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Crunchyroll

Why Is Crunchyroll Not Showing Subtitles?

Crunchyroll rarely experiences issues, but when it does, people notice. Its one of the only legal, widely-accessible anime streaming options on the market, and its merger with Funimation eliminated easily the biggest competition. With Funimation out, anime fans lean hard on Crunchyroll. The minor monopoly Crunchyroll holds over the anime streaming industry presents problems when issues arise on the streamer, leaving a bulk of users without access to their favorite programs. When the streamer crashes, experiences…

Crunchyroll’s Hope for AI-Generated Subtitles Is a Disaster Waiting to Happen

In a recent interview with The Verge about the future of what is now the dominant anime streaming platform in the west, Crunchyroll president Rahul Purini suggested that one way to combat anime piracy should be an embrace of AI models to speed up the subtitling process. But AI won’t do anything of the sort—and a fraught aspect of the process of bringing anime to global audiences will only get messier with it.Prepping the Sandworm Scenes in Dune: Part Two “A.I. is definitely something we think about at a lot of different…

Crunchyroll Will Attempt to Compensate Funimation Users for Loss of Digital Libraries

Screenshot: Sunrise/CrunchyrollIn an increasingly perilous streaming and digital media landscape—where content is as quick to vanish into the ether as it is spread out across myriad services—Crunchyroll’s recent announcement it was entirely subsuming Funimation three years after it merged with its largest anime streaming rival by raising prices and wiping out digital libraries from invested users still stung. But after weeks of backlash, Crunchyroll says it’s trying to work on making amends.Lamar Johnson Loves Beyblades

Crunchyroll president Rahul Purini on how anime took over the world

Today, I’m talking with Rahul Purini, the president of Crunchyroll, a streaming service focused entirely on anime — and really, the biggest anime service still going. Rahul has a long history with anime: he spent more than seven years at Funimation, a company that started in the ’90s to distribute Dragon Ball Z to US audiences, before getting the top job at Crunchyroll.Anime might seem like niche content, but it’s not nearly as niche as you might think — our colleagues over at Polygon just ran a huge survey of anime…

Crunchyroll Is Killing Funimation for Good, And You’ll Pay For It

Image: Funimation/Studio BonesCome April 2, Funimation is going the way of the dodo. Earlier in the week, Sony revealed it’ll be sunsetting Funimation’s app and website in order to unify both it and Crunchyroll...something the company first revealed all the way back in 2022.Lamar Johnson Loves Beyblades and PokemonWhen Funimation was folded into Crunchyroll back in 2021, subscribers could have both services, and Crunchyroll would often rotate Funimation works in and out of its catalog. Those days will soon be over,

AI Wants to Nuke Everyone While Helping You Find Love

Photo: SOPA Images / Contributor (Getty Images)At the beginning of 2023, TikTok was one of the weirdest and most delightful places on the internet. An app with a reputation for memes and 30-second dances had become the front page of the internet, and it seemed TikTok was only getting better as the platform matured. A year later, TikTok’s growth finally appears to have plateaued, and while the app is still a cultural behemoth, there’s a surprising truth lurking in the app’s success: TikTok is in trouble. In a bid to spread

Did Funimation Buy Crunchyroll?

For years, two primary streaming giants have provided anime to the bulk of viewers. Funimation and Crunchyroll have both been in operation for years now, but Crunchyroll’s tenure as a subscription service far exceeds that of its competition, which came available a good decade later. Despite this fact, Funimation’s been around for longer, bolstered by the Dragon Ball franchise to create Funimation films and, eventually, launch the Funimation streaming service. In the years since Funimation put out its service, it and…

Sony Jacks Up Prices for Crunchyroll and Kills Funimation

Sony just raised the price of anime and left American otakus with few other options. The company’s anime streamer, Funimation, is officially shutting down on April 2, according to a press release on Wednesday. Crunchyroll, Sony’s other anime service it acquired in 2021, sent an email to subscribers that prices will soon be raised from $55 a year to $100 a year.“You don’t have to leave your Funimation Watch History and Funimation Queue behind, you can migrate them to Crunchyroll,” said Sony in an email to Funimation…

Funimation will stream its last anime on April 2

Sony's Funimation purchased Crunchyroll from WarnerMedia for $1.175 billion in 2020, and they kicked off their transformation into a unified anime subscription service under the latter's name a year after the deal was announced. By 2022, Crunchyroll has already added more than 50 shows that were either exclusive to Funimation and weren't available with dubs to its library. Now, it sounds like they're almost done unifying their services: Funimation has revealed that it's going to shut down its old app and website on April…

How to cancel Crunchyroll – Tech Advisor

Crunchyroll offers access to a wide range of anime, Asian dramas and even games. It’s home to beloved series such as One Piece and Attack on Titan, but also to many lesser-known titles. There are three paid subscription tiers available. However, you can use the service for free to some extent. All these factors make the platform a truly great place for all anime fans. Despite all its advantages, you may have decided that Crunchyroll just isn’t for you. If you’re wondering how to unsubscribe, we’ve got your…