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May 18, 8:34 PM
#1
Simple put can we please band together and try to find some anime list media??? I feel like I always here about some TV shows lost media or a game but never Anime, why? Do people not care about anime lost media enough to look for it? Besides the JoJo's movie I feel like nobody is actively looking for anime lost media and it's kinda sad. Like can we hurry up and find a phone recording of the Inferno Cop Specials already šš |
May 18, 8:44 PM
#2
No, that ain't happening, anime is produced in japan and if this were ever to happen, it would be in japan. So your queries shouldn't be here, it should be in Japanese forums. Anime is not like film cinema or games, the reels are often either destroyed or hidden forever, also finding and releasing any lost anime against the original companies' consent is a crime that is punishable by japanese law, copyrighted works are subeject to extreme regulations and if the publisher does not wish for it to be published, it will remain hidden forever. 1. The lost copies are probably hidden or destroyed in japan 2. The anime medium isn't important enough to warrant such a search 3. Extreme legal and logistic hurdles may be encountered if one wishes to engages in a lost media hunt (you can't just go a company vault and ask for production reels and stills, those are closely guarded trade secrets) |
tchitchouanMay 18, 8:52 PM
May 18, 8:53 PM
#4
Reply to AniMarter
Ok yeah I'll get right on that for you.
@AniMarter Yeah good luck with that https://lostmediaarchive.fandom.com/wiki/Category:Lost_Anime |
May 18, 8:56 PM
#5
Reply to tchitchouan
@AniMarter Yeah good luck with that https://lostmediaarchive.fandom.com/wiki/Category:Lost_Anime
@tchitchouan Don't worry I'm getting right on it. |
May 18, 9:00 PM
#6
Reply to AniMarter
@tchitchouan Don't worry I'm getting right on it.
@AniMarter good luck, let me know what you find. |
May 18, 9:02 PM
#8
You are mistaken. For example, "Galactic Patrol Lensman" was considered lost media for very long but was recently entirely found. Lost Japanese animation may not be a main focus for Lost Media Wiki contributors in general, it doesn't mean that everyone ignore it completely. Believe me, guys like MartyMcflies v2, collectR and all the anonymous russian rippers care... On my part, I try my best to feature hidden anime media, particularly difficult of access. The on-hold part of my anime list is pretty much only made of untranslated obscurities or lost anime... What I'd give to ever watch "Dr Norman Monogatari: Ai no Kiseki", by the way. This TV special is a rarity among rarities... |
May 18, 9:06 PM
#9
That would require two things: 1. The lost media community at large would have to learn about the existence of more anime lost media. 2. There needs to be some kind of sufficient evidence that the lost media in question is out there somewhere. There's no point in searching for something if there are little to no leads, or if whatever leads do exist all exclusively lead to dead ends. The Phantom Blood search is still ongoing because progress was made towards finding it, even if it's still currently lost, and it was started in the first place because David Productions' anime adaptation propelled JoJo's Bizarre Adventure to mainstream status in the west. |
May 18, 9:06 PM
#10
Reply to tchitchouan
No, that ain't happening, anime is produced in japan and if this were ever to happen, it would be in japan. So your queries shouldn't be here, it should be in Japanese forums. Anime is not like film cinema or games, the reels are often either destroyed or hidden forever, also finding and releasing any lost anime against the original companies' consent is a crime that is punishable by japanese law, copyrighted works are subeject to extreme regulations and if the publisher does not wish for it to be published, it will remain hidden forever.
1. The lost copies are probably hidden or destroyed in japan
2. The anime medium isn't important enough to warrant such a search
3. Extreme legal and logistic hurdles may be encountered if one wishes to engages in a lost media hunt (you can't just go a company vault and ask for production reels and stills, those are closely guarded trade secrets)
1. The lost copies are probably hidden or destroyed in japan
2. The anime medium isn't important enough to warrant such a search
3. Extreme legal and logistic hurdles may be encountered if one wishes to engages in a lost media hunt (you can't just go a company vault and ask for production reels and stills, those are closely guarded trade secrets)
@tchitchouan you do realize all lost media is usually copyrighted right? It's not just anime, and it's not like Japan is much stricter. I mean mei and the catbus is publicly available on the Internet archive and that's Ghibli ... One of the strictest anime studios? It's not that copyright laws are the issue, the issue is nobody is actually looking for lost anime media |
May 18, 9:07 PM
#11
Reply to AniMarter
Ok yeah I'll get right on that for you.
