You do not launch a sleek app. You open a browser tab. You navigate to a digital library that looks like it was designed in 1998. You click an MP4 file. The player is clunky. Sometimes the audio desyncs. Sometimes the subtitles are yellow Arial font that bleeds off the edge of the screen.
Moreover, Toei has historically done a poor job of preserving its own materials. Fires, tape degradation, and simple neglect have erased the original masters of many classic tokusatsu shows. The copies sitting on the Internet Archive—the fansubbed tapes, the laserdisc rips—are sometimes the only surviving versions of specific broadcast elements, such as the original next-episode previews or the original station IDs. To sit down and watch Kamen Rider (1971) via the Internet Archive is a specific ritual.
This is the Archive’s genius. It does not judge the quality of the preservation; it merely hosts it.
As long as the servers of archive.org continue to spin—despite legal threats, funding shortages, and the relentless march of digital decay—the original Kamen Rider will never truly die. A child in 2026, fifty-five years after the show premiered, can still watch Takeshi Hongo leap into the air, his scarf catching a digital wind, and hear him yell: "Rider... Kick!"
The legend is preserved. The loop continues. Henshin.
However, a strange symbiosis exists. For the 1971 series specifically, the Archive acts as a loss leader. A young fan who downloads the first five episodes of Kamen Rider from the Archive because they are curious about the "bug-eyed guy" often becomes the adult who buys the $200 CSM (Complete Selection Modification) transformation belt replica. The Archive captures the audience that corporate marketing cannot reach: the curious.
And then, the Toei logo appears—faded, slightly warped. The announcer shouts: "Kamen Rider!" The guitar riff of the theme song, "Let's Go!! Rider Kick," screams out of your laptop speakers. Takeshi Hongo, played by a 24-year-old Hiroshi Fujioka, rides his Cyclone motorcycle through a sunset that looks like painted cardboard.



