Kamen Rider X Internet Archive [exclusive] Jun 2026
During the 1970s and 80s, a production company in Hawaii produced local English dubs of Kamen Rider V3 to air on Sunday mornings. These dubs featured local voice actors, sloppy translation ("Let’s transform, buddy!"), and cut episodes to 18 minutes for commercial breaks. Copies were believed destroyed until a user uploaded a VHS transfer found in a Honolulu thrift store. The Internet Archive is the only place on Earth streaming it.
The Internet Archive has emerged as an unofficial but critical hub for the preservation and global distribution of Kamen Rider media—particularly the Showa Era (1971–1989) and early Heisei Era (2000–2009) content that remains commercially unavailable, unsubbed, or out-of-print. While Toei Company, Ltd. (the copyright holder) has not formally endorsed this archival activity, the Internet Archive hosts thousands of files related to the franchise, including raw TV episodes, fan subtitles, rare magazines, scans of production materials, and out-of-circulation films. This report analyzes the scope, legality, community impact, and future of Kamen Rider content on the platform. kamen rider x internet archive
The drones fired red lasers. Riku moved with a heavy, deliberate grace. He didn't dodge; he parried. Every time a laser hit his armor, it didn't burn him; it was absorbed. His suit converted the energy into data packets. During the 1970s and 80s, a production company
“In the age of deletion, be the backup. Be the memory. Be the Rider.” The Internet Archive is the only place on Earth streaming it
The Internet Archive is a San Francisco-based nonprofit digital library. Founded in 1996, its stated mission is to provide "universal access to all knowledge."