@AniMarter you're gonna look for the inferno cop specials!?!? |
May 18, 9:08 PM
#12
Reply to thewiru
We can't find anime lost media anymore, because of woke.
@thewiru what's the supposed to mean š§ |
May 18, 9:10 PM
#13
Reply to JackOfDeath
@tchitchouan you do realize all lost media is usually copyrighted right? It's not just anime, and it's not like Japan is much stricter. I mean mei and the catbus is publicly available on the Internet archive and that's Ghibli ... One of the strictest anime studios? It's not that copyright laws are the issue, the issue is nobody is actually looking for lost anime media
@JackOfDeath No, the real issue is lost media is locked away or hidden somewhere and it's hard to get access to to it due to various reasons preventing it. |
May 18, 9:12 PM
#14
Reply to ShatteredSans
That would require two things:
1. The lost media community at large would have to learn about the existence of more anime lost media.
2. There needs to be some kind of sufficient evidence that the lost media in question is out there somewhere. There's no point in searching for something if there are little to no leads, or if whatever leads do exist all exclusively lead to dead ends.
The Phantom Blood search is still ongoing because progress was made towards finding it, even if it's still currently lost, and it was started in the first place because David Productions' anime adaptation propelled JoJo's Bizarre Adventure to mainstream status in the west.
1. The lost media community at large would have to learn about the existence of more anime lost media.
2. There needs to be some kind of sufficient evidence that the lost media in question is out there somewhere. There's no point in searching for something if there are little to no leads, or if whatever leads do exist all exclusively lead to dead ends.
The Phantom Blood search is still ongoing because progress was made towards finding it, even if it's still currently lost, and it was started in the first place because David Productions' anime adaptation propelled JoJo's Bizarre Adventure to mainstream status in the west.
@ShatteredSans there's been MANY lost media found only from people recounting of what happened. The only issue is anime lost media just isn't popular. I mean attack on titan in the dome is something that could be found so easily if we could just spread that it's lost media. Many newer lost media are things probably a bunch of people have recorded on some old phone and don't realize it's lost media because nobody talks about it |
May 18, 9:13 PM
#15
Reply to tchitchouan
@JackOfDeath No, the real issue is lost media is locked away or hidden somewhere and it's hard to get access to to it due to various reasons preventing it.
@tchitchouan hidden in plain sight cause nobody knows it's lost |
May 18, 9:14 PM
#16
@JackOfDeath japanese people have better things to do than look for some lost anime. |
May 18, 9:15 PM
#17
It has been a major source of frustration for me for a while, believe me. I'd love an opportunity to watch series like this:![]() https://xss.now.cc/anime/7625/Yousei_Dick There are also many series which are not strictly speaking lost media but have been sitting planted on my PTW for years regardless, on there since close to when I first joined MAL, due to being only partially or completely untranslated for English (no English subtitling) and prior and existing fansubbing groups seemingly having no interest or plans for them in the foreseeable future despite them being out for years and decades. It's a terrible thing. The quantity and variety of fansubber groups seems to have sharply decreased since the advent of online streaming of media and associated official services too, which doesn't help. I think what bothers me most is when finding out about lost media of the animeverse from as recently as the 2000s or 2010s. You could more readily understand and forgive it when it's something from like the 1960s or early 70s, similar to older (even much older than that) live action cinema and television. But this shit is still happening to content from 2007 or 2012? In the age of information and digital technology where everything seems like it'd be recorded and saved nine million times from 100 million angles and every jerk and their mother has a smartphone camera recording every fancy cappuccino they sip out on the town? It's just crazy and bizarre to me that it's a phenomenon which persists even in this day and age. You're absolutely correct in the general notion that there are a lot of problems - many many in the world, which could be much more easily and quickly solved by those keen to do so if there wasn't such widespread ignorance of them by the vast majority, and this is one of them. Not as serious a tragedy perhaps as issues like lack of adequate medical treatment for more obscure diseases, but still a cultural and civilizational concern worth addressing. |
WatchTillTandavaMay 18, 9:20 PM
May 18, 9:15 PM
#18
Reply to tchitchouan
@JackOfDeath No, the real issue is lost media is locked away or hidden somewhere and it's hard to get access to to it due to various reasons preventing it.
