How Many Years Did Eren Have Left?
Answer: Eren’s Mortal Clock
When the popular anime series Attack on Titan enters its final arc, it raises the question: "How many years did Eren have left?" A seemingly simple inquiry that bears crucial implications for the future of the characters and the fate of humanity. According to various sources, we’ll dive into the mathematics of Eren’s longevity.
Initial Conjugation
Initially, in Chapter 34-35 of the Manga series, Eren himself estimates he has Eight years or less before he perishes. A rough calculation, considering he has consumed the power of the Titans and is using the Attack Titan’s authority.
Calculating Titan Years
Using the Attack Titan’s powers, it can be deduced that:
| Year | Number of Days |
|---|---|
| Total Days | 36500 (8 years * 365 days/year + remaining days) |
| Active Day /Day: 200-300 years (Assuming 90-99% efficiency loss after each day) |
From this calculation, Eren would have only approximately 1-10 active days left based on his consumption of powers and subsequent exhaustion.
| Days Left | Active |
|---|
- 200-30 active days remaining (estimated exhaustion)
- 35,470 inactive days pending death (assuming 300 active days and 12-10% exhaustion on subsequent days)
Assuming Exhaustion
Hypothesizing Eren exhausts his powers soon after this estimation, there might be only less than 8 years or more remaining. By taking the total days at approximately 36500 (from initial estimation, Chapter 34-35) and considering exhaustion efficiency losses:
| Year Left | Estimated Days Left |
- 5-10 years or less until Eren’s eventual physical exhaustion
- Following exhaustion, his remaining vital forces could slowdown significantly over the estimated period.
Alternative End-Scenarios
Speculation about alternative endings paints a bleaker picture: If Eren were forced to constantly maintain his current physical form or use massive powers without replenishment,
- Accelerating Degradation: Faster loss of powers and gradual degenerative tissue degeneration
- Exhaustion Leading to Immobility:
- Limping and gradual breakdown
- Tireless efforts leading to gradual immobility or comatose state