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Doraemon-doraemon- The Day When I... - -pandoratv-raws-

While most uploaders focused on movies or specials, this archivist captured the "lost" TV specials. Their signature was a distinct bitrate encoding (often 640x480 WMV9) and a brutal naming convention: [PandoraTV-RAWS] Doraemon - The Day When I... [Baba78F9].avi .

But PandoraTV-RAWS understood something crucial: -Pandoratv-raws- Doraemon-doraemon- The Day When I...

The user known only as PandoraTV-RAWS had a specific obsession: . While most uploaders focused on movies or specials,

Today, the original upload is gone. PandoraTV the site shut down in 2013. However, the RAWS survive on private trackers and external hard drives in Osaka basements. Every time a fan watches that grainy, un-subbed, beautifully broken AVI file, they aren't just watching Doraemon. However, the RAWS survive on private trackers and

In the vast, chaotic archive of anime preservation, there exists a legendary name whispered among collectors: PandoraTV-RAWS . To the average viewer, it looks like a poorly typed file tag. But to the dedicated Doraemon completionist, it is the key to a vault—specifically, the vault containing one of the most emotionally complex episodes in the franchise’s 50-year history: "The Day When I Was Born" (Boku no Umareta Hi).

For years, this episode existed only in fragmented memory. Here is the story of how a raw uploader saved a masterpiece from obscurity. Most Western fans know Doraemon as the cheerful cat robot who solves Nobita’s homework problems with gadgets from his 4D pocket. But the Fujiko F. Fujio canon has a melancholic undercurrent that rarely surfaces in the weekday TV slots.

(a loose translation of the Japanese title) is not a typical adventure. There are no time patrols, no secret tools, and no Gian concerts. Instead, the plot follows a simple, devastating premise: Nobita, failing yet another exam, wishes he had never been born. Doraemon, instead of offering a happy gadget, takes him via time machine to the day of his birth. Nobita watches, hidden, as his exhausted mother holds him for the first time—crying not out of disappointment, but out of overwhelming love and relief. The episode is raw. There is no villain. The conflict is existential. The resolution is a silent hug. It aired only a handful of times in the 1979 and 2005 series, often skipped in reruns due to its slow pace and heavy themes. Enter PandoraTV-RAWS: The Digital Archaeologist This is where PandoraTV-RAWS enters the narrative. Operating in the late 2000s and early 2010s, PandoraTV was a niche Japanese video sharing site (not to be confused with the music service). Unlike YouTube, which aggressively removed unlicensed anime, PandoraTV became a sanctuary for RAWS —untouched, unsubbed, broadcast-quality recordings.

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