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Where do you go to read manga or watch anime?
Oi, I've been outta the loop for too long, and now that I've returned, I've noticed some of my places of visit have vanished. So where are the new places to go? Which places offer good quality videos and which one have scans uploaded on a fairly normal bases?
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animefreak.tv has a pretty good selection of anime in subs and dubs (if those are available). As for manga, try Mangafox. That site is still working, though I think any licensed mangas have been taken down from what I can remember. But still has plenty of them there.
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I recommend mangafox.com for all manga readings, and animecrazy.net for anime watchings.
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I go to my public library to get my manga fix, and I try to buy my manga when possible (be it used or new).
As for reading it online, it depends if the title is released and licensed in English or not. Also if it is so Out of Print where I can't Inter-Library Loan it, I have no choice but to read it online. As for watching anime, I am guilty of watching fansubs when I can't wait for the release to come out. Usually I only watch Fansubs when it hasn't be officially licensed yet. I try to watch anime on Crunchy Roll or other official sites. When I had Netflix, I got my anime from that. When I had Comcast, I watched Funimation Channel on Demand. Now unfortunately, I just have whatever anime dvds I have at home or I have to watch online. :S Once in a while, the public library does have anime titles I hadn't seen already. :D! |
I usually use Maxmangas.net for manga, and it just recently changed its name to 7manga. The updates are quick, and they've got tons of manga. {{The site isn't slow either! ^_^}}
I normally try to buy manga/anime whenever I'm at a store that carries them. It's so much better actually having the book in your hands than reading it online. :) |
for anime I use watchanimeon.com and for manga I use mangareader.net. Both are pretty good for watching/reading, but I really like getting the book in print myself. I also have a subscription to rentanime.com which is actually pretty decent and keeps up with most current anime dvds and have some other stuff there as well. I have a 3 disc plan which costs about $20/month though
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If you're in the US Crunchyroll and Hulu are great sources of free, legal anime. :D
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I usually just borrow manga and anime dvds from my local library.
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I read scanlations from Mangastream, Mangareader, and Mangafox. Mangastream having the absolute best scanlations but also the fewest. And then, if I like the series, I try to buy all the volumes (it's only right). For watching anime, I watch off official channels on YouTube like Funimation's official channel and off of Crunchyroll (despite a lot on Crunchyroll that requires a premium membership, a lot of it is free, which is nice).
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