@tchitchouan What about hardcore, serious collectors with deep pockets? That sounds like another place to look through maybe. Just an idea though, I dunno. |
May 18, 9:18 PM
#19
Occasionally something will pop up. https://xss.now.cc/forum/?topicid=2084715 |
ćć®ē®ć ćć®ē®ļ¼ |
May 18, 9:22 PM
#20
Reply to MaiNeville
@tchitchouan What about hardcore, serious collectors with deep pockets? That sounds like another place to look through maybe.
Just an idea though, I dunno.
Just an idea though, I dunno.
@MaiNeville Yeah some collectors might have some rare lost things but i don't think they're too keen on sharing it, making the object lose its monetary value. |
May 18, 9:30 PM
#21
Reply to tchitchouan
@JackOfDeath japanese people have better things to do than look for some lost anime.
@tchitchouan you could say that about anyone looking for lost anime to begin with |
May 18, 9:33 PM
#22
Reply to WatchTillTandava
It has been a major source of frustration for me for a while, believe me. I'd love an opportunity to watch series like this:

https://xss.now.cc/anime/7625/Yousei_Dick
There are also many series which are not strictly speaking lost media but have been sitting planted on my PTW for years regardless, on there since close to when I first joined MAL, due to being only partially or completely untranslated for English (no English subtitling) and prior and existing fansubbing groups seemingly having no interest or plans for them in the foreseeable future despite them being out for years and decades. It's a terrible thing. The quantity and variety of fansubber groups seems to have sharply decreased since the advent of online streaming of media and associated official services too, which doesn't help.
I think what bothers me most is when finding out about lost media of the animeverse from as recently as the 2000s or 2010s. You could more readily understand and forgive it when it's something from like the 1960s or early 70s, similar to older (even much older than that) live action cinema and television. But this shit is still happening to content from 2007 or 2012? In the age of information and digital technology where everything seems like it'd be recorded and saved nine million times from 100 million angles and every jerk and their mother has a smartphone camera recording every fancy cappuccino they sip out on the town? It's just crazy and bizarre to me that it's a phenomenon which persists even in this day and age.
You're absolutely correct in the general notion that there are a lot of problems - many many in the world, which could be much more easily and quickly solved by those keen to do so if there wasn't such widespread ignorance of them by the vast majority, and this is one of them. Not as serious a tragedy perhaps as issues like lack of adequate medical treatment for more obscure diseases, but still a cultural and civilizational concern worth addressing.

https://xss.now.cc/anime/7625/Yousei_Dick
There are also many series which are not strictly speaking lost media but have been sitting planted on my PTW for years regardless, on there since close to when I first joined MAL, due to being only partially or completely untranslated for English (no English subtitling) and prior and existing fansubbing groups seemingly having no interest or plans for them in the foreseeable future despite them being out for years and decades. It's a terrible thing. The quantity and variety of fansubber groups seems to have sharply decreased since the advent of online streaming of media and associated official services too, which doesn't help.
I think what bothers me most is when finding out about lost media of the animeverse from as recently as the 2000s or 2010s. You could more readily understand and forgive it when it's something from like the 1960s or early 70s, similar to older (even much older than that) live action cinema and television. But this shit is still happening to content from 2007 or 2012? In the age of information and digital technology where everything seems like it'd be recorded and saved nine million times from 100 million angles and every jerk and their mother has a smartphone camera recording every fancy cappuccino they sip out on the town? It's just crazy and bizarre to me that it's a phenomenon which persists even in this day and age.
You're absolutely correct in the general notion that there are a lot of problems - many many in the world, which could be much more easily and quickly solved by those keen to do so if there wasn't such widespread ignorance of them by the vast majority, and this is one of them. Not as serious a tragedy perhaps as issues like lack of adequate medical treatment for more obscure diseases, but still a cultural and civilizational concern worth addressing.
@WatchTillTandava I completely agree. How does a show as popular as attack on titan have lost media.... You're telling me NO ONE pulled their phone out and recorded this event? Or inferno cops anime convention special episodes? We live in the time of the Internet and smartphones but nobody had the idea to sneakily record? It genuinely pisses me off |
May 18, 9:34 PM
#23
Reply to JackOfDeath
@tchitchouan you could say that about anyone looking for lost anime to begin with
@JackOfDeath yes that is accurate. |
May 18, 9:34 PM
#24
Reply to MaiNeville
@tchitchouan What about hardcore, serious collectors with deep pockets? That sounds like another place to look through maybe.
Just an idea though, I dunno.
