What Streaming Services Host The Most 2010 Cartoons Now?

2026-02-01 09:45:26 124

3 Answers

Ronald
Ronald
2026-02-03 10:54:24
Lately I’ve spent afternoons trying to map where my favorite 2010-era cartoons ended up, and the pattern that emerged is pretty clear: the big platform owners — Max, Netflix, and Paramount+ — hold most of the prominent catalog titles, while niche services pick up the rest.

Max tends to house the Cartoon Network/Adult Swim archive, so landmark series from the early 2010s often live there. Paramount+ collects Nickelodeon and Viacom properties, so anything with that pedigree usually points there. Netflix and Amazon act like utility players: Netflix will have region-specific bundles and some exclusive licensing, Amazon will offer seasons for purchase if they aren’t included in subscription tiers. For anime that started or ran around 2010, Crunchyroll (and the occasional Funimation catalog overlap) is where I go. Free platforms such as Tubi and Pluto TV quietly host older seasons, and regional services can surprise you with shows that aren’t available in my country.

All of this means I ended up juggling a couple of subscriptions and using a streaming guide app; it’s a minor hassle, but chasing down those exact episodes from 'My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic' or rediscovering 'The Legend of Korra' has been worth every click.
Sawyer
Sawyer
2026-02-04 18:40:35
Hunting down where the bulk of cartoons from around 2010 live now feels like piecing together a mixtape from different friends — there isn’t a single home, but a handful of services own the biggest chunks.

If I had to rank them by sheer volume of relevant titles, Max (the place that absorbed most Cartoon Network and Adult Swim libraries) is near the top — it usually hosts big 2010-era hits like 'Adventure Time', 'Regular Show', 'Steven Universe' seasons, and a ton of related shorts and specials. Paramount+ covers a lot of Nickelodeon-era catalog so shows tied to Viacom — older Nick titles and some later Nick productions — often land there. Netflix has historically bought and kept a surprising amount of the catalog in different regions and also produces originals, so you’ll find assorted licensed gems and international kids’ series on it.

Beyond those three, Disney+ holds Disney-owned animation around the decade, Amazon Prime Video frequently sells or rents seasons even when it doesn’t stream them in the subscription catalog, and for anime from 2010 you’re looking at Crunchyroll (and sometimes Funimation’s library). Free, ad-supported services like Pluto TV, Tubi and Peacock also rotate in cartoons from the 2010s. My recommendation is to check a tracker like JustWatch for your country — licensing flips often, so what I can reliably stream today might move next season. I keep a running watchlist because I’m sentimental about revisiting 'My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic' and 'The legend of Korra' whenever they pop back into rotation, and that little thrill never gets old.
Ava
Ava
2026-02-06 13:05:28
I still get excited when I find a hard-to-locate childhood favorite, and for cartoons that premiered around 2010 the streaming landscape is a bit of a scavenger hunt.

In practice, Max is the main hub for a lot of Cartoon Network and related shows from that era, so if you want to binge 'Adventure Time' or 'Regular Show' that’s the first place I check. Paramount+ is my go-to when I’m chasing Nickelodeon-era stuff and spinoffs. Netflix surprises me sometimes with licensed kids’ series and international cartoons, and Amazon often sells seasons if they’re not bundled into a subscription.

If you’re into anime that launched around 2010 (titles like 'Bakuman' or 'Panty & Stocking with Garterbelt'), Crunchyroll is usually the best bet; sometimes shows jump between Crunchyroll and streaming giants depending on dub deals. For budget-wise viewing I fret over Pluto TV and Tubi — they’re ad-supported but occasionally carry whole seasons. Honestly, I toggle between these services and a catalog tracker; it saves me from endlessly re-searching and lets me plan a binge session without the disappointment of a missing season. It’s a bit of work but always worth it when a nostalgia hit lands.
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