Crunchyroll Strikes Again! Buys Right Stuf!

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  • čas přidán 5. 08. 2022
  • Get Surfshark VPN at surfshark.deals/glassreflection - Enter promo code GLASSREFLECTION for 83% off and 3 extra months for free!
    Crunchyroll has continued its purchasing spree! After acquiring Funimation earlier in the year it has now moved on to Right Stuf...
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    #Anime #Discussion #Crunchyroll #rightstuf #animeanalysis #Analysis #Opening #OP #ED #GlassReflection
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 781

  • @Shebeast3
    @Shebeast3 Před rokem +26

    I don't want physical copies to die out because as good as streaming is,it can be frustrating if you can't get a show you want or can't afford to pay for a subscription 🤞

    • @darkdruidsvale
      @darkdruidsvale Před rokem

      ^ id totally buy Log horizon S1-2 if i had the cash, S3 is debatable if id buy it or not as well its good, i didnt like it as much as the prior ones, and since S4 seems to not be viable since the writer was arrested for tax evasion or whatever and theres not really enough content left from what ive read for it to happen, it would probably be just the first 2

  • @draochvar9646
    @draochvar9646 Před 2 lety +66

    And people wonder why piracy is as rampant as it is 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @windowsux
      @windowsux Před rokem +3

      Whats most ironic is that CR started as a pirate anime site before going legit, so the same thing could possibly happen again once those sites get enough dirty ad money to make a turn around.

    • @Zalis116
      @Zalis116 Před rokem +1

      Before the CR/Funi merger and the purchase of RightStuf:
      "Anime is too fragmented on too many sites! I'm gonna pirate"
      After the CR/Funi merger and the purchase of RightStuf:
      "Anime is too centralized on Crunchyroll! I'm gonna pirate!"

    • @juancarlosalonso5664
      @juancarlosalonso5664 Před rokem +1

      Zalis116 Ikr, people who pirate will use literally anything as an excuse to keep doing it.

  • @RiderOmega
    @RiderOmega Před 2 lety +469

    Part of the problem with purchases and mergers of this kind is that what usually happens is one or both companies is forced to vomit staff which kills their ability to maintain quality. Adam Conover has talked quite a bit about what happened to the TV station TruTV when they merged with Time Warner. We're probably going to see something similar. There's a good chance that Right Stuf is gonna see a lot of their staff cut to save costs, but those people are doing critical work, and the quality of Right Stuf will suffer as a result.

    • @XenoKnightAlpha
      @XenoKnightAlpha Před 2 lety +26

      I'm wary of this. I'm afraid that it'll decline in quality, disappointingly. I feel like this exact thing has already happened to Crunchyroll themselves.

    • @itsblitz4437
      @itsblitz4437 Před 2 lety +14

      And remember Rooster Teeth under OtterMedia which is also under AT&T with Warner Media. Its just Nowadays there is now unsolicited buyers and corporations just getting bigger and purchasing everything. We are definitely in a new guilded era.

    • @wisdumcube
      @wisdumcube Před 2 lety +7

      ​@@XenoKnightAlpha Crunchyroll's quality was already questionable before it was bought by Sony, probably around the time they partnered with Funimation and started developing their own in-house "anime" content. The real issue is that Sony now owns a significant portion of the international market when it comes to anime so now people don't have a lot of choices if Sony starts dropping the ball hard on anime localization and distribution.

    • @XenoKnightAlpha
      @XenoKnightAlpha Před 2 lety +5

      @@wisdumcube I didn't notice how bad they were until I experienced their customer service around the time they started that partnership and in-house animation.
      That's a good point. They definitely have snowballed out of control. I don't like that there's not much choice for most people around the world now. It's a real shame.

    • @SerifSansSerif
      @SerifSansSerif Před 2 lety +1

      @@wisdumcube the flip side to this is that a lot of us were complaining on the streaming side that we had to have 5 different services to get everything. (Like funi, crunchy, hidive, Netflix, Amazon, and now Disney just to start)
      The streaming side is more of a win. It's physical media that's the big concern.
      Even the 18 plus is spinning off on its own, and believe it or not, this may not be a bad thing. the lines between the two have been blurred too much and overall the quality of more mature anime has devolved into just porn or porn adjacent. The best thing I've seen lately (via piracy cause Disney) has been summertime rendering. Most of the rest is just porny Isekai.
      Although CR still streams several of the borderline content shows it may not be a bad thing for some pressure against the material to exist.
      Rentanime used to be a Netflix analog back when Netflix did disks by mail. Once they started caving to the demands for h material, the demand for regular content dried up completely and they only really updated the porn section (as that's what had demand), and then finally ran themselves down.
      Porn is a great business.... As long as it's not mixed with family friendly material. You can do one or the other but not both. Sony being anti-porn will be a nice self censorship for the industry.

  • @juances
    @juances Před 2 lety +392

    Why are companies so puritan and refuse to admit that yes, people are into adult stuff. Shouldn't it be an easy source of more money towards their coffers? Of all the shady stuff companies do, it's weird that they suddenly claim to have some moral objection against this one thing.

    • @72kyzero
      @72kyzero Před 2 lety +43

      Investors is all I can say

    • @shadows_star
      @shadows_star Před 2 lety +54

      Because adult content limits the audience and that hurts profit margins

    • @danielseelye6005
      @danielseelye6005 Před 2 lety +9

      The same reasoning why they go for G or PG films instead of R. There are exceptions (Deadpool) but the more family friendly, the broader the customer pool.

    • @sancturillore
      @sancturillore Před 2 lety +65

      @@shadows_star No, it doesn't. Adult stuff has an audience. And they aren't even the ones making the product. They lose nothing from selling it. They only gain from it. There is a lot of stuff for broader audience.
      The audience for adult content is pretty big too.

    • @Altmer353
      @Altmer353 Před 2 lety +25

      @@shadows_star as another person said, it doesnt make sense. There dedicated companies and studios that creates adult content. Why not Crunchyroll to just make separate streaming service for specifically stuff like that. They will loose nothing, only stand to gain.

  • @eliasrosner4427
    @eliasrosner4427 Před 2 lety +204

    I got the email and absolutely freaked the fuck out. 35 year sale ended and the next week they're being eaten by Sony/Crunchyroll. What's extra frustrating about this is that it's a pure example of a vertical merger - production, access and now distribution - and it didn't even get an antitrust look. Sure funimation and crunchyroll had stores but RightStuf was *the* distributor of physical media and neutral too. Now its parent company is the same as Aniplex of America and Crunchymation (and the fact that Sony kept Aniplex of America around for physical releases after merging with Funimation in *2018* is nuts). I agree that I can't see a positive even as we're assured nothing will change. I don't believe prices will remain competitive or fair and I don't believe it'll be as user friendly as it currently is (even with my gripes with the site). I mean, Sony probably wants it all under the Crunchyroll brand store and we've seen how well that worked for the funimation and dub stuff.
    This on the heels of the HBOMax news, and everything with Netflix, was just a gut punch for people in these industries. Ugh.
    Edit: And how could I forget ComiXology's sudden and precipitous collapse thanks to Amazon's ownership?

