Geeks logo

It Was All Just a Dream: Eren Yeager Is Still Alive? - Attack on Titan 2025!

It Was All Just a Dream: Eren Yeager Is Still Alive? - Attack on Titan 2025!

By MORZATPublished about a year ago 3 min read

Imagine waking up one day to find that every trial, every battle, every tear shed, and every friend lost was just a fragment of a restless dream. This is the premise we’re exploring: what if everything that unfolded in Attack on Titan was simply a figment of Eren Yeager’s imagination, and he was still the carefree boy from Shiganshina?

Setting the stage first: Eren's journey is monumental. He goes from a passionate, vengeance-driven teenager to one of the most morally complex and divisive characters in modern anime. His trajectory, marked by bloodshed, betrayals, and the crushing weight of his choices, is the backbone of Attack on Titan. But what if we pulled the rug out from under it? What if Eren never truly left his childhood behind?

Here's the kicker: Eren wakes up, drenched in cold sweat, lying in his small bed at home. His mother lives, humming a gentle tune as she prepares breakfast. Armin is outside, anxious to show him this new book about the ocean. Mikasa is her usual protective self, already at his door to see if he's up. The colossal walls surrounding the town are as looming as ever, but they've never been breached. The Titans? A figment of Eren's overactive imagination-a nightmare born from a child's fear of the unknown.

This twist repositions Eren not as the savior or destroyer of humanity but as a boy against his deep anxieties. The freedom he desires, the world outside the walls, and even his fascination with Titan powers might all be metaphors for his struggles to grow up in a confined and controlled environment. The story goes from being a grand epic to an intimate, psychological tale of a young boy learning to navigate his emotions and dreams.

What would this say concerning the storyline of Attack on Titan? For one, it humanizes Eren in a way we've never seen. We no longer view him as a hero or an anti-hero but a mere child, helpless with the burning desire for agency. His anger, that defined his character, would hence be seen as being produced by childhood insecurities instead of the weight of the world's fate.

It also allows for new dynamics with other characters: Armin is the positive friend who helps Eren discern reality from dream, while Mikasa is more about unconditional support rather than some preordained destiny of protection. Even Eren's parents-enigmatic father Grisha in particular-move from mysterious figures to just ordinary parents trying to raise a boy with a big imagination.

This idea also forces us, as viewers, to reflect on the larger themes of the series. Attack on Titan has always been about cycles of violence, freedom, and the human condition. Reframing it as a dream doesn't diminish these themes; rather, it amplifies them by showing that the true battles we fight are often internal. The war of freedom could be reimagined as the universal human struggle to break free from fear and limitation-something we can all relate to, even outside the context of Titans.

Of course, this twist would be divisive, with some fans feeling a little betrayed by the idea that the story they've invested in is a dream. Others might embrace it as a bold, thought-provoking way to subvert expectations. Either way, it would spark a conversation about the nature of storytelling and the power of perspective.

This, in the end, speaks to the very core of Eren Yeager. Whether as a boy who dreamed of the outside world or a complex character surviving in a post-apocalyptic world, he represents humanity's continuing struggle to find meaning, freedom, and connection. And isn't that what makes Attack on Titan so compelling in the first place? It is not just a story about Titans and wars; it is a mirror held up to our deepest fears and hopes.

social mediatvreview

About the Creator

MORZAT

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2026 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.