· Firestick.io Team · Apps · 17 min read
24 Best Anime Apps on ONN Streaming Device [Free, Subbed & Dubbed]
The 24 best anime apps for your ONN Streaming Device in 2026 — free, subbed, dubbed, and sideloaded options tested and ranked. Crunchyroll, BeeTV, Tubi, AnimeScrap, and more.
I spent three weeks loading anime apps onto my ONN 4K Streaming Box — official Play Store installs, sideloaded APKs, browser workarounds, the whole lot. The ONN runs Google TV, which actually gives it a slight edge over Firestick for anime: the Google Play Store has more of the apps you want pre-packaged, and sideloading is just as straightforward once you know the steps. Most of the apps I tried buffered constantly, crashed mid-episode, or simply stopped working after a few days. The 24 below actually survived.
Whether you want same-week simulcasts as they air in Japan, classic dubbed series from your childhood, or completely free options with zero subscriptions — there’s something on this list for you.
The best anime apps on ONN Streaming Device are Crunchyroll (largest official library, free tier available), Tubi (100% free with a solid classic catalog), and BeeTV (best free unofficial app for latest episodes in 1080p). For the widest selection without buffering headaches — especially when using unofficial apps — pair your ONN with Surfshark VPN. It has a native Android TV app that installs directly on your device.
What I Tested For
My ONN 4K Streaming Box runs on Ethernet to a 500 Mbps fiber connection — any buffering you see in my notes is the app’s fault, not my router’s. Over three weeks I ran every app on this list through the same checklist:
- Library depth — How many series? Simulcasts? Classic dubs?
- Stream quality — Does it actually deliver 1080p without dropping to 480p mid-episode?
- D-pad usability — Some of these were built for phone touchscreens, not a TV remote
- Free vs. paid access — What do you actually get without subscribing?
- Stability — Does it crash 20 minutes into One Piece?
The 24 apps below are the ones worth your time. Everything else I tried didn’t make the cut.
At a Glance: Best Anime Apps for ONN
| App | Type | Free? | Sub/Dub | Quality | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🏆 Crunchyroll | Official | Partial | Both | Up to 1080p | Simulcast fans |
| Tubi Best Free Legal | Official | Yes | Both | Up to 1080p | Free legal classics |
| BeeTV Best Unofficial | Unofficial | Yes | Both | Up to 1080p | Free current season |
| RetroCrush | Official | Yes | Both | SD–HD | Retro anime |
| AnimeScrap Open Source | Unofficial | Yes | Sub | Up to 1080p | Open-source fans |
Best Official Anime Apps (Install from Google Play Store)
These install directly from the Play Store on your ONN device — no sideloading, no settings changes. Just search, install, and watch.
1. Crunchyroll
Crunchyroll
- Largest legal anime library on any platform
- Simulcasts from Japan — new episodes within hours of broadcast
- Full sub and dub catalogs for most major series
- Clean Google TV app with proper D-pad navigation
Crunchyroll is the reason everyone else has to compete on price. I watched Jujutsu Kaisen, Solo Leveling, and an entire season of One Piece through it on my ONN box without a single quality drop. The Google TV app is polished — the series grid is clean, your watchlist syncs across devices, and navigating with a D-pad feels natural rather than painful.
The catch? Crunchyroll significantly reduced its free tier in early 2026. Free accounts now get SD quality, ad interruptions, and a limited title selection — simulcasts and the full dub catalog are behind a paywall. Premium runs $7.99–$14.99/month depending on the tier. If you watch regularly, it’s worth it. If free is non-negotiable, keep reading.
✓ Pros
- Largest anime library of any legal streaming service
- Same-day simulcasts matching Japanese broadcast schedules
- Both subbed and dubbed catalogs for all major series
- Google TV app is genuinely well-built for couch remote use
✕ Cons
- Free tier gutted in early 2026 — SD quality, limited titles, ads throughout
- Premium costs $7.99–$14.99/month depending on plan
- Some dub libraries still lag weeks behind the sub catalog
2. Tubi
100% free. No account required (optional). No subscription. Tubi’s anime catalog leans toward classics and licensed catalog titles — Sword Art Online, Naruto, Bleach, Fairy Tail — rather than same-week simulcasts. For dubbed content especially, Tubi punches well above its weight for a free platform.