    • @tazatom
      @tazatom Před 2 lety +8

      You forgot about disney plus summertime rendering crap. Also Udons printing company printing the hardcovers worng twice

    • @SillyOmega
      @SillyOmega Před 2 lety +4

      People have noticed prices are already going up. I can still get stuff from Sentai shout factory.

    • @eliasrosner4427
      @eliasrosner4427 Před 2 lety +2

      @@SillyOmega Oh how exciting! Not even a weekend and things are rising. I'm guessing it's not uniform, and different for non-members and members?

    • @Melodyofthesea78
      @Melodyofthesea78 Před 2 lety

      You forgot Manga up.....it's censorship is beyond ridiculous.

    • @Mir_Teiwaz
      @Mir_Teiwaz Před 2 lety +1

      They probably kept Aniplex because their stuff sells at a stupidly high premium for what you get.

  • @eldorados_lost_searcher
    @eldorados_lost_searcher Před 2 lety +234

    I think the fact that anime is still considered niche is why this sort of thing is bypassing antitrust scrutiny. Which is worrying.

    • @charlestrudel8308
      @charlestrudel8308 Před 2 lety +39

      and then, when it start to make big money, its too late because companies are already too big.

    • @shadows_star
      @shadows_star Před 2 lety

      Anime is only considered niche nowadays by extremely, extremely old white boomers.

    • @eldorados_lost_searcher
      @eldorados_lost_searcher Před 2 lety +10

      @@shadows_star
      Yeah, and who writes the laws and decides to enforce them?

    • @1337w0n
      @1337w0n Před 2 lety +21

      Now explain Disney for the past few decades.

    • @jase276
      @jase276 Před 2 lety +20

      Quite the opposite, anime is no longer niche which is why these corps are getting their little grubby paws on it to milk and ruin. To better market to the mindless masses.

  • @KiaraDex
    @KiaraDex Před 2 lety +61

    We had a few years where Anime was able to be watched legally for a resalable price now begins the new dark age

    • @RusticRonnie
      @RusticRonnie Před 2 lety +2

      You mean the new good times, PLEX SERVERS baby

    • @kosmosXcannon
      @kosmosXcannon Před 2 lety

      They are ushering in another golden age of piracy

    • @windowsux
      @windowsux Před rokem +3

      Whats most ironic is that CR started as a pirate anime site before going legit, so the same thing could possibly happen again once those sites get enough dirty ad money to make a turn around.

    • @davidruth1902
      @davidruth1902 Před rokem

      @@RusticRonnie how is that good?

  • @erics.2440
    @erics.2440 Před 2 lety +119

    I've spent several thousand dollars at Rightstuff over the last decade, and I've always been satisfied with the products I've received. Their prices have consistently been considerably better than most of their competitors, and their customer support have always been extremely helpful.
    I'm really hoping that Crunchyroll, and Sony by proxy, understand how important physical releases are to the community and don't kill this brand.
    Either way, it's looking like I'll have to start using other online bookstores to get my LN's and Manga in the future, because I don't particularly like the idea of giving these mega corporations anymore of my money.

    • @weismax33
      @weismax33 Před 2 lety +2

      I think Sony does. Rightstuf, at the end of the day, is a distributer of physical media. The part that Sony really cares about is the blu-ray section.
      Both Crunchyroll and Funimation have their own stores where they sell stuff. I don't know what Crunchy offers, but I know Funi offers BR/DVDs on their store.
      So, why would Sony want two stores that sell anime related media at the same time(Crunchy/Funi stores) when they can buy one mega store(Rightstuf), move all those products to it and shut down the two stores they don't need anymore?

    • @Klaaism
      @Klaaism Před 2 lety +2

      @@weismax33 CR offers all kinds of merch from various companies, especially deals to higher-paying tier members. Hopefully they manage to fold Rightstuf into the existing infrastructure. Granted alot of that depends on why CR bought.

    • @soul71000
      @soul71000 Před rokem

      @@weismax33 Fuck Funimation.

    • @HorFrench
      @HorFrench Před rokem +1

      Guess I'm gonna have to go on a spending spree before crunchy roll can nuke physical media because I refuse to use their streaming service

    • @pupsaderpupin5627
      @pupsaderpupin5627 Před rokem

      @@HorFrench I just picked up Bubblegum Crisis, oh the irony.

  • @SaberknightX
    @SaberknightX Před 2 lety +56

    On announcement, they immediately got rid of the smut : (
    Mergers are messy, but to put that kind of workload immediately on the staff ... yeah there is plenty to be worried.

    • @natesmodelsdoodles5403
      @natesmodelsdoodles5403 Před 2 lety +6

      Oh they've still got the smut...
      ...on a completely separate site that's likely borked to hell and back!

  • @sinom
    @sinom Před 2 lety +113

    Outside of NA the funimation buyout/merger caused a bunch of countries to loose legal access to a bunch of different anime so yes something of value was indeed lost.

    • @512TheWolf512
      @512TheWolf512 Před 2 lety

      They're encouraging piracy, you have to be mad to give them money eveiid you ARE american

    • @thesurvivorssanctuary6561
      @thesurvivorssanctuary6561 Před 2 lety +8

      As a professional weeaboo, I'm horrified.

    • @jonathanyeh6624
      @jonathanyeh6624 Před 2 lety +4

      A large reason why Sony acquired Crunchyroll and decided to move forward with Crunchyroll as the main brand was Crunchyroll’s International presence, which was much larger than Funimation/Wakanim/AnimeLab. I don’t think any market with Funimation or Wakanim doesn’t have Crunchyroll already, so other than Russia (due to Crunchyroll and Wakanim ceasing service in Russia due to the Ukraine war), none of the Funimation/Wakanim markets should have lost access to a Sony owned anime streaming service. And new releases should have wider international (excluding Asia) availability under Crunchyroll going forward.
      Is it possible some countries lost anime titles due to the rebranding/merger as certain licensing agreements were affected? Yes. Sentai pulled many of its older titles from Crunchyroll in the Us since they now offer HiDive. HiDive is available in most countries outside of Asia, though you can only pay in USD and the selection varies (since Sentai’s worldwide excluding Asia library is much smaller than the US/Canada library).

    • @erufailon4723
      @erufailon4723 Před 2 lety +7

      @@jonathanyeh6624 That last point about Sentai is important. For example, there are quite a few KyoAni shows that were available in my country on Crunchyroll before they were removed, but are still not on Hidive here because Sentai doesn't give a fuck about territories outside of America

    • @Gadottinho
      @Gadottinho Před 2 lety

      may say anyone? because there werent any, funimation basically didn't exist outside of the US.

