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.
 
Most of their dubs were crap. If you have tk rewrite dialogue to fit another demographic, the show is already going to su k. They fucked over Shin Chan and it could have had both a good adult and under 18 following.

Part of Funimation's dubbing even if they don't rewrite the script is their VAs don't sound right. 4Kids may have mangled the script of One Piece, with a lot of cuts and drawing over anything remotely objectionable, which wasn't the case for Funimation's dub...but the same can't be said about the voice acting. "What if it was the same terrible delivery as 4kids, but with no personality whatsoever?"
 
I'm not well-versed on Crunchyroll's history but getting "slowly legitimized" sounds a bit suspect and instead bringing back memories of how the RIAA suits killed Napster with Roxio buying the brand and dressing up in Napster's corpse to sell DRM'd music (unlikely that DRM from 2003 works anymore).
Napster is now a music streaming service that, supposedly, pays better than Spotify.
 
Most of their dubs were crap. If you have tk rewrite dialogue to fit another demographic, the show is already going to su k. They fucked over Shin Chan and it could have had both a good adult and under 18 following.
Disagree. Shin Chan getting a TV MA adult joke dub was the best thing that could have happened to the show since it was never going to fly in the US with a proper dub. And it was funnier than Ghost Stories.
 
Disagree. Shin Chan getting a TV MA adult joke dub was the best thing that could have happened to the show since it was never going to fly in the US with a proper dub. And it was funnier than Ghost Stories.

Disagree. Shin Chan getting a TV MA adult joke dub was the best thing that could have happened to the show since it was never going to fly in the US with a proper dub. And it was funnier than Ghost Stories.
Ghost stories was never meant to be funny. Shin Chan was. Shin Chan was dubbed in Spain and is extremely popular. It's also been dubbed into various languages here and is known as a heart warming cheeky treat. Funimation just turned it into bad shitposting neglecting the context snd history of the show. A show that started at the same time as Sailor Moon and is still going. If they can advertise AIDS commercials during kid's programming featuring fags and troons in the US and put drag queens on Nick Jr, they can handle a stupid kid, who shows his cartoon ass off all the time. They also had the license for the show for 14 years and did shit with it.
 
Part of Funimation's dubbing even if they don't rewrite the script is their VAs don't sound right.

This reason alone is why I just don't watch dubs anymore. After trying subs once, I immediately was hooked with how the VAs weren't over the top for no reason, dialogue and tone actually fit the scene, and everything just seemed right.
 
This would be best case for anime blu rays. They are low volume sellers already. The problem is it isn't the blu rays. It's a artifact of Japanese rental stores. At first that's who they sold to, hense the high price. Then they found mega weebs WOULD pay the same. So the high price never went away. And weebs sadly still pay no matter how much they grumble
Except the more savy Jap weebs figure out very fast it is exponentially cheaper to buy the U.S. license anime DVDs way back in the early 00ies. As most anime dvds were at least subbed and unsubbed barring the odd ones out. Like the Bible Black DVDs where they were hardsubbed as per license agreement since that studio figured out what the Jap weebs were doing. Granted I have no clue if they're still doing that with DVDs and Blu-rays or they completely drank the "digital only" kool-aid.
 
Detective Conan was another series Funimation butchered and destroyed.

They also refused to touch it FOR YEARS but held on to the licensing to spite its fans. They also sent a DCMA to the fan translation project that did the manga (and possibly anime) for years after not touching the series, getting the group shut down (meanwhile Viz was publishing the manga and didn't care as far as I know).

They did eventually give the rights up, about 3 or 4 years after sending that letter that fucked with the fan project and everyone else that enjoyed the series. Believe Crunchyroll has them now. . .
 
And being a pirate continues to be a perpetual state of winning. You're gonna have to bunker bomb my shit if you think I'll own nothing and be happy.
 
FUNimation also never finished Sgt. Frog. Man, they just have a history of unfinished dubs and sitting on licenses, don't they.

Also speaking of gag dubs, a friend and I have been watching Sasami: Magical Girls Club, and it's a borderline gag dub for some reason. It's an absolutely bizarre choice I can't figure out, though if the Shin Chan dub was happening around that same time...

Part of Funimation's dubbing even if they don't rewrite the script is their VAs don't sound right. 4Kids may have mangled the script of One Piece, with a lot of cuts and drawing over anything remotely objectionable, which wasn't the case for Funimation's dub...but the same can't be said about the voice acting. "What if it was the same terrible delivery as 4kids, but with no personality whatsoever?"
Toei handpicked the VAs for the known Straw Hats at the time, so at least the main cast tries. It was sometime around Fish-Men Island or Dressrosa when quality started to slip, not helped that FUNimation would just randomly put the dub on hold.
 
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.
ADV's dubs of both Gunsmith Cats and Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water are still my preferred choices whenever I rewatch them.
 
ADV's dubs of both Gunsmith Cats and Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water are still my preferred choices whenever I rewatch them.
The Gunsmith Cats dub is very watchable and only seems to make minimal changes (there were a few lines that were changed but nothing too obvious). It doesn't hurt that half the cast is supposed to be American (funnily enough, Radinov is referred to as Russian but if you look at the papers seen in-story, she's actually Ukrainian--oops!)
 
Except the more savy Jap weebs figure out very fast it is exponentially cheaper to buy the U.S. license anime DVDs way back in the early 00ies. As most anime dvds were at least subbed and unsubbed barring the odd ones out. Like the Bible Black DVDs where they were hardsubbed as per license agreement since that studio figured out what the Jap weebs were doing. Granted I have no clue if they're still doing that with DVDs and Blu-rays or they completely drank the "digital only" kool-aid.
Funi/Crunchy Blu rays give you the option to turn the subs off, sentai doesn't
 
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Funi/Crunchy Blu rays give you the option to turn the subs off, sentai doesn't
Unless the subtitles are hardsubbed on to the Jap language version, it is still possible to ripped the raw version from the DVD. As this have been an issue ever since U.S. anime and "other" companies first started doing anime DVDs.
 
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