But Netflix isn’t just spending on anime for the sake of the global market. It is also eyeing expansion in Japan itself, where it has an estimated six million subscribers. It ranks fourth in the country in terms of minutes streamed, behind two local platforms and market leader Amazon Prime, according to research firm Media Partners Asia. In other words: there’s room to grow.
- JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure Part 6: Stone Ocean Anime (David Production, Dec 1, 2021)
- Aggretsuko, season 4 (Fanworks, December 16, 2021)
- The Orbital Children (January 28, 2022)
- Tiger & Bunny, season 2 (Bandai Namco Pictures, April 2022)
- Kotaro Lives Alone (Liden Films, spring 2022)
- Ultraman, season 2 (Production I.G, Sola Digital Arts, spring 2022)
- Kakegurui Twin (Mappa, August 2022)
- Exception (Bakken Record, 5 Inc., 2022)
- Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045 (Production I.G, Sola Digital Arts, 2022)
- The Seven Deadly Sins: Grudge of Edinburgh, two-part film (Alfred Imageworks, Marvy Jack, 2022)
- Rilakkuma’s Theme Park Adventure (Dwarf Studios, TYO Inc, 2022)
- Thermae Romae (Naz, 2022)
- Vampire in the Garden (Wit Studio, 2022)
- Detective Conan: The Culprit Hanazawa and Detective Conan: Zero’s Tea Time (undated)
New research from the Association of Japanese Animations reveals that the overseas market for anime overtook Japanese sales for the first time last year. More than ever, that market is a corporate battleground.
Netflix has unveiled its anime programming through 2022, during a marathon presentation at its two-day Japan Festival 2021.
Netflix has been deeply invested in anime for years now. More recently, other mainstream streamers (like Disney+) and Hollywood studios (such as Warner Bros. Animation and Cartoon Network) have shown growing interest in the market, while specialist distributors Crunchyroll and Funimation have merged.