Attack on Titan’s final episode of its final chapter in the final season has finally arrived, and it’s even more complicated than its release schedule. As the series’ finale came to a close, all the complex interwoven threads of Eldian, Marleyan, and Titan history collided, and it all led to an exciting – if at times confusing – ending. As far as the manga is concerned, the series’ ending is widely considered controversial. However, the anime adds to and changes aspects of it that don’t take away from its message, but instead were “pretty much there from the beginning” according to AOT’s creator Hajime Isayama.With or without those changes though, what makes AOT so great is the air of mystery surrounding its well-defined world whose secrets are slowly revealed over time – and that all culminates in a finale that is as tragic as it is hopeful, and as complete as it is open-ended. In this way, AOT is a story about dichotomies, meant to show how no one side is ever totally right or wrong when they’re truly understood. That’s what makes understanding Attack on Titan’s finale so important: just as beneath every war is a desire for peace, in every ending there’s a new beginning.AOT’s final episode begins right at the start of the final battle between Eren and Armin’s resistance group consisting of Levi, Mikasa, Armin, Jean, Connie, Reiner and Piek. At first, the battle seems all but impossible to win as the Founding Titan calls upon the assistance of every Titan in history to protect Eren and allow the Rumbling to continue. Armin is even consumed whole by Ymir, and all hope already seems lost.RELATED: Attack on Titan: How Small Changes Redeemed The Controversial Manga Finale
Attack on Titan‘s final episode of its final chapter in the final season has finally arrived, and it’s even more complicated than its release schedule. As the series’ finale came to a close, all the complex interwoven threads of Eldian, Marleyan, and Titan history collided, and it all led to an exciting – if at times confusing – ending. As far as the manga is concerned, the series’ ending is widely considered controversial. However, the anime adds to and changes aspects of it that don’t take away from its message, but instead were “pretty much there from the beginning” according to AOT’s creator Hajime Isayama.
With or without those changes though, what makes AOT so great is the air of mystery surrounding its well-defined world whose secrets are slowly revealed over time – and that all culminates in a finale that is as tragic as it is hopeful, and as complete as it is open-ended. In this way, AOT is a story about dichotomies, meant to show how no one side is ever totally right or wrong when they’re truly understood. That’s what makes understanding Attack on Titan‘s finale so important: just as beneath every war is a desire for peace, in every ending there’s a new beginning.
AOT‘s final episode begins right at the start of the final battle between Eren and Armin’s resistance group consisting of Levi, Mikasa, Armin, Jean, Connie, Reiner and Piek. At first, the battle seems all but impossible to win as the Founding Titan calls upon the assistance of every Titan in history to protect Eren and allow the Rumbling to continue. Armin is even consumed whole by Ymir, and all hope already seems lost.
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