The ads are present and unskippable, but spaced out reasonably — nothing like the aggressive ad blocks on some competitors. On the ONN box, the interface loads fast and the D-pad navigation is clean. For anyone who wants legal anime without spending a cent, Tubi is the first app I’d install.
✓ Pros
- Completely free — no account, no subscription, no catch
- Strong dubbed catalog for classic and mid-tier series
- Legal, stable, auto-updates via Play Store
- Fast load times on ONN hardware
✕ Cons
- No simulcasts — latest-season episodes won't be here
- Unskippable ads every 15–20 minutes
- Library smaller than Crunchyroll for current-season anime
3. Pluto TV
Pluto TV isn’t primarily an anime platform, but it runs dedicated 24/7 anime channels — continuous streams of Dragon Ball Z, Naruto, InuYasha, and more. Think of it like old-school cable anime at midnight, but free and on demand. If you want to park on the couch and let classic dubbed anime run without picking specific episodes, Pluto TV’s anime channels scratch that itch perfectly. No account required.
4. RetroCrush
RetroCrush is the niche pick on this list — and intentionally so. It focuses exclusively on classic anime from the ’70s, ’80s, and ’90s: Fist of the North Star, Dirty Pair, Kimba the White Lion, Getter Robo. The kind of titles that are nowhere else online. Completely free with ads, legally licensed, and surprisingly deep for a free service. You’ll need to sideload it since it’s not on the Play Store, but the install is straightforward.
5. YouTube (Muse Asia, Official Publisher Channels)
YouTube is underrated as an anime source. Muse Asia uploads full licensed episodes of current-season anime for free. Dozens of official publisher channels — Toei Animation, Muse India, Ani-One Asia — upload entire series legally. Crunchyroll’s own channel posts free episode 1s for every new season. The anime section of YouTube is enormous if you know which channels to follow.
6. Bilibili
Bilibili is China’s largest video platform — essentially a YouTube-sized site with a massive legal anime library and English subtitles for many titles. The official app installs from the Play Store and includes series you simply won’t find on Crunchyroll. Interface is busy and ad-supported, but the catalog depth makes it worth the visual noise. I found several series here that were absent from every other app on this list.
7. Netflix
Netflix’s anime catalog has grown into something genuinely impressive: exclusives like Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, Blue Eye Samurai, and the Studio Ghibli library sit alongside a growing selection of licensed titles. Stream quality is consistently excellent on ONN hardware. The catch is that Netflix is subscription-only (check their website for current pricing), and the anime selection is curated rather than comprehensive — you won’t find simulcasts here. If you already subscribe for other content, the anime section is worth exploring.
8. Amazon Prime Video
Prime Video holds some notable anime exclusives — Vinland Saga being the headline title — alongside a solid mid-tier licensed catalog. The interface isn’t as anime-friendly as Crunchyroll’s, but it works cleanly on ONN and D-pad navigation is competent. If you’re already a Prime subscriber, the anime section is a free bonus worth checking before you pay for a separate streaming service.
9. Disney+
Disney+ carries the Studio Ghibli library in most markets, Star Wars: Visions, and a handful of other anime titles depending on your region. Not a primary anime destination by any stretch, but worth knowing if you’re already subscribed. The Google TV app on ONN runs well.
10. Peacock
Peacock has a smaller but growing anime section, with a free tier that makes it worth installing alongside your other apps. Some titles here won’t be anywhere else. Not a specialist platform — but when a series shows up exclusively on Peacock, it’s good to have the app already installed.
11. HIDIVE
HIDIVE is the dedicated anime streaming service for titles Crunchyroll doesn’t carry — and the overlap is genuinely low. It focuses on simulcasts and catalog content from publishers outside the Crunchyroll agreements, which means the combined HIDIVE + Crunchyroll library covers almost everything currently airing. Subscription-based (check their website for current pricing), but the Google TV app works cleanly on ONN with solid D-pad navigation.
