NEW GAME!!
Finished · 12 epDoga Kobo · 2017 · Japan

NEW GAME!!

NEW GAME!!

7.6/ 10 · 72,762

Available on

Crunchyroll· Sub · HDYouTube· Sub · HD

The second season of New Game!. Aoba Suzukaze starts another year designing characters at Eagle Jump, and she can’t wait to meet the newbie recruits…if any are hired. But before she can even unlock her senpai status, she finds herself in a lead designer position for the company’s newest game! Following in her manager’s footsteps, Aoba’s gotta get good if she wants her skills to compete with Ko Yagami’s. Working hard alongside some interesting new coworkers, only time will tell if Aoba gets her best ending. (Source: Funimation)

More seasons

NEW GAME!Prequel · TV · 2016
NEW GAME!!Current · TV · 2017

Episodes

12
1. Episode 1 - It Actually Feels Like I Started My Job
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
2. Episode 2 - So This is an Adult Drinking Party...
24m · Crunchyroll
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3. Episode 3 - What Happens If I'm Late to Work?
24m · Crunchyroll
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4. Episode 4 - The First... Paycheck...
24m · Crunchyroll
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5. Episode 5 - That's How Many Nights We Have To Stay Over?
24m · Crunchyroll
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6. Episode 6 - Like... The Release is Canceled?
24m · Crunchyroll
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7. Episode 7 - Please Train the New Hires Properly
24m · Crunchyroll
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8. Episode 8 - It's Summer Break!!
24m · Crunchyroll
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9. Episode 9 - Do We Have To Come Into Work?
24m · Crunchyroll
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10. Episode 10 - Full-time Employment is a Loophole in the Law to Make Wages Lower
24m · Crunchyroll
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11. Episode 11 - There Were Leaked Pictures of the Game on the Internet Yesterday!
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch
12. Episode 12 - One of My Dreams Came True!
24m · Crunchyroll
Watch

How watching this pays the artists

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Where the money actually goes

Streaming services pay licensing fees to the production committee that financed the show. That committee distributes revenue to the studio, the publisher of the source material, the music label, and the broadcasters who originally aired it. The animators themselves are typically employed or contracted by the studio; their pay comes from the studio’s share of these licensing dollars.

Piracy doesn’t reduce streaming-service revenue evenly — it removes the underlying viewership that justifies future licensing investment. Less licensing investment means smaller studio budgets, lower pay for animators, and fewer shows greenlit.

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