Anime streaming company Crunchyroll is shutting down the Funimation app in April, with users set to lose the shows theyāve purchased.
The latest in a string of shake-ups announced by streaming companies, anime specialist Crunchyroll has announced that itās to shut down its Funimation website and app. The anime currently hosted on that service has been folded into Crunchyrollās own platform, meaning numerous titles will still be available for purchase.
The sticking point for existing Funimation customers, however, is that the media theyāve already bought and downloaded wonāt be supported by Crunchyroll. This means that, when the Funimation service ends on the 2nd April, all those purchases will be lost.
Itās a story that first came to our attention thanks to EposVox on Twitter/X. They highlight a section on Crunchyrollās website, which states, āPlease note that Crunchyroll does not support Funimation Digital copies, which means that access to previously available digital copies will not be supported.ā
Given that much if not all of Funimationās media will also be hosted on Crunchyroll, itās unclear why users whoāve already purchased a show or film canāt be given some sort of redeemable code so they can download them again on Crunchyrollās own service.
In IGNās coverage of the same story, we can see that Crunchyroll has provided detailed instructions for merging or migrating Funimation accounts over to Crunchyroll, which includes porting data across. Why canāt there be some kind of system in place that ensures loyal customers whoāve spent their money on buying media ā rather than pirating it ā arenāt out of pocket?
The simple answer, of course, is that there are currently no legal protections in place for purchasers of digital media. So if platform-holders donāt feel like refunding users for the money theyāve spent, or giving them a means to re-download the stuff theyāve bought, they donāt have to.
Once upon a time, Crunchyroll and Funimation were two separate companies, before it was announced that they were to merge in March 2022. Funimation has therefore been on borrowed time for almost two years, with the flow of new anime to the service officially switched off around the time of that announcement.
Funimation joins the likes of TalkTalkās film store and Google Play Movies in the digital platform graveyard; customers whoād spent money on the TalkTalk service also lost access to film and TV stuff theyād purchased, with the company behind it refusing to provide refunds.
There are clear advantages to purchasing digital media, not least their convenience. Unfortunately, customer protection isnāt one of those advantages.