Just an idea though, I dunno.
@MaiNeville very true. The issue is people like this usually have NO online presence and are completely impossible to contact |
May 18, 9:36 PM
#25
Reply to Lucifrost
Occasionally something will pop up.
https://xss.now.cc/forum/?topicid=2084715
https://xss.now.cc/forum/?topicid=2084715
@Lucifrost yeah when people finally start a discussion on it. This is what I mean by we need to spread the word of lost anime instead of saying "damn can't find it? Oh well." |
May 18, 9:37 PM
#26
Reply to tchitchouan
@JackOfDeath yes that is accurate.
@tchitchouan so why does it seem like you're so against it? Are you gatekeeping lost media or something |
May 18, 9:41 PM
#27
The search for lost anime media has become a growing interest in the community. Over the years, several anime episodes, pilots, dubs, or full series have either disappeared, gone unaired, or were never officially released outside Japan. Whether due to licensing issues, production troubles, or just time forgetting them, a lot of these works have slipped through the cracks. Fans are increasingly motivated to track these down — sometimes even forming online groups or communities dedicated to archiving, sharing rare VHS recordings, or translating obscure materials. It’s a mix of digital archaeology and passion for preserving anime history. Some lost media includes alternate dubs (like the original Sailor Moon pilot by Toon Makers), unreleased OVAs, or older shows that aired only once and never got home releases. Finding these is tough. Sometimes the creators themselves no longer have the material, or it exists only in physical formats like old tapes that are nearly impossible to locate. But as interest grows, and as the anime community becomes more globally connected and tech-savvy, there’s hope that more lost anime media can be recovered. So yes — while it’s challenging, the call to “please find some anime lost media” is real, and the hunt continues. |
May 18, 9:44 PM
#28
Reply to JackOfDeath
@tchitchouan so why does it seem like you're so against it? Are you gatekeeping lost media or something
@JackOfDeath No, i'm not against it, in fact i did my best to find all the hidden and lost bikini armor media. I'm merely stating the difficulties encountered when trying to find lost media like these anime right here which were thought to be lost for YEARS. |
May 18, 9:53 PM
#29
Reply to JackOfDeath
@Lucifrost yeah when people finally start a discussion on it. This is what I mean by we need to spread the word of lost anime instead of saying "damn can't find it? Oh well."
@JackOfDeath You can't exactly tell since it's an old thread, but the discussion began after evidence of the anime's existence was publicized. |
ćć®ē®ć ćć®ē®ļ¼ |
May 18, 9:57 PM
#30
Reply to YuriYilzlize
The search for lost anime media has become a growing interest in the community. Over the years, several anime episodes, pilots, dubs, or full series have either disappeared, gone unaired, or were never officially released outside Japan. Whether due to licensing issues, production troubles, or just time forgetting them, a lot of these works have slipped through the cracks.
Fans are increasingly motivated to track these down — sometimes even forming online groups or communities dedicated to archiving, sharing rare VHS recordings, or translating obscure materials. It’s a mix of digital archaeology and passion for preserving anime history. Some lost media includes alternate dubs (like the original Sailor Moon pilot by Toon Makers), unreleased OVAs, or older shows that aired only once and never got home releases.
Finding these is tough. Sometimes the creators themselves no longer have the material, or it exists only in physical formats like old tapes that are nearly impossible to locate. But as interest grows, and as the anime community becomes more globally connected and tech-savvy, there’s hope that more lost anime media can be recovered.
So yes — while it’s challenging, the call to “please find some anime lost media” is real, and the hunt continues.
Fans are increasingly motivated to track these down — sometimes even forming online groups or communities dedicated to archiving, sharing rare VHS recordings, or translating obscure materials. It’s a mix of digital archaeology and passion for preserving anime history. Some lost media includes alternate dubs (like the original Sailor Moon pilot by Toon Makers), unreleased OVAs, or older shows that aired only once and never got home releases.
Finding these is tough. Sometimes the creators themselves no longer have the material, or it exists only in physical formats like old tapes that are nearly impossible to locate. But as interest grows, and as the anime community becomes more globally connected and tech-savvy, there’s hope that more lost anime media can be recovered.
So yes — while it’s challenging, the call to “please find some anime lost media” is real, and the hunt continues.
@YuriYilzlize the hunt of what feel like 3 people |
May 18, 9:58 PM
#31
Reply to tchitchouan
@JackOfDeath No, i'm not against it, in fact i did my best to find all the hidden and lost bikini armor media.
