Where Can Viewers Stream The Third Ending Sequence?

2025-10-17 17:27:29 69

3 Answers

Mila
Mila
2025-10-18 00:23:27
Hunting down a show's third ending sequence can actually be pretty fun if you know where to look, and I've got a little checklist I use every time.

First, I check the official streaming services that hold the show's license in my country—platforms like Crunchyroll, Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, or region-specific sites often carry the full episodes with the correct endings intact. If the third ending only appears from a certain episode onward, streaming the episodes that include it is the most reliable way to watch the animation in context and hear the full song as intended.

Second, many production committees upload the ED as a standalone promotional clip. That means checking the anime's official website, the studio's or publisher's YouTube channel, the record label's channel, or the show's account on Nico Nico Douga. Search terms that helped me in the past: the song title plus 'ED' or Japanese tags like '第3エンディング' or 'ED3'. Music video uploads may be geo-restricted, so if you run into that, the licensed streaming platforms or the show's Blu-ray/DVD often include the ED without locks.

Finally, don't forget the soundtrack and singles—digital stores and streaming music services sometimes include a short PV or link back to the official video. Between official streaming episodes, the studio/label channels, and physical releases, I usually find whatever ending I'm after, and it feels great hearing the full animation cleanly at last.
Mason
Mason
2025-10-18 02:08:37
I usually approach this like a small research mission: the third ending sequence will most often be available in one of three places, and knowing which comes first saves time.

Primary source is the official episode stream. Licensed platforms typically present the exact TV cuts, so if the ED debuted in episode X, streaming that episode on services such as Crunchyroll, Funimation's archive (now on Crunchyroll in many regions), Netflix, Hulu, or local broadcasters’ streaming portals will show it. Regional licensing matters a lot—sometimes a service will have episodes but substitute a different ending, so compare episode timestamps and credits if something seems off.

Secondary source is the promotional clip: studios, music labels, or the anime's official YouTube/Nico Nico accounts often post the third ending as a short video or PV. Searching for the song name plus 'ED' or 'ending' usually surfaces it. If the song was released as a single, the label's channel may host the music video that uses the ending animation or a variant. I also check Blu-ray/DVD extras and official soundtrack releases for higher-quality or extended versions. Personally, I prefer watching the ED as posted by the official channels—better quality and respectful to the creators.
Tate
Tate
2025-10-22 21:20:49
I like to keep things simple: if I want the third ending sequence, I first try to watch the episodes where it appears on the licensed stream for my region so I get the original TV edit. If that’s behind a regional block or missing, my next stop is the anime’s official channels—studio, publisher, or the record label’s YouTube/Nico Nico page often uploads the ED clip or a music video that uses the same animation.

Sometimes the ED is bundled with physical releases or the single's digital release, so checking Blu-ray extras or the single on music platforms can yield a clean version. Quick search tips that work for me: use the song title plus 'ED', or Japanese tags like '第3エンディング' and include the show's name. I tend to avoid unofficial uploads; I want the best quality and to support the creators, and it’s always nicer to watch the full sequence the way it was meant to be presented.
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