Get Surfshark — Native Android TV App
→Best Sideloaded Anime Apps for ONN
These don’t live in the Google Play Store — you’ll need to sideload them using the Downloader app. The process takes about five minutes on ONN devices (full guide below). All of these are free.
12. BeeTV
BeeTV was my daily driver for the unofficial section of this test. I watched three full episodes of Solo Leveling at 1080p on my ONN box without a single buffer — and that’s without Real-Debrid. Links load quickly, the interface is clean enough for a TV remote, and the ad situation is minimal compared to most free options. Both subbed and dubbed content, current season and catalog.
The downside? BeeTV is unofficial, which means no guarantees on uptime. I ran it for two straight weeks without issues, but apps like this can vanish between one week and the next. Use it while it works, keep a backup option ready.
✓ Pros
- 1080p streams that load without needing Real-Debrid
- Interface that actually works with a D-pad on ONN
- Both subbed and dubbed, including current-season titles
- Minimal ads compared to most other free unofficial apps
✕ Cons
- Unofficial — can disappear or break without notice
- Requires sideloading (about 5 minutes of setup)
- VPN recommended for privacy when using unofficial apps
13. Anime TV
Anime TV is built specifically for Android TV — which means the ONN D-pad experience is noticeably better here than apps originally designed for phones. Subbed content focus, updated regularly, and the episode coverage for current-season titles is solid. Free, ad-supported.
14. BeeAnime
Think BeeTV but focused entirely on anime — no general movies, just series. BeeAnime has a tighter catalog but the Android TV interface is well-optimized. I navigated it entirely with the ONN remote without frustration. Sub-heavy catalog, but popular dubs are present for major titles. Free, sideload required.
15. AnimeScrap
AnimeScrap is the open-source option on this list. It’s maintained publicly, which means you can actually verify what it’s doing — a meaningful advantage over black-box unofficial apps. Integrates with MX Player for external playback, supports light and dark modes, and gets regular updates that most unofficial apps don’t bother with. Sub-focused, but the library depth is strong.
16. Stremio + Anime Addons
Stremio is technically a universal streaming platform, but with the right community addons it becomes a capable anime hub. The Anime Kitsu addon and several others pull from multiple sources, integrate Trakt for watchlist tracking, and handle sub/dub switching cleanly. I’ve used Stremio on streaming devices extensively — the setup takes 10 extra minutes compared to a dedicated app, but the experience is more polished once configured. Pair it with Real-Debrid and stream quality jumps noticeably.
17. Kodi + Anime Addons
Kodi with the right addons is overkill for casual viewers but genuinely powerful for enthusiasts. The Seren addon with Real-Debrid integration pushes excellent stream quality. Dedicated anime repositories add titles Seren misses. If you’re already in the Kodi ecosystem, the anime coverage is worth exploring before you pay for a dedicated service.
Browser-Based Anime Sites (via Firefox on ONN)
These aren’t apps — they’re websites you access through a TV browser. Install Firefox from the Play Store on your ONN device, then navigate directly. Less convenient than a dedicated app, but useful when an app doesn’t have a specific series.
18. 9Anime
One of the most comprehensive anime sites online. 9Anime has current-season simulcasts, a deep back catalog, and multiple stream sources per episode — so you can switch if one buffers. Browser-only on ONN, but workable in Firefox with pointer mode enabled.
19. AniWatch
AniWatch (also known as Aniwatch.to) is where I go when 9Anime doesn’t have something. Clean interface, fast servers, and it often has episodes available before other sites catch up. Consistent 1080p streams on my ONN setup.
20. AnimeHeaven
AnimeHeaven is known for fast episode uploads when new content drops. Interface is functional if slightly dated. Works in Firefox without any special configuration, and the episode library for older series is deep.
21. 4Anime
4Anime has a particularly strong catalog of mid-tier and older series that fall through the cracks on other sites. Both subbed and dubbed coverage, reliable servers. Like all browser-based options, it runs better with a VPN.
22. Gogoanime
Gogoanime is one of the oldest and most consistently available anime sites online — enormous back catalog, both dubbed and subbed, fast servers. The pop-up ad situation is aggressive. Install uBlock Origin in Firefox before you visit, or just tolerate it. Either way, the catalog depth makes it worth bookmarking.