I'm merely stating the difficulties encountered when trying to find lost media like these anime right here which were thought to be lost for YEARS.
I'm merely stating the difficulties encountered when trying to find lost media like these anime right here which were thought to be lost for YEARS.
@tchitchouan looks like you found this pretty easily š¤āļø |
May 18, 10:02 PM
#32
Reply to JackOfDeath
@tchitchouan looks like you found this pretty easily š¤āļø
@JackOfDeath No, these anime had been lost until around 2021 but nobody cars about them so it didn't make any news. |
May 18, 10:20 PM
#33
Empress Chung (Lost Media): I present to everybody a lost anime called Empress Chung It was released in 2005, and almost nothing is known about it outside of Korea Any Korean bros in here? |
May 18, 10:23 PM
#34
Reply to tchitchouan
@JackOfDeath No, these anime had been lost until around 2021 but nobody cars about them so it didn't make any news.
@tchitchouan nobody cares and that's why we need to SPREAD the hunt for lost anime! |
May 18, 10:24 PM
#35
Reply to MaiNeville
Empress Chung (Lost Media):
I present to everybody a lost anime called Empress Chung
It was released in 2005, and almost nothing is known about it outside of Korea
Any Korean bros in here?
I present to everybody a lost anime called Empress Chung
It was released in 2005, and almost nothing is known about it outside of Korea
Any Korean bros in here?
@MaiNeville a Korean anime from before 2020!?!! I didn't know such a thing existed š± |
May 18, 10:36 PM
#36
Reply to JackOfDeath
@MaiNeville a Korean anime from before 2020!?!! I didn't know such a thing existed š±
@JackOfDeath Yes, Empress Chung is known for being released simultaneously in both Koreas (North and South) There is rumor that it had a DVD release, but nobody produced any substantiated pictures to prove it. There is 0% discussion on it, no reviews, nothing. Link: https://xss.now.cc/anime/4544/Wanghu_Sim_Cheong ![]() Directed by: Nelson Shin Screenplay by: Kim Jung-ha, Shin Jang-hyun, Yoo Kwang-hee, Kyong Seung-won, Kwon Young-sup Story by: Nelson Shin Produced by: Nelson Shin, Yi Jin-eun, Kang Min-woo Edited by: Nelson Shin Music by: Sung Dong-hwan Production companies: AKOM, SEK Studio Distributed by: KOAA Films Release date: August 12, 2005 Running time: 93 minutes Countries: North Korea / South Korea Language: Korean Budget: US$6.5 million |
May 18, 10:46 PM
#37
Yeah I’d rather spend my time watching the thousands of anime that aren’t lost. Maybe I’ll consider searching for lost media anime once I run out of things to watch — but that’s not happening anytime soon. |
May 18, 10:49 PM
#38
Reply to MaiNeville
@JackOfDeath Yes, Empress Chung is known for being released simultaneously in both Koreas (North and South)
There is rumor that it had a DVD release, but nobody produced any substantiated pictures to prove it.
There is 0% discussion on it, no reviews, nothing.
Link: https://xss.now.cc/anime/4544/Wanghu_Sim_Cheong

Directed by: Nelson Shin
Screenplay by: Kim Jung-ha, Shin Jang-hyun, Yoo Kwang-hee, Kyong Seung-won, Kwon Young-sup
Story by: Nelson Shin
Produced by: Nelson Shin, Yi Jin-eun, Kang Min-woo
Edited by: Nelson Shin
Music by: Sung Dong-hwan
Production companies: AKOM, SEK Studio
Distributed by: KOAA Films
Release date: August 12, 2005
Running time: 93 minutes
Countries: North Korea / South Korea
Language: Korean
Budget: US$6.5 million
There is rumor that it had a DVD release, but nobody produced any substantiated pictures to prove it.
There is 0% discussion on it, no reviews, nothing.
