I get a little giddy whenever someone asks where to watch 'Dear Friends', because tracking down older series can feel like a treasure hunt. In my experience, the safest legal routes are the major anime-focused streaming platforms and the big digital stores: Crunchyroll (and what used to be Funimation’s catalog), HiDive,
Hulu, Netflix,
Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV/iTunes, and Google Play all rotate titles in and out depending on licensing. Sometimes the official Youtube channel of the rights holder or the show’s distributor will run clips, whole episodes, or anniversary streams, so I keep an eye there too.
Region restrictions matter a lot—what’s available in Japan or North America might not be in Europe—so I use an aggregator like JustWatch to check real-time availability instead of guessing. If the series is older and not streaming, buying the official DVD/Blu-ray or a digital purchase on iTunes/Google Play is the best way to support the creators and get reliable subtitles or dubs. Libraries and services like Hoopla or Kanopy occasionally carry licensed anime as well, which is a neat legal option.
All that said, availability changes, so I try to snag physical copies when I spot a good release. It feels great to own a clean version of 'Dear Friends' that I can rewatch without hunting down streaming windows.