Short and sweet: yes, you can export all anime names into a personal watchlist. If you use a public tracker like 'MyAnimeList' or 'Anime-Planet', check profile settings for an export/CSV option. Mobile apps sometimes offer a share or export feature too. If that’s not available, browser extensions and third-party sync tools can pull lists and create CSV/JSON files you can import into Google Sheets, Notion, or a local spreadsheet.
Remember that private lists may not export and some metadata (cover art, episodes watched) might need extra steps. I usually keep an exported CSV as a backup — it’s a tiny habit that saves headaches later, and it makes planning watch months way more satisfying.
Okay, quick practical route: if your anime list lives on a major tracker platform, just look for an 'export' or 'download' option in settings. 'MyAnimeList' is the easiest for non-techy folks because it has a direct CSV export. That CSV contains each anime title and metadata which you can drop into Google Sheets or Excel and filter, tag, or sort however you like. If your list is split across services, browser extensions and syncing tools exist to consolidate entries.
If you're comfortable with a bit more tech, APIs from 'AniList' or 'Kitsu' let you fetch lists programmatically and export JSON or CSV. Also keep in mind privacy settings — private lists often won't show up through public APIs. I usually export once every few months so I don’t lose anything and it helps when I’m rebuilding a list on a new app. Feels great to have a portable archive.
I get a small thrill when my watchlist turns into a proper exportable file — yes, you absolutely can export all anime names into a personal watchlist. If you keep your list on sites like 'MyAnimeList', 'AniList', or 'Kitsu', they each have ways to get your data out. For example, 'MyAnimeList' lets you export your anime list as a CSV from your profile settings, which gives you titles, scores, status, and dates. 'AniList' can be queried via its GraphQL API and you can pull every entry as JSON or transform it into CSV. 'Kitsu' also provides API access for pulling your library.
If you want everything in one place—Google Sheets, Notion, Obsidian, or a local spreadsheet—you can export native CSV/JSON and import it. For syncing between services, browser extensions like MAL-Sync or third-party tools can help move lists around and preserve statuses and scores. Just watch out for private lists (those might not export), rate limits on APIs, and missing cover images if you need artwork. I find exporting periodically is a comforting little backup ritual that makes my collection feel safe and tidy.
I tend to geek out about automating this, and yes — exporting every anime title from your personal list is totally doable and surprisingly flexible. I typically use the 'AniList' GraphQL API because it returns everything cleanly: title variants, status, score, and timestamps. The workflow I use is: query paginated results until the entire list is fetched, normalize title fields (English, romaji, native), then dump to JSON and convert to CSV for spreadsheets or to Markdown for Obsidian. For 'MyAnimeList', I lean on the unofficial Jikan API if I need a programmatic route, or their built-in CSV export for a quick grab.
Important considerations: handle rate limits and pagination, respect terms of service, and check whether your list is private. If you want images and extra metadata, you may need extra API calls per entry, which slows things down. For moving lists between services, extensions like MAL-Sync or intermediary formats (CSV -> import) save tons of time. I love scripting this because it turns my messy queue into a tidy, searchable archive — and I can always run it again when I reorganize my backlog.
2026-02-08 16:19:25
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Over time, I refine the list by revisiting older entries—sometimes a show I rated highly years ago doesn’t hold up, and that’s okay! I also keep a 'to-watch' section organized by priority: high for must-sees like 'Vinland Saga,' and low for casual picks. Sharing my list with friends has sparked some of our best debates, like whether 'Attack on Titan’s' ending was genius or rushed. The key is treating it as a living document, not a fixed trophy case.
Creating a text file to list all anime episodes is such a practical idea, especially if you're a collector or just trying to keep track of what you've watched. I've done this myself for shows like 'One Piece' and 'Naruto', where the episode count is massive. It helps me avoid missing fillers or losing my place.
You can manually type out each episode title, or if you're tech-savvy, scrape data from sites like MyAnimeList using Python scripts. I prefer the manual method because it feels more personal, like curating my own anime library. Organizing by arcs or seasons in the text file adds another layer of neatness. For example, separating 'Attack on Titan' into its four distinct seasons makes it easier to revisit specific moments.
Another tip: include air dates or ratings next to episodes if you want to track your progress chronologically or highlight favorites. Tools like Notepad++ or even Google Docs work fine, but plain .txt keeps it universally accessible. It’s a small effort that pays off when you’re deep into a binge-watch session.