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{{Infobox Avatar: The Last Airbender character| {{short description|Fictional character from Avatar: The Last Airbender}}
{{For|the first episode of the 2024 live-action television series|Aang (Avatar: The Last Airbender episode){{!}}Aang (''Avatar: The Last Airbender'' episode)}}
| image = ]
{{Infobox character
| name = Aang | name = Aang
| image = Avatar Aang.png
| nationality = ]
| caption = Avatar Aang in '']'', kneeling in a battle pose, holding his new staff behind him.
| series = ]
| alt = Aang kneeling in a battle pose, holding his new staff behind him.
| first = {{Plainlist|
* '''Original series''':
* "]" (2005)
* '''''The Legend of Korra''''':
* "]" (2012)
* '''Live-action series''':
* "]" (2024)}}
| last = {{Plainlist|
* '''Original series''':
* "]" (2008)
* '''''The Legend of Korra''''':
* "]" (2013)}}
| creator = ]<br>]
| lbl1 = Voiced by
| data1 = {{ubl|] (])|] (])|Ben Helms ('']'')|Jaxson McBride ('']'')|Dustin Sardella ('']'')|Davis Pak ('']'', ''Quest for Balance'')|Caz Inghram ('']'')|] ('']'')|] ('']'')}}
| lbl2 = Portrayed by
| data2 = ] (])<br>] (])
| gender = Male | gender = Male
| hair = None | title = {{Plainlist|
* The Avatar
| eyes = Gray
* '''Preceded by:''' ]
| age = Biologically 12 (Chronologically 112)
* '''Succeeded by:''' ]}}
| position = ], ] Master
| spouse = ] (wife)
| appearance = ]
| children = {{ubl|] (son)|] (daughter)|] (son)}}
| voice = ]
| nationality = ]
| lbl21 = Animal guide
| data21 = ]
| lbl22 = Bending element
| data22 = {{hlist|] (native)|]|]|]|Energybending}}
| lbl23 = Katara, onji and meng
}} }}


'''Avatar Aang''' ({{lang-zh|c=安昂|p=Ān Áng}}), or simply '''Aang''', is the ] ] of ]'s ] '']'' (created by ] and ]), voiced by ]. Aang was the last surviving Airbender, a ] of the ]' Southern Air Temple, and the youngest ever airbending master (for his time).
'''Aang''' is a ] voiced by ], the ] ] of the ] ] ''].'' The twelve-year-old Aang is an ] ] of the ]' Southern Air ], and the current incarnation of the ], the spirit of the planet manifested in human form, who can control all four ] and whose job is to keep the ] in harmony. With friends ] and ], and ]s ] and ], Aang journeys on a quest to master the elements, defeat the ], and bring ] to the ]-torn ]s.

He is an ] of the "]", the spirit of light and peace manifested in human form. As the Avatar, Aang controls all four ] (water, earth, fire, and air) and is tasked with bringing balance and keeping the ] at peace. At chronologically 112 years old (biologically 12), Aang is the series' ], spending a century in ] in an iceberg before being discovered and joining new friends ] and ] on a quest to master the elements and save their world from the ] ] ,as Aang progressed on his journey he is joined by ], ] and ].

Aang's character has appeared in other media, such as ]s,<ref name="Trading Cards">{{cite web|url=http://entertainment.upperdeck.com/avatar/en/interface.aspx|title=Avatar Trading Card Game|access-date=2008-03-24|publisher=Nickelodeon |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080302152900/http://entertainment.upperdeck.com/avatar/en/interface.aspx |archive-date = 2008-03-02}}</ref><ref name="Trading Cards 2">{{cite web|url=http://www.boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/22469/avatar-the-last-airbender-trading-card-game|title=Avatar: The Last Airbender Trading Card Game|access-date=2008-03-24|publisher=BoardGameGeek|archive-date=2010-02-21|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100221154127/http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/22469/avatar-the-last-airbender-trading-card-game|url-status=live}}</ref> ]s,<ref name="The Burning Earth">{{cite web|url=http://www.avatartheburningearth.com/|title=Avatar: The Last Airbender&nbsp;— The Burning Earth|access-date=2008-03-13|format=Flash|publisher=Nickelodeon| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080314184122/http://www.avatartheburningearth.com/| archive-date= 14 March 2008 | url-status= live}}</ref><ref name="EscapeFromSpiritWorldGame">{{cite web|url=http://www.nick.com/avatarescape/index.jhtml|title=Avatar Escape From The Spirit World|access-date=2008-02-19|author=Nickelodeon|format=Adobe Flash File|publisher=Viacom Corporation|archive-date=2011-11-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111119223956/http://www.nick.com/avatarescape/index.jhtml|url-status=live}}</ref> ]s,<ref name="T-Shirts">{{cite web|url=http://shop.nick.com/?categoryId=2060004|title=The Nickelodeon Shop&nbsp;— Avatar|access-date=2008-02-11|publisher=Nickelodeon|archive-date=2011-07-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110714181633/http://shop.nick.com/?categoryId=2060004|url-status=live}}</ref> and ]s.<ref name="Web Comics">{{cite book|title=Avatar: The Last Airbender Cine-Manga|volume=1|url=http://www.tokyopop.com/product/1423|access-date=2008-03-14|publisher=Tokyopop|isbn=1-59532-891-2|author=Michael Dante DiMartino|author2=Bryan Konietzko|name-list-style=amp|date=2006|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080416071717/http://www.tokyopop.com/product/1423|archive-date=16 April 2008|url-status=dead}}</ref> Avatar Aang has also been portrayed by ] in the live-action film ]<ref name="mtv">{{cite web |last1=Marnell |first1=Blair |title='Last Airbender' Star Noah Ringer Joins 'Cowboys And Aliens' Cast |url=https://www.mtv.com/news/2596517/last-airbender-noah-ringer-cowboys-and-aliens-cast/ |website=MTV News |access-date=February 10, 2022 |date=April 19, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120929182238/http://splashpage.mtv.com/2010/04/19/last-airbender-noah-ringer-cowboys-and-aliens-cast/ |archive-date=2012-09-29 }}</ref> and voiced by ] in the sequel series '']''. ] portrays Avatar Aang in the ] live-action ].<ref>{{Citation|title=Avatar: The Last Airbender: Netflix Live-Action Series Reveals Cast and Creative Team|website=IGN|date=12 August 2021 |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/avatar-the-last-airbender-netflix-cast-aang-zuko-katara-sokka|access-date=2021-08-12|archive-date=2021-08-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210812145745/https://www.ign.com/articles/avatar-the-last-airbender-netflix-cast-aang-zuko-katara-sokka|url-status=live}}</ref>

