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.
 
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.
If purchase isn't ownership, then piracy isn't theft.
 
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).

AB is just shittier Nyaa in most cases, I’ve had better luck with ACM (even if I did get fucked over by their login requirements).
 
Yeah, they were. @The Carpet Crawler mentioned Miss Kobayshi's Dragon Maid but you can see some of the stuff like at this this Reddit post.

Tohru: "What's with that outfit?"
Lucoa: "Everyone was always saying something to me, so I tried toning down the exposure. How is it?"
Tohru: "You should try changing your body next."
Tohru: "What are you wearing that for?"
Lucoa: "Oh, those pesky patriarchal societal demands were getting on my nerves, so I changed clothes."
Tohru: "Give it a week, they'll be begging you to change back."
Here is that clip in all of its notorious glory.

 
They say be careful what you post online because it is forever.

Well except for stuff you purchase from a corporation.

People mock me for still collecting piles of DVDs and VHS of media I enjoy, but whenever I see this shit it makes me glad I don't rely on streaming services for anything I give a fuck about.
Yeah, still gonna mock you if it's anime tho.
 
The last good thing Funimation released was the Ghost Stories dub.
ADV dubbed it. ADV was always the better of the dubbing companies, it was founded by fans for fans, and they actually gave a shit about quality, or at least the entertainment value they cared about. Sentai is a serviceable spiritual successor, but there was something special about ADV we'll never get back.
 
There is literally no reason to subscribe to Crunchyroll or Funimation.

Even if you're adverse to torrenting for one reason or another (like myself), Kissanime and a dozen different anime streaming sites not only provide nearly every anime that ever existed for free, but they even put up unofficial translations of new shows faster than Crunchyroll and Funimation, which can take up to a week just to put up their "official" subs, especially for niche shit like CGDCT or anything that isn't shounen goyslop.
 
ADV dubbed it. ADV was always the better of the dubbing companies, it was founded by fans for fans, and they actually gave a shit about quality, or at least the entertainment value they cared about. Sentai is a serviceable spiritual successor, but there was something special about ADV we'll never get back.
I thought that Sentai was what was left after ADV filed for bankruptcy and had to restructure its own corpse.
 
The two only viable options is physical media or piracy. Piracy is 100% morally and ethically justified in the age of don't own anything and be happy.
Especially for anything older than 10+ years, which in a reasonable world would already be in the public domain. Which is mostly where the good shit is anyway. Like why would you watch generic goyslop anime #6270 when you can watch Digimon Adventure (1999) or Eureka Seven (2005)?
 
People mock me for still collecting piles of DVDs and VHS of media I enjoy, but whenever I see this shit it makes me glad I don't rely on streaming services for anything I give a fuck about.
Physical media is the foundation of piracy, which is now a public service. A Blockbuster of Alexandria, if you will.
 
View attachment 5705503

I hope this is real, I appreciate they're mask off enough to blitz the frog in a microwave instead of boiling it.
The fact that they are nearly doubling the yearly subscription is fucking insanity, though. But again, as I mentioned earlier, valuing customers or customer loyalty is an alien concept to the greedy little faggots that run most media companies these days.
Especially for anything older than 10+ years, which in a reasonable world would already be in the public domain. Which is mostly where the good shit is anyway. Like why would you watch generic goyslop anime #6270 when you can watch Digimon Adventure (1999) or Eureka Seven (2005)?
Another reason is that so much good old stuff is now (pretty deliberately) out of print, and physical copies cost a fucking fortune. Funimation never wanted to do another Blu-Ray release of the classic original Tenchi Muyo! OVA series from the 1990's, and now third parties expect you to cough up almost $300 for a used set.
 
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