  • @CommanderZx2
    @CommanderZx2 Před 2 lety +55

    Lots of uncut versions of anime that Funimation had available to stream have not been migrated to Crunchyroll and they instead have only migrated the broadcast version, despite the fact that CR says the show has been migrated.

    • @ThePhoneix999
      @ThePhoneix999 Před 2 lety +15

      And not enough people care sadly

    • @512TheWolf512
      @512TheWolf512 Před 2 lety +20

      Order everything from Japan directly, or pirate. There's no other way

    • @reverseshin
      @reverseshin Před 2 lety +3

      I Need to Rip my Tegami Bachi Dvds Soon... I Need to See what animation was fixed/patched on the DVD Releases

    • @bilditup1
      @bilditup1 Před 2 lety +2

      Is there a list?

    • @Altmer353
      @Altmer353 Před 2 lety +18

      This is why piracy is so important. People always bash it, but in reality a lot of the stuff that you cant buy anywhere can be found on private trackers. And i say more, people there put so much work into getting old anime with 480p to upscale to 720p/1080p using different AI tools. Try to find for example Texhnolyze legally with 720p, you just cant. It was never released in 720p. But you can find it on couple private trackers. Im not saying you should always pirate and never support creators. Buy steaming subscription, physical releases or merch. I do that, but if i see some anime that is soo good, i will get it for myself in digital format so i can OWN it. Either by ripping blu-ray or downloading from torrent.

  • @haru.4267
    @haru.4267 Před 2 lety +32

    I’ve been worried about the Crunchyroll’s monopoly issue for a while now - here in France, the second biggest anime/manga consumer in the world, they’ve bought out Kazé, a physical goods producer and manga publisher, as well as several other companies.

    • @Animebryan2
      @Animebryan2 Před 2 lety +2

      As the old saying goes, If you can't beat 'em, buy 'em out.

    • @juice6521
      @juice6521 Před 2 lety

      Why you French such huge weebs?

    • @WannabeShady90
      @WannabeShady90 Před rokem +1

      I didn't know Crunchyroll took over Kaze. That means in Germany Crunchyroll owns not only Wakanim, but also Kaze. Not much competition left.

  • @homingice6444
    @homingice6444 Před 2 lety +32

    It worries me that people will start to transverse more into pirated websites because of the fact. That Chrunchyroll can just now not re-license something and when all of the print outs are gone. It becomes an issue to legally watch a show that can't be legally watched anymore or becomes even more difficult to legally watch said show.
    Chrunchyroll is walking a dangerous path because they could end up shooting themselves in the foot and eventually eating themselves alive.

    • @Zalis116
      @Zalis116 Před rokem

      Yet I thought anime viewers were pirating because there were too many different legal services streaming anime and splitting up the market. But now one service having too much anime is somehow a problem?

  • @LucasCarter2
    @LucasCarter2 Před 2 lety +71

    I'm still mad about the funimation purchase of AnimeLab, which by all rights had the best UI for any anime streaming service I've ever seen, and the best, most lovely customer support too. Their interface (both the players and the site to browse the content) was so good, I even went out of my way to use their "give us feedback" feature to just tell them they'd done a good job.
    And now all that is gone. Funimation never bothered taking the far superior interfaces, and now crunchyroll owns funimation and animelab is just a memory only in the hearts of Australians who knew there was a better way.

    • @lydiagrace8300
      @lydiagrace8300 Před 2 lety +2

      AnimeLab forever!

    • @microsoul669
      @microsoul669 Před 2 lety

      The new interface for their website is atrocious

    • @Mirality
      @Mirality Před rokem

      Preach.

    • @NihongoWakannai
      @NihongoWakannai Před rokem +1

      Yup, animelab was by far the best service and they just murdered it and tossed it into a deep grave never to be seen again

    • @wyw201
      @wyw201 Před rokem

      All are owned by Sony, it's Sony consolidating their subsidiaries.

  • @zero195
    @zero195 Před 2 lety +26

    I could totally see them buying Right Stuf, just for gundam. I am hoping that nothing changes, since killing physical media would also kill a significant chunk of companies that go to anime cons, like Crunchyroll Expo. Killing off DVD/Blu Ray would be like Shonen Jump killing off their manga division just because the Jump Plus app exists.

    • @yunogasai1338
      @yunogasai1338 Před 2 lety

      Discotek just announced that they've licensed urusei yatsura's tv series but now I wonder if it'll be ok.

  • @FredSpade
    @FredSpade Před 2 lety +18

    Preserve your hard copies.
    That's all, folks.

  • @XenoKnightAlpha
    @XenoKnightAlpha Před 2 lety +46

    Oh no... this is absolutely scary. I had good experiences with RightStuf.

  • @SolracNexus
    @SolracNexus Před 2 lety +101

    I have a feeling that the business meeting went like this:
    "What should we do to maximize profits?"
    "Something with the right stuff"
    "Sure, let's do that"

    • @Haskellerz
      @Haskellerz Před 2 lety +9

      "What should we do to maximize profits?"
      "Buy everything!!! Since we have the distributors, the anime studios are next"

    • @TheNobleFive
      @TheNobleFive Před 2 lety +2

      @@Haskellerz Sony already had A1 Pictures and Cloverworks.

    • @Purpless_ON
      @Purpless_ON Před rokem

      @@Haskellerz Sony already own a couple anime studios

  • @me-myself76
    @me-myself76 Před 2 lety +132

    Man, where the hell are anti monopoly laws when you need them the most?

    • @auraaetherbladesigma6939
      @auraaetherbladesigma6939 Před 2 lety +9

      Exactly!!!

    • @Kikasitsu
      @Kikasitsu Před 2 lety

      They went away as soon as the Soviet Union disappeared.
      Do you seriously think you were given the 40-hour work week because of “good will” by a Rockefeller or a J.P. Morgan?
      Think about what has transpired since 1991, and you’ll see where your Anti-Trust laws went. (That’s what they’re called, just so you know.)

    • @FredSpade
      @FredSpade Před 2 lety +51

      No such thing, these days, in practicality. Corporations own politicians.

    • @SgtPotShot
      @SgtPotShot Před 2 lety +24

      Well, their competitors are Amazon & Netfilx, so you could argue in a courtroom that Crunchyroll does not yet have a monopoly, at least in streaming media. You could argue that distribution of physical media is becoming a monopoly, but then again, Crunchyroll's competitor is Amazon.

    • @radicalindividual7774
      @radicalindividual7774 Před 2 lety

      Democrats dug holes around them, and put dozens of other laws in place so they could profit from it not existing.

  • @JaseAnimates
    @JaseAnimates Před 2 lety +90

    Gee, for a company that supposedly uses it's profits to 'support' anime studios, they sure have a lot of spare change to keep buying up the competition. 😶

    • @erufailon4723
      @erufailon4723 Před 2 lety +6

      Have they ever claimed to "support studios", though? They obviously pay for licenses, but the studio rarely is the one handling an anime's overseas licensing. The money goes to the companies that fund anime, and it enablds them to fund more anime. I suppose that counts as supporting the industry. Too bad that the industry is in such a state that it might be better left unsupported.

