This episode really shows that regardless if the person is on the other side, they still manage to join together to stop rumbling because of their common goal.
Even though they have different goals to stop the rumbling.
9/10 for this
Something has shattered deep inside Eren Yeager, and nobody — not his friends, not his enemies, not even the audience — knows exactly what he's planning. That's the setup for Attack on Titan's Final Season Part 2, a 12-episode run where the guy you've been rooting for since episode one becomes genuinely terrifying. He's teamed up with Zeke, the Beast Titan, to supposedly end the centuries-long war between Marley and Eldia, but his real motives are buried under layers of secrets and family trauma. Meanwhile, Mikasa, Armin, and Reiner are all caught in the fallout, forced into impossible choices where there's no clean moral ground to stand on. MAPPA handles the animation here, and the action sequences hit hard — but it's the quieter moments, the betrayals and shifting loyalties, that really stick with you. The tone is relentlessly dark, more concerned with what war does to people than with who wins. If you liked the moral complexity of Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood or the psychological weight of Neon Genesis Evangelion, this is operating in similar territory but with its own brutal edge. Think less giant robot existentialism, more geopolitical nightmare where every character believes they're the hero. You need to have watched the previous seasons for any of this to land, but if you're already invested, this stretch of the story is where everything starts falling apart in the best possible way.



This season covers Chapters 117-130 of the manga. Continue reading from Chapter 131.

This episode really shows that regardless if the person is on the other side, they still manage to join together to stop rumbling because of their common goal.
Even though they have different goals to stop the rumbling.
9/10 for this
2 sides of the coin debating whether they're right or wrong, whether they're pro-rumbling or not. People on both sides showing their vulnerability.
This episode is more like a dilemma of are these horrible acts justifiable, like Annie's action in the back season and Connie's plan to revive his mom.
9/10 in philosophical side
The trump card has been played. Now everyone is in a state of fear and inevitable destruction, knowing rumbling cannot be stopped by anything.
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