"Asuka Strikes!" was first broadcast on November 22, 1995, and drew a 7.6% audience share on Japanese television. In 1996, it ranked nineteenth in
Animage Anime Grand Prix list of "Best Anime Episodes". Official merchandise based on the episode has also been released, including a line of official T-shirts. The episode was received positively by critics and reviewers, who lauded its direction, plot, humor, action, and Asuka's introduction. Digitally Obsessed's reviewer Joel Cunningham praised "Asuka Strikes!", describing it as "the funniest episode in the series"; Cunningham particularly enjoyed the "hilarious" relationship between Shinji and Asuka, saying; "A great introduction of a great character, and some very amusing dialogue, make this one of the standouts of the show thus far".
Film School Rejects's Max Covill ranked it among the best episodes of the series, saying; "an Asuka-centered episode is usually a great sign of quality, and this is a lot of fun"; he also praised the first scene, which portrays Asuka in shadow, for bringing a sense of mystery to the new character.
Animation Planet magazine's John Beam positively reviewed "Asuka Strikes!"; he also lauded the show for its "outstanding characterizations, animations, and dramatic presentation". Animé Café's Japanese reviewer Akio Nagatomi negatively received the episode. He criticized the introduction of Asuka and Kaji, which he said are stereotypical and cliché characters, and the introduction of Eva-02 "with a
Phantom of the Opera style cloak". The reviewer was particularly critical of Asuka, the script, and the details of the plot and setting, which he said are unrealistic. Despite this, he praised the direction, saying; "the show does have flow; something to which a lot of other feature's can't lay claim".
Looper's Thompson Smith described Gaghiel as one of the less-interesting Angels in
Neon Genesis Evangelion; according to Smith, the Angel provides a problem for Asuka to solve in her first appearance, but "lacks any sort of significance beyond all that".
Comic Book Resources' Theo Kogod criticized Asuka's behavior in her first appearance; he negatively transposed the scene in which her skirt accidentally rises due to the sea breeze and slaps Toji, Kensuke and Shinji, and, since none of the boys could control the weather, Kogod considered it "an overreaction—the first of many". The sequence in which the episode's title appears with the sound effect of Asuka's slaps received appreciation. Writers Kazuhisa Fujie and Martin Forster in their
Neon Genesis Evangelio: The Unofficial Guide also said Asuka's line "Are you stupid?" has become popular since her first appearance in the eighth episode.
Screen Rant's Adam Beach ranked the battle against Gaghiel among the best fights in
Neon Genesis Evangelion; Beach described it as "memorable" for both Asuka's introduction and the marine setting, praising its "interesting choreography". His colleague Jack Cameron expressed a similar view, while Daniel Dockery of
SyFy Wire similarly ranked the fight among the best "non-depressing moments" in
Neon Genesis Evangelion.
Newtype magazine praised the episode's drawings and Asuka's facial expressions. Alex Walker of
Kotaku ranked "Asuka Strikes!" among the best
Neon Genesis Evangelion episodes. Multiversity Comics' Matthew Garcia said the episode's treatment of Asuka in view of her team is interesting. For Anthony Gramuglia of Comic Book Resources, she is a refreshing character compared to Shinji's insecurities in the previous seven episodes, and this invigorates the series with a "great deal of joy". According to Gramuglia; "She changes the show, offering a diversity of perspective that livens things up".
Crunchyroll's reviewer Noelle Ogawa similarly wrote; "From her confident introduction aboard a battleship to her forceful and aggressive battle style in her bright red Eva, she is a joy every time she's on screen". Jemima Sebastian from
IGN compared a scene from
Godzilla vs. Kong (2021), in which
King Kong on a ship suffers an underwater attack from
Godzilla, to the fight between Gaghiel and Eva-02, describing it as a possible homage to
Evangelion. ==References==