    • @rexmckey1604
      @rexmckey1604 Před 2 lety +13

      @@erufailon4723 they did a lot in the past. It was kinda their main talking point that the money used on crunchyroll went directly to the anime industry.

    • @AstaIsAMonster
      @AstaIsAMonster Před rokem

      @@erufailon4723 yup they had

    • @demonic_myst4503
      @demonic_myst4503 Před rokem +1

      Streaming services have never done shit to help anime studios streaming decreases their profit most their money comes from salss of dvds

    • @wyw201
      @wyw201 Před rokem

      Profits are retained capital used for operations, M&A typically are funded by debt or investor capital. Doubt Crunchyroll will approach M&A with cash to hurt cash flow.

  • @sjp8024
    @sjp8024 Před 2 lety +15

    It def worries me. It's difficult to find physical anime that's out of print. Once Fullmetal Alchemist (original series) was taken off of streaming everywhere, I tried to find the box set and every seller sent black-bottomed bootleg-looking discs. The ps5 plays them somehow but I return them... If I wanted a pirated copy I'd just put on my pirate hat and do it myself.

  • @b1merio
    @b1merio Před 2 lety +11

    Loved Interspecies Reviewers. Really hope Ero Anime somehow makes it available for purchase.

  • @williamdunbar2802
    @williamdunbar2802 Před 2 lety +34

    Hopefully they keep making physical anime, since I really want to get all the Gundam Blu Rays

    • @madcrowmaxwell
      @madcrowmaxwell Před 2 lety +6

      I suspect that physical releases will continue, but will go up in price significantly. I wouldn't be surprised if $80-$100 "semi-deluxe" box sets end up as the only game in town.

  • @cheangelcazares
    @cheangelcazares Před 2 lety +8

    Glass Reflection seems unaware that AMC Networks recently bought Sentai and HIDIVE. And based on the amount and quality of titles they licensed this current season, it would appear that they could compete with Crunchyroll.

  • @Strider_Shinryu
    @Strider_Shinryu Před 2 lety +47

    My biggest concern on the surface is what's going to happen with the smaller and/or less successful series. I've had only positive experiences with RightStuf as well and that's largely because I've been able to get physical versions of stuff that it felt like I was the only one watching, even if it took a while for it to get a release. I don't see CR stopping physical releases entirely but I see them basically just being an endless parade of MHA, Rent a Girlfriend or whatever the flavour of the month is. The sort of stuff they already constantly promote the crap out of on their social media. Rather than being fan friendly or anime friendly, whether something gets a physical release at all will entirely depend on how much money CR thinks they can squeeze from it (and this is even more the case if it's something they've already sunk money into by producing/co-producing regardless of actual quality).

    • @bitnecromancer3721
      @bitnecromancer3721 Před 2 lety +8

      This is my biggest fear. That the all the unique and interesting stories that only seem to be found in anime are going to be chocked out by "safe" profitable clones of popular shonens and harems. At that point it's not anime anymore, it's just Japanese flavoured hollywood.

    • @wernerviehhauser94
      @wernerviehhauser94 Před 2 lety +1

      There is nothing to fear. It will happen as Netflix happened. What generates the most profit stays, the rest dies. And we know that most profit is made with crap, since it has happened several times in the roundabout 45 years I've known what a TV is.....

    • @erufailon4723
      @erufailon4723 Před 2 lety +2

      Crunchyroll/ex-Funimation has been putting out physical editions of some less popular stuff even after the merger so I wouldn't be too worried for now. So far the rule of thumb has been that if it gets a dub, it gets a blu-ray

    • @Shebeast3
      @Shebeast3 Před rokem

      this is my fear too,the smaller or lesser know but great series will probably suffer the most just because it's not a 'popular' show like the ones you mentioned

    • @ghoulchan7525
      @ghoulchan7525 Před rokem

      RIP of ever getting a western DVD/blu-ray release of Thunderbolt Fantasy i guess.

  • @TBoneTony
    @TBoneTony Před 2 lety +7

    Critical Mass, is that the same company that was also known as Anime18 back in the 90s when they used to dub old classics like La Blue Girl and Urotsukidoji Legend of the Overfiend?

  • @doomzilla3568
    @doomzilla3568 Před 2 lety +49

    I'm extremely worried for Nozomi Entertainment's future after the purchase from Sony. They are one of my favorite publisher as their gundam blu rays, nadesco, and sayonara zetsubou sensei are amazing, especially gundam. This is extremely bad timing as we *FINALLY* got Macross coming to the states. This sets a very dangerous precedent for every independent retailers and distributors of suffering a monopolistic future from a conglomerate.

  • @tjl9458
    @tjl9458 Před 2 lety +13

    One of my major concerns with the purchase of Nozomi is their history of Kickstarters. Like we got a Blu-Ray/dub release of all of Aria thanks to their Kickstarter as well as other series like Skip Beat. What is going to happen with those kind of series? Maybe if we're lucky Discotek will do them?

  • @CommanderZx2
    @CommanderZx2 Před 2 lety +131

    Shouldn't this really be called Sony strikes again? CR by itself doesn't have the capital to be doing this and it's just Sony hiding behind the CR brand to do their dirty work.

    • @rumfordc
      @rumfordc Před 2 lety +1

      and if you called it Sony, that would just be CR hiding behind Sony to do their dirty work.

    • @bloodirose
      @bloodirose Před 2 lety

      @@rumfordc no, not really. Sony is the controlling party here. They bought out crunchyroll, they bought out funimation. They are the ones with the money and power here. Not crunchyroll.

    • @rumfordc
      @rumfordc Před 2 lety

      ​@@bloodirose thats as silly as saying Google has no power simply because its owned by Alphabet, or that CZcams has no power simply because its owned by Google.

    • @bloodirose
      @bloodirose Před 2 lety +10

      @@rumfordc not saying they have no power… but Sony is the one pulling the strings at the end of the day.

    • @rumfordc
      @rumfordc Před 2 lety

      @@bloodirose at the end of the day, they're both pulling strings and working together. so claiming its all Sony is just trying to let CR hide behind Sony.

  • @sibsart2039
    @sibsart2039 Před 2 lety +20

    Well it’s a good thing I bought the Interspecies Reviewers Blu-Ray before this as a gift.
    No seriously, my girlfriends loves the series.

    • @pinkCEO
      @pinkCEO Před 2 lety +6

      Hey I believe it, I think it's unironically a decent couples show lol. Watched it with mine and had a good time.

    • @sibsart2039
      @sibsart2039 Před 2 lety +2

      @@pinkCEO I mean, it was basically smut… but it was also genuine funny.

