Warner Bros. Home Entertainment

Background
In 2005, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment was founded to bring together all of its parent company's businesses involved in the delivery of home entertainment content to consumers. The company structure includes subsidiaries such as Warner Home Video, Warner Bros. Digital and Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment. In 2017, the Warner Home Video brand was made its in-name-only division. In January 2020, it was announced Warner Bros. and Universal Pictures Home Entertainment would be partnering to form a 10-year joint venture, which will see new and library titles from both companies being released on 4K UHD, Blu-ray, and DVD under one entity; the venture launched in early 2021 under the name Studio Distribution Services. SDS does not use an on-screen logo; Warner Bros. content released by SDS continue to use the Warner Bros. Home Entertainment logo.

(March 14, 2017-)
Logo: Same as the 3rd Warner Home Video logo, except the sky footage is different, and the logo seems to be in a more 3D look with the colors looking more solid along with the text on the banner being replaced with "Times New Roman".

Variant: An open matte version exists. In this version, the shield is smaller.

Technique: Simple computer animation for the shield, live action for the sky background.

Music/Sounds: Same as the NTSC AOL Time Warner variant of the last WHV logo, with a little more reverb. PAL releases use the regular pitch.

Availability: Current.
 * It was first spotted on the DVD release of The Jetsons & WWE: Robo-WrestleMania! and the Blu-ray release of Collateral Beauty, both of which were released on the same date, and appears on newer home media releases from the company.
 * Again, this doesn't appear on any Viz Media and Sesame Workshop releases.
 * This logo is still being used (one recent example being Black Adam, released on January 3, 2023), despite Warner Bros. updating its logo in 2021.
 * Strangely, it doesn’t appear on any Pathé releases in the UK, instead just featuring their logo as a de-facto home video logo. This also applies when Fox distributed their releases.
 * This doesn't show up on any newer DVD and Blu-ray releases of recent MGM films, which go straight to the menu when the disc starts.

Legacy: Many consider this logo's animation to be of lower quality than the 1996 Warner Home Video logo; in fact, it was initially unknown whether this logo was real or a fan project.