10 Things in Avatar: The Last Airbender That Have Aged Surprisingly Well

Avatar: The Last Airbender remains a hugely popular animated TV show to this very day, even if it only had three seasons to its name. The show did get a boost from The Legend of Korra to keep the franchise alive, but with or without Korra, Avatar has been doing well and aged nicely in the modern era. The original series aired from 2005 to 2008, and it feels like that show hasn’t aged a day.Several notable factors will make a story feel either ageless or badly aged. A show ages badly if it relies too much on the styles and cultural zeitgeist of the time, especially if nostalgia isn’t helping. Shows also age badly if their general cultural ideas are shockingly out of date. Fortunately, Avatar: The Last Airbender dodged those issues with its timeless themes and messages of hope, redemption, personal transformations and forgiveness. Such themes are relevant in any decade.Avatar: The Last Airbender made no reference to current technology, which made it feel timeless and age well. Most Avatar nations and groups used pre-industrial tech, which is always popular in fiction, and even the industrialized Fire Nation only used steampunk tech at most, which is charmingly old-fashioned rather than badly aged.

Avatar: The Last Airbender remains a hugely popular animated TV show to this very day, even if it only had three seasons to its name. The show did get a boost from The Legend of Korra to keep the franchise alive, but with or without Korra, Avatar has been doing well and aged nicely in the modern era. The original series aired from 2005 to 2008, and it feels like that show hasn’t aged a day.

Several notable factors will make a story feel either ageless or badly aged. A show ages badly if it relies too much on the styles and cultural zeitgeist of the time, especially if nostalgia isn’t helping. Shows also age badly if their general cultural ideas are shockingly out of date. Fortunately, Avatar: The Last Airbender dodged those issues with its timeless themes and messages of hope, redemption, personal transformations and forgiveness. Such themes are relevant in any decade.

Avatar: The Last Airbender made no reference to current technology, which made it feel timeless and age well. Most Avatar nations and groups used pre-industrial tech, which is always popular in fiction, and even the industrialized Fire Nation only used steampunk tech at most, which is charmingly old-fashioned rather than badly aged.

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