    • @sibsart2039
      @sibsart2039 Před 2 lety +3

      @Bionick Toa True story, we went to a con with Crim’s dub VA. She got a signature and gifted a drawing of Crim she did. The voice actress said she felt bad the dub didn’t continue:

    • @PJammaGod
      @PJammaGod Před 2 lety +3

      A very cultured girlfriend

    • @tiedomi80
      @tiedomi80 Před 2 lety +1

      I bought the Steelbook version pretty much as soon as it was made available for preorder.

  • @Vash1306
    @Vash1306 Před 2 lety +7

    Just one to point out that its Funimation by extension Sony was the ones who bought Crunchyroll from AT&T/WarnerMedia. And not Crunchyroll bought Funimation. They just chose to go with the Crunchyroll branding due more wider world brand recognition.

  • @AstaIsAMonster
    @AstaIsAMonster Před 2 lety +11

    This is why I don’t like these big companies taking anime/media because they will censor and destroy everything we love. 🤦🏽‍♂️

  • @mordi9286
    @mordi9286 Před 2 lety +38

    Maybe for Discotech: "Old but gold."
    I'll agree, it's worrying. I'll admit my first and only piece of merch so far is the box set to Paladin;Agateram. It took me until then to understand the desire for physical pieces like these. And the concern for if they remove many aspects RightStuf had. I kind of wish there were an official statement at some point.

  • @venomouslizards
    @venomouslizards Před 2 lety +24

    Well great, I love RightStuf, but I don’t know if I can continue supporting it if Crunchyroll now owns it.

  • @kelionpro9612
    @kelionpro9612 Před 2 lety +36

    I always appreciate these important updates within the anime community

  • @RykonDragonix
    @RykonDragonix Před 2 lety +5

    This video demonstrates a very good understanding of the business landscape sir, well done. I think this is a very fair and measured take on the whole situation as it's been evolving over the last few years. Makes me wonder what's really going on back at Sony headquarters for them to send PlayStation HQ to the states and start gobbling up western anime distribution companies. I hope things don't take a turn for the worst as a result of all these hasty mergers both in anime and in gaming.

  • @CamKoudo
    @CamKoudo Před 2 lety +2

    I find it funny that a Crunchyroll ad played right at the beginning of the video for me xD

  • @Sonicfalcon16
    @Sonicfalcon16 Před 2 lety +6

    I've been feeling like NOW is a good time to get anything you need on your backlog. As these buyouts are happening I find that getting good anime series is becoming less and less common so go get stuff you like or want and get it now

  • @instagritsinbound
    @instagritsinbound Před 2 lety +5

    Dude, physical copies of Baccano! are disappearing both in video and manga format. Some volumes and blu ray bundles going for insane prices on Amazon. It's a huge bummer that the only way I can view this media is thru less than legal means and I'm truly bummed that I may never personally own any of it.

  • @overkill1340
    @overkill1340 Před 2 lety +10

    Rightstuf just dropped the free shipping to Canada while Sentai Filmworks offered basically the same offer as Rightstuf. While a great deal of my desired shows are Sentai, I wish HiDive and Sentai could branch out and really own a significant part of this market. I'm no fan of Netflix or Prime but, we need something that can stand up to this conglomerate/near monopoly that is developing here.
    Sentai also has near storewide sales frequently while Rightstuf has a large scale sale perhaps once a year. I haven't been able to put togeather a proper order from RS in quite a while and anime pricing has really jumped here in Canada. I just jumped on the recent Sentai sale and I don't know if RS will have much of my business in the future.

    • @tiedomi80
      @tiedomi80 Před 2 lety +4

      I've also noticed that Sentai/HIDIVE has more aggressively gone after simulcasting series this season. Like, in seasons past you might get one or two (or none at all). This season though they have like, 9

    • @Haskellerz
      @Haskellerz Před 2 lety +3

      Bring back ADV Films

    • @edsenior
      @edsenior Před 2 lety +1

      @@Haskellerz Psst! Sentai IS ADV Films.

  • @01oo011
    @01oo011 Před 2 lety +30

    Eventually everything in the world will be owned by one megacorp.

    • @waffenwafflesreal
      @waffenwafflesreal Před 2 lety +1

      I doubt

    • @badass6300
      @badass6300 Před 2 lety +8

      we have laws against that, that should work, but are kinda not working, because loop-holes, due to purposefully made complex laws that allow for said loop holes.

    • @NoIdentity724
      @NoIdentity724 Před 2 lety +14

      So Disney?

    • @TheWaross
      @TheWaross Před 2 lety +8

      We are in the age of corporate consolidation.
      You see it in tech, in video games companies and now in anime... nice...

    • @rikumajumder1558
      @rikumajumder1558 Před 2 lety +15

      @@badass6300 Laws don't work when Corruption is in play in the government.

  • @CleanUpNick
    @CleanUpNick Před 2 lety +11

    So Disney's buying up popular "Hidden Gems" like Summertime Render and Made in Abyss while Crunchyroll is buying up physical media... this is gonna get messy... isn't it...

    • @danielg.w5733
      @danielg.w5733 Před 2 lety +1

      Gold Roger laughs in the distance

    • @PipimiOden
      @PipimiOden Před 2 lety +1

      ...i thought hidive had made in abyss?

    • @natesmodelsdoodles5403
      @natesmodelsdoodles5403 Před 2 lety +1

      @@PipimiOden It does, but they're with AMC. Disney has Hulu, tho.

    • @PipimiOden
      @PipimiOden Před 2 lety

      @@natesmodelsdoodles5403 yeah but technically amc isn't disney, amc just licenses stuff to hulu i think

  • @michaelc657
    @michaelc657 Před 2 lety +21

    CR and Funi merging made sense because Netflix entered the picture, and if Netflix purchased either CR or Funi it was likely death for the other. This one's a little more of a headscratcher.

    • @LeonWagg
      @LeonWagg Před rokem

      How can Netflix buy CR and Funi when both of them are owned by Sony?

  • @seraphonica
    @seraphonica Před 2 lety +5

    I have bought literally 150 dvds at once from Right Stuf, and they all were well-shipped and arrived without incident. I hope that Crunchyroll is planning to make good use of them. Perhaps an anime by mail rental service, something like Netflix's?

  • @CureCrystal1
    @CureCrystal1 Před 2 lety +2

    They don't do Free Shipping to Canada anymore this was a couple of months before the Crunchyroll buy out

  • @DeckDogs4Life
    @DeckDogs4Life Před 2 lety +2

    15:18
    I am glad I picked up a copy of it when Sentai Filmworks was having a sale in that case. I wondered why they said something about limited stock....

  • @aiwash2766
    @aiwash2766 Před 2 lety +2

    I got that special edition of gundam 00 because of you Tristan and ngl the quality is amazing

  • @horrorkesh
    @horrorkesh Před 2 lety +7

    to be fair owning Gundam is a massive thing if you like Gundam I mean its a huge name in anime

  • @outofsyncsamurai
    @outofsyncsamurai Před 2 lety +3

    The reasoning behind this if I had to guess would be Crunchyroll wants to expand their sales of merch. Right Stuf already has the infrastructure to do this so its easier to buy and rebrand than to build it out themselves. As far as DVD's and Blu-Ray go, there's always going to be a market for getting a physical copy of your favorite show or a collectors edition, so having a system to offer that probably makes a lot of sense for Crunchyroll instead of letting others do it or not offering it at all.

