Did Eren Know Everything From The Start

So, the big question: did Eren Yeager, that brooding, complicated protagonist from Attack on Titan, know everything from the beginning? It's a debate that's raged amongst fans longer than the Rumbling itself!
The Titan Time Warp: A Comic Book Explanation
Think of it like this: Eren inherited the Attack Titan and the Founding Titan. These aren’t your average, run-of-the-mill titans. The Attack Titan can see into the future, while the Founding Titan can manipulate memories and even time itself.
Confusing, right? It's like having a time-traveling DeLorean and a superpower that lets you mess with people's brains. Combine that with the PATHS dimension - a weird metaphysical realm connecting all Eldians - and you've got a recipe for some serious temporal shenanigans.
Must Read
So, What Did Eren Really Know?
This is where the fun begins! Did Eren have a complete script of the future, like a cosmic screenplay? Or was he more like an actor improvising a scene, vaguely aware of the plot points but still making choices along the way?
The answer seems to be somewhere in the middle. He wasn't a puppet, controlled by destiny. He influenced the past to create the future he needed to see.

Think of it like this. He knew his choices would lead to certain outcomes, but he might not have known exactly how those outcomes would feel. Like knowing you need to break up with someone, but not knowing how much it will hurt.
The Heartbreaking Humor of Forced Freedom
One of the most debated aspects is Eren's motivation. Was he truly fighting for freedom, or was he just a slave to the future he saw?
It's almost darkly humorous. Eren, the guy screaming about freedom, might have been the least free person of all. He was trapped by his own future knowledge!

Imagine knowing you have to do something terrible, even if you don't fully understand why, and the weight of that future presses down on you every day. Talk about a cosmic gut punch.
A Bittersweet Conclusion: Choices and Consequences
The beauty (and the tragedy) of Eren's story is that he made choices, even within the limitations of his future knowledge. He chose to show Mikasa the world. He chose to confide in his friends. He chose, ultimately, to put the future in their hands.

Perhaps "knowing everything" isn't about having all the answers, but about understanding the consequences of your actions. Eren knew the world would hate him. He knew he'd hurt the people he loved.
And yet, he still walked that path. That's not just knowledge; that's a terrifying kind of courage, or perhaps, a horrifying kind of responsibility.
Ultimately, whether Eren "knew everything" or not is less important than the fact that he chose what he did with that knowledge. He wasn't a passive observer; he was an active, albeit deeply flawed, participant in his own destiny.
So next time you're debating Eren's actions with your friends, remember: it's not about whether he knew everything, but about what he did with what he knew. And maybe, just maybe, pour one out for the guy who had to carry the weight of the future on his shoulders.
