動漫之家APP與官網已於昨日正式停止服務
動漫之家APP與官網已於昨日正式停止服務,這一消息令不少老二次元用戶倍感唏噓。根據企查查數據顯示,運營方尚科奇(北京)網路科技有限公司已被列入失信被執行人名單,公司法定代表人及大股東楊彥才同時遭到限制高消費。早在2023年9月,該公司便因登記住所或經營場所無法聯繫,被列入經營異常名錄,顯示其經營狀況早已陷入困境。
動漫之家自2005年成立,最初只是以論壇形式運營,後來逐步拓展為涵蓋漫畫、動畫、輕小說的綜合社群平台。2014年,其官方APP上線,進一步鞏固其在國內二次元圈的地位。對於不少漫畫迷來說,在正版版權尚不明確的時代,動漫之家是他們接觸到大量優秀作品的重要入口,也幾乎成為中國網路漫畫發展史上繞不開的一個名字。
然而,這個曾經無數人青春的見證者,最終還是走向關停的命運。如今打開動漫之家,已無法載入首頁,所有資源一律消失,就連用戶的訂閱歷史與收藏的漫畫,也因伺服器證書失效而徹底消亡。相比於以往伺服器崩潰或內容下架所帶來的零星失落,這一次是乾脆徹底的「終結」,甚至沒有給用戶留下任何備份的機會。許多冷門作品可能因此淪為失落的數位媒體,十幾年累積下來的評論與互動,也只得永遠停留在使用者的回憶裡。其實,動漫之家的崩潰並非毫無徵兆。早在2021年,北京市文化市場綜合執法總隊就曾查處一起透過隱蔽通道向用戶提供含暴力、色情、低俗內容的網路動漫案件,而涉事的正是動漫之家。當時,官方對其處以最嚴厲的處罰,並責令平台關停日漫頻道、刪除所有違規動漫內容。這次事件使動漫之家失去了《進擊的巨人》等多部人氣日漫,平台人流與影響力受到重創。自此之後,動漫之家的沒落似乎便已成為注定的結果,只是人們無法確切預料它會在哪一天迎來最終結局。
動漫之家的消失,不僅僅是網路時代一個平台的倒下,它更代表著一個世代的青春告別。對許多老二次元而言,它承載了他們啟蒙漫畫的記憶,也曾是他們日常生活的一部分。如今,伴隨著伺服器的徹底關停,這段青春記憶也走入歷史,留下一聲長長的歎息。
The well-known Chinese ACG community DMZJ (Anime Home), both its app and official website, officially ceased service yesterday, leaving many longtime users deeply nostalgic. According to corporate records, its parent company, Shangkeqi (Beijing) Network Technology Co., Ltd., has been blacklisted as a “dishonest executor,” while its legal representative and major shareholder, Yang Yancai, has been restricted from high-level spending. As early as September 2023, the company had already been placed on an “abnormal business operation list” due to the authorities being unable to reach its registered address, a sign that its operations had long been in trouble.
Founded in 2005, DMZJ began as a forum, later expanding into a multi-terminal community platform covering manga, anime, and light novels. In 2014, the official app was launched, further cementing its influence in the Chinese ACG scene. For many readers, at a time when copyright enforcement was still unclear, DMZJ served as a crucial gateway to countless works and became an almost unavoidable name in the history of online comics in China.
Now, however, this once-vibrant community has reached its end. Visiting DMZJ today, users can no longer load the homepage, and all resources have vanished. Subscription histories and saved collections have also disappeared, wiped out entirely after the platform’s server certificates expired. Unlike previous partial crashes or selective content takedowns that still left some hope, this time is absolute—no backups, no last chance. Many obscure titles may be lost forever as “lost media,” and over a decade’s worth of comments and discussions will remain only in users’ memories.
The platform’s downfall, however, did not come without warning. In 2021, Beijing’s Cultural Market Comprehensive Law Enforcement Team investigated a case in which a hidden channel was used to provide users with anime containing violence, pornography, and vulgar content—the central target being DMZJ. At the time, the authorities imposed the heaviest penalties possible, ordering the platform to shut down its Japanese manga channel and delete all illegal works. This incident directly led to the removal of popular titles such as Attack on Titan, and with it, the disappearance of one of the site’s biggest draws. From that moment, DMZJ’s decline was all but inevitable, though no one could predict the exact day it would end.
The disappearance of DMZJ is more than the collapse of an online platform—it is the closing of a chapter in youth for many Chinese anime fans. It was where countless readers discovered their first manga, where they gathered to share their passions, and where their daily lives intertwined with the world of comics. Now, with its servers gone for good, this shared memory has passed into history, leaving behind only a sigh of nostalgia.
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