  • @luceph
    @luceph Před 2 lety +3

    I´m worried as Macross were finally coming in legal physical form. It was announced recently to be licensed by RightStuf. And now I don´t know waht to expect.

  • @Moldybeard
    @Moldybeard Před 2 lety +6

    they're likely looking at increasing their physical merch business, they bought an established distribution service so they don't have to build up one on their own.

  • @MySpyxFamily
    @MySpyxFamily Před 2 lety +2

    I appreciate these updates!

  • @aaronorenstein5963
    @aaronorenstein5963 Před rokem +1

    Interesting insight.
    Oddly enough, you inspired me to actually make a purchase off of Right Stuf for the first time a minute ago. (As well as bring up a certain New Kids on the Block song, which is now playing intermittently in my head...)

  • @ROUGEBLOCK
    @ROUGEBLOCK Před rokem

    You know what, I always like how bright your videos are. Great lighting

  • @Road_to_Dawn
    @Road_to_Dawn Před 2 lety +4

    Iirc, I’ve actually gotten my collections of Kara no Kyoukai, Madoka Magica, and Yuuki Yuuna from Right Stuf, and the quality on all of those is fantastic. I really hope our fears are unfounded and they can keep up the standards they’re known for.

    • @Zalis116
      @Zalis116 Před rokem

      Garden of Sinners and Madoka Magica were both released by Aniplex, which is controlled by Sony, who also owns Funi/CR and now Rightstuf.

  • @lordlonzo
    @lordlonzo Před 2 lety

    Holy shi I started watching you in 2012. I took a few years break from anime after I graduated highschool. I have been drawn back to anime recently. So glad I found your channel again. Your channel was part of my childhood. Miss the long hair though. 😂

  • @BooktapC
    @BooktapC Před rokem +2

    I do find it suspicious that Sony has acquired Rightstuf they are a major anime retailer in North America but I have more of a wait and see approach. I was thinking of aniblogging about this since Sony now owns FUNimation, Crunchyroll, and Rightstuf but I don't know, nothing is written in stone so nothing is certain as of yet.

  • @carstenhedegaardjensen230

    Was able to order a copy of the Interspecies Reviewers on bluray from a Danish retailer and will be receiving it shortly - just got the notice that they now have it ready in their warehouse. Maybe I was just lucky to get one, but I hope everyone who wants one will be able to get it.
    Still wish Japan would just create their own international anime streaming service and make an effort to get shows properly subtitled and I'm sure they would kill all other competition and not have to suffer anymore harmful Western influence and censorship. I know I would sign up in a heartbeat.

  • @CE73KiraYamato
    @CE73KiraYamato Před 2 lety +2

    I sadly did not know crunchyroll purchased rightstuf until u made this video. I hope if we get more news you can post another video

  • @CBlade0
    @CBlade0 Před 2 lety +2

    I remember you being their partner! You played a part in this :p

  • @BasaraToujou10
    @BasaraToujou10 Před 2 lety +6

    Rip birthday sales & awesome packaging🥹

  • @bentaphid44
    @bentaphid44 Před rokem

    10:49 "The oldest and goldest" has a nice ring to it

  • @markpaterson2053
    @markpaterson2053 Před rokem

    Great to see you again, haven't watched a good Glass Reflections video for a while.

  • @The_mechanick
    @The_mechanick Před 2 lety +3

    I liked to use RS in addition to other places but now I’m using nothing but the actual distributors. Diskotech, Sentai Filmworks, Shout Factory, and Anime Ego are where I’m buying from now.
    Also, RS is forcibly shifting their 18+ open orders & preorders to the new site which includes the purchaser’s private information (including billing). I have the email that says so, so if you want to see it please let me know.

    • @cradica
      @cradica Před 2 lety

      I noticed some non-h stuff that's listed as 18 + is still there (like Highschool DXD)

  • @Scwoowy
    @Scwoowy Před 2 lety

    Very thorough. Some things I ordered Funimation things I ordered through rightstuf looked like they were placed in busted cases, before getting plastic wrapped and sent off.

  • @jumpdriveradiodj
    @jumpdriveradiodj Před rokem

    I remember Animelab which was Australia and NZ's premier streaming service which was acquired by Ellation from Madman which has now has been closed down. Madman is still distributing physical items though which is a good thing.

    • @cradica
      @cradica Před rokem

      So first Animelab and now Rightstuf (they are literally after anyone with Interspecies Reviewers!)

  • @myeternalsin
    @myeternalsin Před 2 lety +1

    I’m very excited at the aspect of getting a Sound Euphonium dub. And now that you mention it a Laid-Back Camp Blu-ray release would be amazing. If they release both of those things I’ll consider it a win as selfish as that is. Unfortunately, only time will tell, but videos like this definitely help because we all know they watch these things or at least get brought up even if they never talk about it.

  • @statesminds
    @statesminds Před 2 lety +4

    I love Rightstuf. God i hope they dont mess them up. I still buy physical media as well as streaming so it better not change that. Im a physical collector. Sentai and Rightstuf is where i go and Sentai’s boxes often just say Rightstuf lol. I also use rightstuf for adult stuff sometimes ngl so hope that doesnt change either

    • @XenoKnightAlpha
      @XenoKnightAlpha Před 2 lety

      I checked for some old links for some adult stuff to see if they still have it, and they lead to 404. I searched for titles I was sure they had and nothing. Perhaps I'm doing something wrong, and they changed the way the site works, but it looks like they indeed removed the adult stuff. Idk

  • @amandaknapp8955
    @amandaknapp8955 Před rokem

    I admit I haven't used Right Stuff since I was ordering VHS out of their catalog but I have very fond memories of them.

  • @Rumpelstiltskin01
    @Rumpelstiltskin01 Před 2 lety +1

    It would also seem that all of right stuff special bundles for older LNs and Manga have also vanish off the site as well.

  • @LadyNekoshema
    @LadyNekoshema Před 2 lety +4

    I buy physical anime for the collectors value. IDK what the profit margin is for that, but it sucks to think that option might go away forever. I rewatch my Lucky Star box set at least once a year, and I think of anime I purchased in my teens that aren't being streamed anywhere. As for why, I honestly want to believe it's Interspecies Reviewers. I'm not a fan of ecchi [which I know that show was borderline schmentai] but it's not for me. I think there's some petty person who just wants to destroy this anime, not realizing the more you tell us no, the more we'll seek it out. If this means messing with CrunchyRoll by constantly making new platforms for 1 anime, I'm game.

