Anime DVD industry approaching limit
Anime! Anime! has an article up about the lack of growth in Japan’s anime DVD industry. (Link is in Japanese.)

The article focuses on DVD sales in particular, which traditionally does quite well in Japan. It also makes some comparisons to overseas markets such as North America and briefly mentions Singapore.
Surprisingly, opinions voiced in the discussion thread at 2ch (as reported by Itai News) were actually very critical of the industry, particularly over the high cost of R2 anime DVDs. I find this interesting because 2ch is generally full of right-wing xenophobic nationalists, so I was expecting them to jump at this chance to blame foreign pirates for destroying the livelihoods of Japanese studios.
[ Anime! Anime! via Itai News ]
Some of the points covered by the original article:
- 2007 was a calm year for the anime industry with a marked absence of new IPOs and mergers and acquisitions compared to previous years.
- Anime series are making less money and prime-time slots receive lower viewership.
- The worst performing sector is DVD sales. Although as a whole it is stable, sales of individual titles have gone down.
- There is still no sense of immediate danger as compared to market collapses overseas.
- Briefly mentions Geneon USA’s collapse and the Odex Incident in Singapore.
- Attributes the problems faced overseas to the development of digital fansubbing since the turn of the millennium.
- Online file-sharing did not catch on among anime fans in Japan initially, allegedly due to their more cautious attitudes towards the net. (Yeah right.)
- However, it is gaining popularity now and Japanese fans are approaching the state of the English fansubbing community in 2000.
- Fansubs used to serve as promotion for DVDs but now foreign viewers are contented with just the digital rip.
- It is very likely that Japan’s anime DVD market will eventually go the same path as younger Japanese people grow used to file-sharing technology.
- Online distribution is an important growth area and many companies, such as Bandai and Toei, are attempting it.
- However, online distribution can only produce extra income for companies with huge collections of past works and does not earn enough to substain new on-going titles.
Oh no! Anime is doomed! Anyway the article is pretty slanted towards the traditional industry view of the whole fansub debate, a stance which Anime! Anime! has consistently maintained. Perhaps this is because they have access to insider information, or perhaps this is seen as the politically-correct interpretation. (Which is how the mainstream media do it.) Either way, there’s probably some truth in there but, as a bottom-level consumer, I can’t really say that I sympathize when industries whine about changing paradigms.
I think it’s about time people realized that anime is, and probably forever will be, a highly niche market. The projected growth is just unsustainable and the whole foreign market was one huge bubble waiting to burst in the first place. Everyone wanted a piece of the action because anime was the next coolest thing, but a lot of it turned out to be hot air.
Don’t say I didn’t warn you…

Meanwhile, here are some general comments that were expressed by 2ch posters in response to the article:
- Anime DVDs cost too much, especially when compared to regular DVDs.
- There are tons of crappy titles not worth paying for.
- HD broadcasting means that DVDs are actually of worse quality than illegal rips.
- Just switch to online distribution.
- DVDs not worth buying because anime has no rewatch value.
- Buying DVD is troublesome.
- Won’t buy without watching.
Most of it is similar to what you would find on most English forums, but I think that the most important points raised are that HD broadcasting looks better than DVD and that anime DVDs in Japan are seriously overpriced.
When you take into account of the fact that DVDs actually look worse than current TV broadcasts despite costing an exorbitant amount of yen better spent elsewhere, I think the sluggish sales can easily be seen as the slow death of a format past its prime instead of the manifesting effects of increased file-sharing. In the first place, Japanese fans have always been able to record and watch whatever they want for free, so I really don’t see how the spread of P2P can have as much effect there as compared to foreign markets such as North America, where many titles are released direct to video.
Oh well. Whatever. I don’t give a damn any more. In fact, I hope the industry will get rid of some extra baggage (GONZO in particular) and down-size.

GONZO ruined one of my favourite manga series ever. Death to the anime industry!