Link: https://xss.now.cc/anime/4544/Wanghu_Sim_Cheong

Directed by: Nelson Shin
Screenplay by: Kim Jung-ha, Shin Jang-hyun, Yoo Kwang-hee, Kyong Seung-won, Kwon Young-sup
Story by: Nelson Shin
Produced by: Nelson Shin, Yi Jin-eun, Kang Min-woo
Edited by: Nelson Shin
Music by: Sung Dong-hwan
Production companies: AKOM, SEK Studio
Distributed by: KOAA Films
Release date: August 12, 2005
Running time: 93 minutes
Countries: North Korea / South Korea
Language: Korean
Budget: US$6.5 million
@MaiNeville hearing north Korea be involved makes me immediately think it will never be found |
May 18, 10:50 PM
#39
Reply to kanarazukarasu
Yeah I’d rather spend my time watching the thousands of anime that aren’t lost. Maybe I’ll consider searching for lost media anime once I run out of things to watch — but that’s not happening anytime soon.
@kanarazukarasu you've rated all of attack on titan a 10 but you don't care about it's lost media..... Yep makes perfect sense |
May 18, 11:07 PM
#40
I really wish it were that easy. There are plenty of series and even one shot short anime series from back in the '60s and 70s that's technically on MAL, but no one seems to be able to track down. |
May 18, 11:10 PM
#41
Reply to Retro8bit
I really wish it were that easy. There are plenty of series and even one shot short anime series from back in the '60s and 70s that's technically on MAL, but no one seems to be able to track down.
@Retro8bit its not even just old anime, there's plenty of stuff from the last decade that's somehow lostš we need to spread the word so we can find them all!!! |
May 18, 11:28 PM
#42
It's not like people don't want to find them but it's hard to do when piracy keeps getting prevented or attacked. |
May 18, 11:57 PM
#43
I'd love to go over anime lost media someday, but the hunts are a lot more complex than usual lost media. It's usually old copies of anime that are destroyed or locked away somewhere. Obscure/rare "possibly lost" merch is a lot easier of a hunt because of how typical that is in other spaces, but I don't think anime merch is what people would be looking for without a nostalgia factor. I can't say the same about older stuff, but we should be happy about how hard it is for what we currently have to get lost- weebs and gamers pirate more than anyone else, and that usually leads to pretty good media preservation. |
May 19, 1:04 AM
#44
Reply to CaptainKenshiro
It's not like people don't want to find them but it's hard to do when piracy keeps getting prevented or attacked.
@CaptainKenshiro then dont post lost media directly on YouTube or something. If copyrights the issue just spread the lost media privately |
May 19, 1:05 AM
#45
Reply to removed-user
I'd love to go over anime lost media someday, but the hunts are a lot more complex than usual lost media. It's usually old copies of anime that are destroyed or locked away somewhere. Obscure/rare "possibly lost" merch is a lot easier of a hunt because of how typical that is in other spaces, but I don't think anime merch is what people would be looking for without a nostalgia factor.
I can't say the same about older stuff, but we should be happy about how hard it is for what we currently have to get lost- weebs and gamers pirate more than anyone else, and that usually leads to pretty good media preservation.
I can't say the same about older stuff, but we should be happy about how hard it is for what we currently have to get lost- weebs and gamers pirate more than anyone else, and that usually leads to pretty good media preservation.
@pizzadeliveryboy then explain how things as recent as attack on titan have lost mediašš weeks obviously suck at preservation |
May 19, 1:47 AM
#46
There are some interest stacks with lost media anime. Like this one: https://xss.now.cc/stacks/3070 |
May 19, 1:56 AM
#47
Well I like searching for lost Media but I rather translate those haven't a eng sub translation (Sally the Witch and Tobe Isami) because it hard to watch on raw And if there is one anime I want to recover that is Maze:Movie. |
May 19, 2:00 AM
#48
"I feel like nobody is actively looking for anime lost media" I mean, it would've worked better if the OP has posted this on a japanese SNS. |
May 19, 2:11 AM
#49
The Lost Golgo 13 Anime (1971) Originally aired on TBS. Lost for over 50 years, The series seemingly vanished, with no known copies available for decades. Rediscovered in 2023. It was found at Tokyo Laboratory during its closure, buried in its media archive. BS-TBS aired the recovered episodes under the title Golgo 13 Selection in December 2023. |
May 19, 2:30 AM
#50
Reply to JackOfDeath
@kanarazukarasu you've rated all of attack on titan a 10 but you don't care about it's lost media..... Yep makes perfect sense
@JackOfDeath It actually makes perfect sense. I don’t know if Attack on Titan has any lost media—and honestly, I don’t care. Even if it wasn’t lost, I wouldn’t watch it, just like I didn’t bother with the spin-offs or side stories. Giving something a perfect score doesn’t mean I feel the need to consume, collect, or preserve every piece of content related to it. |
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