  • @mutepoet_
    @mutepoet_ Před 2 lety +22

    “I’m concerned about the monopoly.” and “Spending money to squash competitors... that’s almost too far.”
    Arkada I lament to remind you but that is the peak of capitalism. Take it all & squash anything that stands between you & profit. Money spent crushing your adversaries is long run money earned from their clientele back to you.
    Edit: American physical copies are already bare bones & a slap to the face for anime fans. Bare bone blue ray plastic case, paper thin holding case with penny cost stickers, animation panels booklet, and if we are barely lucky leaflets, not books, mind you, but leaflets of art. Not even an actual book containing art for the advertised collectors edition save for series of old like FullMetal Alchemist 2003 Collectors Edition. If you want to be treated with respect as an anime fan going the full mile buying merchandise Japanese collections is the way to go because even with their increased prices you gain so much. Physical soundtrack osts, textured box holders for your blu rays, unique art carefully chosen & placed on the box holder & blu ray disks... you wont find that level of care and dedication for American releases from Crunchyroll anymore.
    Right Stuf seemingly tries to keep the beating blood of the caring fans alive by making vinals and bringing back older series manga and blu rays when it is popular enough.
    Crunchy, in my opinion, is going to further push for penny cost collectors editions & not a cent more for only the most popular series while the lesser popular series gets shafted.
    Please, prove me wrong.

    • @Shebeast3
      @Shebeast3 Před rokem

      👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

    • @mutepoet_
      @mutepoet_ Před 9 měsíci

      Just wanted to return back to this video to check the upload date; They waited a year to shaft RSA.

  • @MyRealityIsProof
    @MyRealityIsProof Před 2 lety +18

    When will the Japanese anime companies band together to make their own streaming/physical copy distribution company for the western audience?

    • @overkill1340
      @overkill1340 Před 2 lety +6

      Streaming, maybe, but the Japanese physical market simply doesn't work over here.

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 Před 2 lety +3

      Even just banding together and agreeing to ban exclusive licencing deals would be a big improvement.

    • @Dante93k
      @Dante93k Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@overkill1340 In Spain we have Selecta Visión, which licenses a lot of works every year and even manages to bring some important titles to local cinemas. There is a pretty big demand here for anime, people ask for new titles all the time and we love when they get new licenses.
      So they're great, but also one of the very few companies that consistently bring Blu-ray releases. Aside from them, we don't have much choice for getting physical media.

    • @overkill1340
      @overkill1340 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Dante93k Not sure exactly what you are getting at, but what I meant was this. The Japanese physical market is directed at a small group of dedicated otaku whales with lots of money to spend. As a result their physical media is very expensive. Our (North America's) physical media market has always been about large quantity sales of low cost releases. With consumers innundated with cheap vhs/dvd/bluray discs for decades, the Japanese system doesn't catch on here and Japanese companys don't look outside their own borders very often. This is why distribution is almost exclusively done by NA companies with little or no ties to the Japanese creators and marketers. It is highly unlikely that Japan could create a physical media production company that would actually work in our market.
      There is a lot of dubbing in Spanish and Portugese, while these markets are often underserved by both streaming and physical anime platforms. I'm not sure how your local/hollywood movie/tv market works, but a limited run, expensive release market might work there, while the non-European Hispanic/Portugese countries usually have a workforce that could simply not afford the Japanese physical pricing system.

    • @Altmer353
      @Altmer353 Před 2 lety

      Yeah. same, I dont get it. Why they dont create their own streaming service. Outsource translation overseas, then after translation was done, hire couple of local good translators in japan to verify quality of translation and then publish on their streaming service. If you afraid to kill off physical disk market you shouldn't be, you can just add some exclusive scenes to physical copies of popular anime (like for example Psycho-Pass did it) and release them. Game studios from Japan got smart and started do release their games on steam and other platforms some years back. Some niche studios got so much money from sales, even more than in Japan. If anime industry wants to grow and prosper it needs to adapt.

  • @LittleMissLanna
    @LittleMissLanna Před 2 lety

    Saw your reaction on Twitter and was waiting for this lmao

  • @dynamicworlds1
    @dynamicworlds1 Před 2 lety +9

    If the supposed point of our economic system is to make companies compete with each other, why are mergers and them buying each other out a thing that's legal?
    For that matter, why are (inherently anticompetitive and monopolistic) exclusive distribution contracts legal?

    • @Altmer353
      @Altmer353 Před 2 lety +1

      Because someone owns those companies. And they have right to sell them if they want to. Either it is a group of people, or one person. Same way you have a right to sell your home or your car.

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Altmer353 corporate law is already vastly different than selling a car, and a person buying or selling stake in a corporation is not the same thing as corporate mergers. That is a ridiculous argument.

    • @thesurvivorssanctuary6561
      @thesurvivorssanctuary6561 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Altmer353 Ok, but are you saying I have a right to buy all the weapons manufacturing in the world? That'll make it very easy for Mme to conquer the world, and then you won't be able to do anything about it; cause I won Monopoly(TM)!

    • @Altmer353
      @Altmer353 Před 2 lety +1

      @@dynamicworlds1 Don't put words in my mouth. Monopoly laws is entirely different matter. Your question was "why are mergers and them buying each other out a thing that's legal?". I answered that. They have rights to do that, if i built company alone, with my friends or family, i/we should have rights to sell it. If not what I'm going to do with company i do not want? How do you even imagine that? Or you prefer for me to sell every company asset, fire employees and close down? Do you know how much harm it will do to people who worked there?

    • @dynamicworlds1
      @dynamicworlds1 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Altmer353 at no point did I put words in your mouth. That you need to resort to that level of dishonesty immediately is telling of how indefensible you feel your position actually is.
      You answered with an invalid comparison as a response and I pointed out how it was invalid, and then you just repeated it while throwing a false accusation at me.
      It's disgustingly dishonest.
      Btw, no, anti-monopoly laws are not an entirely different matter. They fall under the same category of anticompetitive business practices that a BUNCH of different but parallel laws fall under.

  • @jamie4993
    @jamie4993 Před 2 lety +14

    Reading the landing page at Ero Anime, it's explicitly stated that they are taking the role of Critical Mass properties (including retaining the brand). Even going so far as to try to fulfill open orders left hanging by this acquisition. So as long as they are able to follow through on the promise, then the 'smut' should be fine.

  • @BrewerFiremind
    @BrewerFiremind Před 2 lety +1

    As someone who has very sub par internet where they live this makes me sad

  • @Aussie-grizzly
    @Aussie-grizzly Před 2 lety

    see I am not as affected by this since in Australia we have Madman which does anime/manga/figures/merch etc and that's been owned by Sony for a while and we are still getting anime in physical copies, though the branding has changed a bit over the years

  • @KamBha
    @KamBha Před rokem

    10:17 wait, isn’t made in abyss and call of the night on HIDIVE in the us/Canada region? It is in Australia and both a worth watching.

  • @fly_8659
    @fly_8659 Před 2 lety +2

    Now if only Crunchyroll could find some spare change behind the couch to hire developers to fix their website UI...

