Funimation into a single streaming service. After that, Crunchyroll inherited a huge library of content from Funimation — but Funimation remained online, while still adding episodes of continuing series. We didn’t know when Funimation was going to shut down until now.

If you’re interested in transferring to a Crunchyroll subscription, there are instructions on the support page about how to transfer your watch history and queue. As for myself, I’m likely going to cancel my subscription. The only reason why I kept Funimation was because I’m on a legacy $5.99 per month plan — making it the cheapest ad-free streaming service I have amid rising prices across the entire industry. Sure, Funimation’s playback controls and UI aren’t all that great, but I’ll miss using the app to get my fill of nostalgia from Dragon Ball Z or to catch up with new episodes of My Hero Academia.
 
>paying for anime in 2024
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You do not own a fucking thing that you can't physically secure. I will make mad crusty rants about this until the end of time. This happens with "digital content" over and over and every time the fucked-over respond with shocked Pikachu face. The right to look at something that someone else controls is not the same as your personal possession of it.
 
I watched most of My Hero Academia on Crunchyroll back in 2017, when the only caveat was really ads (which were defeated by an adblocker) and being a week late.

There were a few reasons why I left Crunchyroll for good but it's unfathomable how customer loyalty is not paid back with discounts and perks, but another round at gang rape.
 
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Did they ever sell digital copies by themselves and not just packaged with their Blu-rays? I never used the ones I got with them.
 
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Buy physical always don't be idiot .
The new equivalent of that is pirate a local copy always, because now that everybody's forcing streaming a shitton of shows never get physical releases.
If you're a fan of one of those 2-season wonders on Netflix that got canceled on a cliffhanger, odds are pretty bad for you when it comes to finding a blu ray for it.
 
I watched most of My Hero Academia on Crunchyroll back in 2017, when the only caveat was really ads (which were defeated by an adblocker) and being a week late.

There were a few reasons why I left Crunchyroll for good but it's unfathomable how customer loyalty is not paid back with discounts and perks, but another round at gang rape.
Lol, "reward customer loyalty?" The phrase and very concept is alien to modern corpos - the current generation of C-Suite retards heading places like Sony and Disney and others genuinely believe that they're entitled to customers' money and monthly subscriptions, as if it's a law of nature. It doesn't help that the modern consoomerist mentality so many people have these days has done nothing to dissuade them of this notion.
 
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