January 18th, 2008 at 5:31 pm
Hm I did a trackback to this post and it isn’t showing. But nvm. But I guess that is what you can ask from ethocentric xenophobics.
January 18th, 2008 at 6:43 pm
Y? I watched Rozario Vampire and i kinda liked it. they rushed all the main characs out too fast though (I read the Japanese Manga too) Its alright to me i guess…so what are you disappointed about? I would like to know ^^
January 18th, 2008 at 11:09 pm
You know, this kind of news is a happy news indeed, considering after all the emotions that has been poured into what used to be a hobby watched by probably the minority of geek fans out there. (I’m using such words liberally here.)
The state of anime industry is the same as the state of gaming industry: from what used to be a hobby for a small, hardcore subculture, into a massive mainstream trend that has the ultimate potential to crash into the cliff (if anyone watched Akagi, the stakes in the anime industry are as risky as they are).
As a result, we begin to see some cracks showing in the anime industry structure. How people will respond to those cracks, and whether anyone bothered to research on the cracks (an analogy to looking into the problems faced), is entirely up to both sides of the industry to ponder.
For me, thank God this materialistic pursuits is going to end soon. Gives me a better incentive to start going out to the gym more frequently.
January 18th, 2008 at 11:52 pm
@ TP
You don’t need the gym. It is a place full of Macho Maries and show-offs.
You need more eroge. xD But seriously the gym isn’t as worthy as anime or anything else in that matter. What is the point in pumping iron when you can just go down to the market and get a sack of rice for your parents every now and then?
Grocery shopping is still the best way to keep fit.
January 19th, 2008 at 6:26 am
maybe is b’coz of the downloadable anime…
January 19th, 2008 at 4:56 pm
Yeah. But seriously, R2 DVDs are done so badly it’s not even funny. Like, dubs are crap, so basically they kinda waste money by doing it. Secondly, their translation and subtitles are crap. Fansubs can do better than their crap translation and ugly fonting subtitles. Here I rest my case.
Anyways, just here to drop by to say happy birthday. HAPPY BIRTHDAY DM!!!
January 20th, 2008 at 5:17 am
Um,I wouldn’t say dubs are bad,I have seen a lot of good dubbing. Like Fullmetal Panic,that was awesome,or Fullmetal Alchemist.Now,some dubbing does suck as well,like Naruto,or anything done by 4kids. And for translation,that really depends sometimes,but oh well. lol
January 20th, 2008 at 5:18 am
Also,Dark Mirage,curse your cute Yuki avatar,why didn’t I think of it! D: Now if I used it I would feel unoriginal. ;-;
January 20th, 2008 at 11:03 am
Anime shall live for life! XD
January 24th, 2008 at 10:41 pm
Some of the things to be done, apart from how best to improve the process of distribution, is reducing the use of tired storylines. Rewards await for the studios deciding on true originality over make-a-buck crap.
January 30th, 2008 at 1:05 am
@Wildobrown
Quote:Is odex clamping down on IRC downloads in singapore or is it just bit torrent? Or is IRC downloads classed as direct downloads?
—–
Basically this sums up everything:
Odex basically pulled off a farce last year, made a big hoo haa, then decided to make off with the money they scammed and hide in the shadows to avoid media attention so as to make people forget about them.
And their farce-front AVPAS can be described in one word: dead.
January 30th, 2008 at 1:11 am
Oh i forgot to add. So far they only “caught” (scammed) people (and little kiddies as young as 9) who downloaded using bittorrent.
And they messed up big time last year when they sent their “love letters” all around the world.
—–
As for the Japanese anime DVD producers, they should seriously revamp the way they manage their business (charge less, better quality, create english subs themselves?) and stop whining like RIAA or that useless odex.
January 30th, 2008 at 7:06 pm
what i dont get is why they would clamp down on the individual people who download anime. i mean why not just go for the source of distribution of these fansubs? arent these sources the real infringers of copyright laws? i may have an overly simplistic view of this issue so can someone please explain?
February 12th, 2008 at 6:00 am
Ain’t seen R+V yet, then again who has.
GONZO don’t seem that bad, but I do agree about downsizing the anime industry, there is just too much crap out there that deserves death.
Shame too many of the good companies have a habit of killing themselves off in one big ball of crap in scenerios like this but I do hope some of the crapper companies do rethink their fuck em all and let the anime community bitch about it policies.
February 14th, 2008 at 5:17 am
Stop bitching about it , And Go fuckin’ buy the damn DVD’s … That is if you liked the fansubs and enjoyed them .
The Anime industry is supposed to be growing but as most people seems okay to settle down with piracy , Cuz apparently nobody understands and sympathize with artists studios going down. I Think all you Otaku’s wont have that much to enjoy in the upcoming years at this rate .
Honestly , I don’t want to argue and i don’t care what you or your broke friends think … This is simple logic and an international opinion.
On the other side i am really happy that Old and new Animation studios are looking deeper into legal actions toward fansubs . Cutting off anime fansubbing is easy once the animation studios start threating with the “Legal” and “Illegal” stuff .
but oh boy with this rate … It’s all going down hell ..
And i know that as an animator my-self .