  • @dryadchisel4504
    @dryadchisel4504 Před 2 lety

    I'm glad I was able to pick up the Interspecies Reviewers bluray before this happened

  • @caseycarlson9436
    @caseycarlson9436 Před 2 lety

    There are show we could possible get in physical form. I've been wanting Sweetness and Lightning for years now. Releasing those shows on Blu-ray would go a long way to alleviate our concerns. They probably wont, though.

  • @PhreezyOnTheBeat
    @PhreezyOnTheBeat Před 2 lety +3

    I love RightStuf … hope this works out well for them.

  • @Bransbow
    @Bransbow Před 2 lety +16

    I’ve been intentionally avoiding giving Crunchyroll my business for awhile now, and Right Stuf was my main alternative for buying and watching shows. Now I guess I only have Hi Dive to stream with, but who knows how much longer they’re going to last?

    • @Altmer353
      @Altmer353 Před 2 lety +6

      There other ways to support creators. Better one. You can buy merch directly from japan and just pirate anime. This way you will continue to support them and will get much better consumer experience.

    • @draochvar9646
      @draochvar9646 Před 2 lety +5

      Just pirate the shows and buy the merch from Japan. That's a far better way to give the creators your support.

    • @cradica
      @cradica Před 2 lety

      same

    • @shadowtheimpure
      @shadowtheimpure Před 2 lety +2

      @@Altmer353 "buy merch" Unfortunately, merch takes up a lot of goddamn space. I own almost no merch because I'd have nowhere to keep it.

    • @jetmcgavin6663
      @jetmcgavin6663 Před 2 lety

      There still isn't a Hidive app on the ps5 smh

  • @YaknSnak82
    @YaknSnak82 Před rokem +1

    Part of the reason streaming companies buy physical media distributors is because not everyone has great access to Internet for streaming or families can’t afford it. Now Crunchyroll can sell to those people. This is the positive. The company gets a wider audience to sell to and the customer who had to get pirated media can now have the option to buy it.

  • @GainingDespair
    @GainingDespair Před 2 lety +9

    Deep down, while not a positive for the consumer, I hope someone like Amazon smells blood in the water, and makes a strong push towards an authentic anime platform. They probably wouldn't be much bothered with going into debt, it is a growing market, and with the backing of Amazon they could seriously give Crunchyroll/Funimation a massive competitor.
    Odds are naught however

  • @ProfessM
    @ProfessM Před 2 lety +1

    Great now Gundam is indanger just when I started to save up cash to get those cool looking boxsets. Trying to be a casual collector is a nightmare. Stuff like this makes you have to BUY NOW hyper stressful.

  • @PenumbralVT
    @PenumbralVT Před 2 lety +3

    Can't wait until every company merges into one and I can finally get my apple branded anime smart watch to sync with my refrigerator

  • @theshadowdirector
    @theshadowdirector Před rokem +1

    Funimation purchased a notable UK distributor not too long ago. Personally didn't think of it as the end of the world as they had a habit of burying the streaming rights to certain shows and basically making physical copies the only means of legally watching them.
    I think we should be more worried if they swallow up Sentai and HIDIVE.

  • @Blake_C137
    @Blake_C137 Před 2 lety +1

    HiDive does have Made in Abyss 2, DanMachi 4, Call of the Night, and 4 other shows this season, so if you are an anime fan that isn’t a pirate, it’s worth the $4 a month.

  • @phoenyck
    @phoenyck Před 2 lety +14

    The only positive thing I can think of for the buyout is maybe some crunchyroll produced anime may get physical releases, like A Place Further Than The Universe

  • @pvs18
    @pvs18 Před 2 lety +3

    I don't think you understand how little profit there is in streaming when you're responsible for the content production as well. The real money is in the distribution of physical media. Each title costs X amount of money to produce and is then marked up to make a profit. For streaming, you charge a flat price per month or year to have access to an entire catalog. The amount of money you make this way is MUCH LESS than selling physical media. The costs of subtitling and dubbing stuff is expensive, and streaming revenue just doesn't cover it. This is why Disney+, HBO Max, Paramount+, etc. still operate at a LOSS. Netflix was making money from streaming for a while because they didn't make their own content. They'd work out a deal with the studios (Warner Bros, Disney, Sony, Paramount, Universal, etc) that spent the money to make the content, and then they'd charge the subscription fee. The upfront costs of producing content didn't affect their profits until those same studios began to get their own streaming services. All that stuff is being yanked from Netflix, and now they're losing so much money having to produce their own content.
    So why buy Right Stuf? People preferred buying from Right Stuf over the actual Crunchyroll and Funimation stores because their site and customer service are better. This move is to buy a better storefront along with the Nozomi catalog. You can't go all in on streaming unless you charge much more for it, and I think that price will be too high for most people to the point that many would just resort to piracy. Sony *invented* the Blu-ray (and 4K Blu-ray by extension), so why would they actively try to kill a format they invented and actively support?

  • @Lightspeeds
    @Lightspeeds Před 2 lety

    The only good thing I can think of out of this deal is that we might be able to get the various Macross series dubbed when they release the boxsets.

  • @antrepeyous
    @antrepeyous Před 2 lety

    ngl most of this flew over my head as I don't really use Crunchyroll or buy products from right stuff, but you mentioned Sound of the Sky and i was all ears.

  • @DeckDogs4Life
    @DeckDogs4Life Před 2 lety

    This definitely does have some concern for me because I like buying physical media, especially because the internet doesn't always work, plus, as a prime example, I can't find Clannad for streaming on the platforms I pay for so my only way to watch it is by owning a copy of it.
    It's really a sad thing to see that companies are moving this way.
    I can't find a single place to legally obtain a copy of the original Zoo Tycoon anymore for example. My only option is buying a second hand ebay copy of a disc that may or may not function, pirate the game, or try to locate my old copy of the game somewhere and hope it still works.
    I don't want that to become more common but companies seem to be pushing that way.

  • @Haz3dNightfall
    @Haz3dNightfall Před 2 lety +1

    Sentai Filmworks Hidive is our biggest and possibly last hope standing in the way of Sony's total monopoly of the anime dubbing industry.

  • @cone786
    @cone786 Před rokem

    Good thing I pre ordered that interspecies reviewer steel book as soon as I saw it

    • @cradica
      @cradica Před rokem

      I did too. Did you notice it was rated TV-MA for the first 3 episodes on Funimation but was re-rated to an 18 plus warning on blu-ray? Well interestingly enough the very last episode to air on Funimation was the only one rated 18 in Germany the rest were 16.

  • @America_Yea
    @America_Yea Před rokem

    I feel like this is removal of some of the tangle of rights ownership on various anime ip in the states side blocking varying distribution attempts. anyways we'll have to see what impact this one has. too bad it was one of the active ones this time.

  • @Kannadiga2301
    @Kannadiga2301 Před 2 lety

    Interesting video GR

  • @mccama19
    @mccama19 Před 2 lety +2

    The only time a monopoly is a good thing is when it's in a board game!