Attack on Titan's ending divided the fanbase more than any anime in history. As someone who has re-read the final chapters three times, I want to make the case that the ending works.
The controversy (spoilers ahead): Eren Yeager, the protagonist, initiates the Rumbling — a genocide that kills 80% of humanity outside the walls. His friends stop him. In the final chapter (Chapter 139), it is revealed that Eren manipulated events across time to ensure this outcome, knowing he would die. His goal: to make his friends into heroes who stopped the Rumbling, ensuring Paradis Island's safety.
Why people hated it:
- Eren's breakdown about Mikasa in Chapter 139 felt out of character for someone who had been stoic and determined for 30+ chapters.
- The 80% genocide being portrayed as a "necessary sacrifice" felt morally unresolvable.
- Ymir Fritz's love for King Fritz felt like a narrative justification for an abusive relationship.
Why it actually works:
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Eren was always emotional. Go back to Chapter 1. He cries. He rages. He is impulsive. The stoic Eren of the final arc was the mask. Chapter 139 is the mask falling off. Source: re-read Chapters 1, 12, 50, and 90. The emotional throughline is consistent.
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Isayama was writing a tragedy, not a power fantasy. Eren did not "win." He committed an atrocity, traumatized his friends, and died knowing the cycle of violence would eventually continue. The extra pages showing Paradis being bombed years later confirm this.
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The Ymir Fritz storyline is about how trauma bonds people to their abusers. It is uncomfortable because it is supposed to be. Isayama was not endorsing the relationship. He was depicting how cycles of violence perpetuate through distorted attachment.
Sources: Hajime Isayama, Attack on Titan manga Chapters 1-139, Kodansha. Isayama interview with Brutus Magazine (2023).