Popularity In the 3rd
Newtype Anime Awards for 2013, Eren was voted as eighth best male character. In
Animages
Anime Grand Prix 2014 polls, Eren ranked as the fourth most popular male anime character, behind
Levi who was voted the most popular. However, his Japanese voice actor ranked first among all voice actors, with Eren as his primary credit for that period. In the
Animedia Eren was nominated for multiple categories including "Most Valuable Player", "Darkness", "Hot" and "Brave"; He only won the "Hot" award, but took high places in the rest.
Anime News Network also listed his Titan form as one of the weirdest power ups seen in anime. In a
Newtype poll, he was voted the tenth most popular male anime character from the 2010s. At the
5th Crunchyroll Anime Awards, Lucas Almeida won
Best Voice Artist Performance (Portuguese) for his performance as Eren. In July 2021, he once again appeared in the
Newtype polls. At the
6th Crunchyroll Anime Awards, Eren won the award for
Best Antagonist, while also being nominated for both
Best Protagonist and Best Fight Scene for his fight against War Hammer Titan. The character's voice actor Yuki Kaji won the award for
Best Voice Artist Performance (Japanese) while Vlad Tokarev was nominated in the
Russian voice acting category, but lost to Islam Gandzhaev's
Tanjiro Kamado. Eren won the award for
Best Main Character, while Yuki Kaji won in the same voice acting category for the second consecutive year in the
seventh edition. Eren and Yuki Kaji were once again nominated in the same categories as last year in the
eighth edition. Miguel Ángel Leal won
Best Voice Artist Performance (Spanish) for his performance as Eren in the
ninth edition. Eren is featured in a variety of merchandise. In December 2013, the
Good Smile Company released the Eren Picktam! strap along with straps of other characters from the series. The official Eren Jaeger
nendoroid and
figma were also launched after the series' success. These figures exist via a variety of figurine and merchandise companies. Eren's figma was released in May 2014, and the nendoroid was released in April 2014. In addition to figures,
Bandai has released Eren plushes, a smaller one in December 2013 and a larger one in July 2014. Eren Yeager, along with many other characters from the series, also has a dedicated perfume inspired by his character traits. His perfume was released by Koubutsuya in fall of 2013 along with the perfumes for
Mikasa Ackerman and Levi. In an Akiba Souken poll, Eren was voted as the most popular character from the series with 50,143 votes.
Critical response Critical reception to Eren's character has been varied. Jacob Hope Chapman of
Anime News Network referred to Eren as "almost deliberately not a 'likable' protagonist, even by 15-year-old boy standards" due to reasons of being violent, impulsive, and not especially smart or strong. However, he liked that he inspires people by believing in his feelings, hopes, and dreams, making him the "heart of humanity". Theron Martin noted that while Eren initially has hardly any emotion besides anger, in later episodes he eventually does have emotions beyond that. Jeffrey Kaufman of
Blu-ray.com calls Eren "a compelling character, and once a really surprising development crops up a few episodes in, he becomes even more compelling." Ken Iikura
Anime Now highly acclaimed Eren for the way his emotions are shown in the series due to his constant rage regarding his desire to take vengeance for the Titans who ate his mother as well as his reaction to the discovery of the two Titans who have been posing as his friends. As a result, Iikura said Eren was more appealing due to his emotions rather than the powers he reveals across the series to fight. While acclaiming the episode "Warrior", the site
MANGA.TOKYO praised Eren's interactions with Reiner and Bertolt due to the two latter characters opening themselves to Eren as enemy Titans but the three remains as calm until their eventual fight. The character was often compared with
Thorfinn from
Vinland Saga due to their similar struggles with getting revenge as well as how the same studio did of their own anime adaptations. Kyle Charizanis of
The Fandom Post found the anime portrayal of Eren's transformation to be amusing, starting from his "almost pitiful" look while declaring how he's going to kill all of the Titans. When the anime portrays him as capable of controlling his transformation, Charizanis adds "Maybe one day he’ll be able to contort his body to be used as a bridge, or heal other people’s wounds, or morph his arms into sharp blades like a certain other anime character." In the final anime episode, when Eren is fighting the Female Titan, he describes Eren's internal monologue as changing "from the usual violent determination to a kind of gleeful madness." and likens his tone to that of
The Joker. Elijah Watson from
Complex magazine liked the plot twist of Eren's titan form turning on the other titans that he called it a
Worldstar moment. Bamboo Dong of
Anime News Network was fond of Eren's Titan abilities as "there has not been anything as uncomfortable for me to watch as Eren chomping into his own hand, trying to transform. There is something visceral and real about Eren drawing blood from his own hand, and boy, it gave me the chills," and later praised his thoughts when fighting the Female Titan due to the portrayal of Eren's humanity despite being a Titan. Other reviews were more critical on the character. Nicole MacLean of
THEM Anime Reviews found him "a frustrating protagonist" based on how his angry fits and exclamations “can be seen as highly childish”. Elliot Gray of
Japanator called him a "normal protagonist" and instead found Mikasa and Armin more appealing. Similarly, Anna Neatrour from
Manga Bookshelf called him “in many ways a fairly brash and opinionated hero". On the other hand, Justin Wu from
The Artifice saw Eren's hotheadness as a positive trait of the character. Chapman found
Bryce Papenbrook's child Eren forced but noted his performance once the character grew up was far better.
MangaTokyo acclaimed Eren's growth across the anime series' until the finale of its third season due to how he realizes the amount of enemies he has to face changing from having angry tantrums to a more collected mind seeking the freedom of his people.
The Fandom Post noted that one of the major twists of the third season was discovering the relationship between Eren and Zeke. Another reviewer praised how the development of the characters and discovery of the truth behind Grisha also reflected on the childhood moments from Eren, Mikasa and Armin. For the final arc,
Den of Geek and
IGN noted that while Eren becomes a darker character due to his harsh interactions to Mikasa and Armin to the point he comes across as a fallen villain with Zeke being the apparent cause. IGN viewed his role as more ambiguous when he talks to Mikasa in a flashback about their bonds.
The Fandom Post commented despite his aggressive comments, Eren's new characterization might include lies as some generate a major impact on Mikasa's feelings for her. His appearance as the Attack Titan in the final frames of the opening of the anime's final season were compared to that of
Hideaki Anno's
Shin Godzilla movie (2016) by
Anime News Network due to how threatening it looks. The darker portrayal of Eren was noted to fit in the
Attack on Titan when compared with Thorfinn's by Anime News Network as theme songs have lyrics involving war in order to further link the two protagonists, with Eren ending it with his life and Thorfinn deciding to live his the rest of his life atoning for it. Reception for the end of Eren's character arc in the manga was polarized. When Eren later reveals his motivations for committing mass murder to make his friends into heroes to Armin in the last chapter of the manga, the latter thanks Eren, which sparked reader controversy. In an interview regarding this scene, Isayama clarified that Armin was not condoning Eren's actions, but acknowledging that he was Eren's accomplice. Recognizing that reception to the final manga arc and last chapter was mixed, Isayama admitted that Eren's motivations and the story themes he wished to portray during the arc ended up being difficult to depict and that he regrets being unable to fully express those themes in the manga. In response to the controversy surrounding the last chapter, the final episode of the anime depicts the scene differently as Eren reveals that his motive was indeed to exterminate the world to achieve a free one and Armin instead tells Eren that they will go to
hell together for their shared responsibility in committing mass murder; a change that was received more positively than the original dialogue. ==References==