23. AniMixPlay
AniMixPlay has a cleaner TV-friendly interface compared to most browser-based sites, and the auto-play next-episode feature actually works correctly with a remote — which sounds minor until you’ve fought with a site that doesn’t support it. Strong coverage for current-season titles.
24. CloudStream (Anime Sources)
CloudStream is a sideloaded media player that aggregates streaming sources across movies, TV, and anime — including dedicated anime source plugins. More like a unified frontend than a standalone site. Once configured, it handles anime alongside everything else in one clean interface, with D-pad navigation that feels built for a TV rather than bolted on. Search for the latest APK on the CloudStream GitHub and sideload it using the steps below.
How to Sideload Anime Apps on Your ONN Device
Google Play Store apps install normally — just search and hit Install. The unofficial apps (BeeTV, Anime TV, BeeAnime, AnimeScrap, CloudStream, RetroCrush) require sideloading. Here’s the exact process for ONN Google TV:
How to Sideload Apps on ONN Streaming Device
5 stepsInstall Downloader from Play Store
Open the Google Play Store on your ONN device, search for Downloader by AFTVnews, and install it. This is the standard sideloading tool for Android TV devices — same app used on Firestick. It’s free and takes about 30 seconds to install.
Allow Downloader to Install Unknown Apps
Go to Settings → Apps → Special App Access → Install Unknown Apps. Find Downloader in the list and toggle Allow from this source to ON. This is a per-app permission on Google TV — you’re only allowing Downloader to install files, not every app on your device.
Find the APK Download URL
On a phone or computer, search for the app you want followed by “APK download Android TV” — for example, “BeeTV APK Android TV.” Find the official source or a trusted site like APKMirror. Copy the direct download URL so you can type it into Downloader on your ONN box.
Download the APK via Downloader
Open Downloader on your ONN device. Use the URL field to enter the APK download link (type it character by character with the on-screen keyboard, or use a Bluetooth keyboard). Hit Go — Downloader fetches the file and immediately prompts you to install it. Select Install.
Clear Cache and Launch
After installation, select Done (not Open — launching directly from Downloader sometimes fails). Then go to Settings → Apps → find your new app → Clear Cache. Now launch it from your app library. Clearing cache before first launch prevents the “app not responding” issue that hits fresh installs.
The sideloading guide for Firestick covers all the same underlying concepts — the process on ONN is nearly identical, just with the per-app “Install Unknown Apps” permission instead of a global toggle.
Which Anime App Should You Actually Use?
The honest answer depends on what you actually want:
You want the biggest official library with simulcasts → Crunchyroll. Pay for premium if you watch more than two or three series at a time. The free tier in 2026 is barely worth the download.
You want completely free, legal content → Tubi for dubbed classics, YouTube for official publisher channels and Muse Asia content, RetroCrush if you’re into retro titles.
You want free access to current-season anime with minimal setup → BeeTV for the easiest experience, BeeAnime if you want anime-only, AnimeScrap if open-source matters to you.
You’re already using Kodi or Stremio → Lean into the addons. Real-Debrid makes a significant difference in stream quality for both platforms.
You want a no-install browser backup → Firefox, bookmarked to 9Anime and AniWatch.
For a broader look at free streaming options on Google TV and Android TV devices, the app ecosystem overlaps heavily with ONN — most of what works on Firestick works here too.
Upgrade Your Unofficial App Streams with Real-Debrid
If you’re using Stremio or Kodi for anime, Real-Debrid upgrades your stream quality significantly — cached high-quality sources instead of whatever random mirror the addon happens to find. The difference is most noticeable on 1080p anime with large file sizes. Setup takes about five minutes and works on every device connected to your account.
Try Real-Debrid — Better Anime Stream Quality
→Related Articles
- How to Install Stremio on Firestick — same installation process works on ONN Google TV
- How to Install Kodi on Firestick — covers setup and best addons for streaming
- Best Free Streaming Channels — more free content options beyond anime
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Last updated: April 2026