{{TOC limit|limit=3}}

==Appearances==
===''Avatar: The Last Airbender''===
Upon death, Avatar Roku was reincarnated and Aang was born, and later raised by Monk Gyatso, a senior monk at the Southern Air Temple and friend of the late Avatar Roku. Even prior to learning he was the Avatar, Aang distinguished himself by becoming one of the youngest Airbending Masters in history by inventing a new technique. As a result of Fire Lord Sozin's increasingly hostile attitude towards the other nations, the senior monks decided to reveal Aang's nature as the Avatar four years before the traditional age (Avatars are usually told of their status once they turn 16) and relocate him to one of the other Air Temples.<ref name="The Storm">{{cite episode|title=The Storm|airdate=2005-06-03|season=1|number=12|credits=Director: Lauren MacMullan; Writer: Aaron Ehasz|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref><ref name="The Southern Air Temple">{{cite episode|title=The Southern Air Temple|airdate=2005-02-25|season=1|number=3|credits=Director: Lauren MacMullan, Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> Learning that he was to be taken from Gyatso caused Aang to flee the monastery on his flying bison, Appa, before being caught by a storm; the life-or-death conditions triggered the Avatar State, encasing the young Avatar and his bison in an air-pocket among ]s, where he remained suspended for a century. Although Monk Gyatso had snuck into Aang's bedroom late at night to tell Aang that he will not be relocated to the Eastern Air Temple, it had already been too late.<ref name="The Boy in the Iceberg" /><ref name="The Southern Air Temple" />

====Book One: ''Water''====
After one hundred years of suspended animation in an iceberg, twelve-year-old Aang was freed when found by ] and ], yet unaware of the events that occurred during his rest.<ref name="The Boy in the Iceberg"/> His reawakening catches the attention of Prince ], the banished son of current Fire Lord ], and Aang is forced to leave, with Katara and Sokka accompanying him after they learn that he is the Avatar.<ref name="The Avatar Returns">{{cite episode|title=The Avatar Returns|airdate=2005-02-21|season=1|number=2|credits=Director: Dave Filoni, Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> Aang and his new friends visit the Southern Air Temple, where they meet a winged lemur whom Aang later names Momo. It is there that Aang learns that the Fire Nation wiped out his people, including Gyatso which causes Aang to summon his avatar spirit and the other 3 nations find out the avatar is back. After a series of misadventures, Aang meets his previous incarnation, Roku, who informs him that he must master all four bending arts and end the war before the coming of Sozin's Comet at the end of summer.<ref name="Avatar Roku (Winter Solstice, Part 2)">{{cite episode|title=Avatar Roku (Winter Solstice, Part 2)|airdate=2005-04-15|season=1|number=8|credits=Director: Giancarlo Volpe, Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> Upon arriving to the Northern Water Tribe, after a few conflicts, Aang became an apprentice of Waterbending Master Pakku alongside Katara.<ref name="The Waterbending Master">The Waterbending Master". '']''. Nickelodeon. 2005–]. No. 18, season 1.</ref> After helping the Water Tribe drive off a Fire Nation invasion headed by Admiral Zhao, with Katara as his teacher, Aang and his group journey to the Earth Kingdom to find an Earthbending teacher. Ozai, angered that ] betrayed the Fire Nation, sends his daughter, Princess ], to hunt down Zuko and Iroh.<ref>The Siege of the North, Part 2". '']''. Nickelodeon. 2005-12-02. No. 20, season 1.</ref>

====Book Two: ''Earth''====
In the second season, Aang learns Earthbending from ]<ref name="The Blind Bandit">{{cite episode|title=The Blind Bandit|airdate=2006-05-05|season=2|number=6|credits=Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> after he has a vision of the blind Earthbender in a swamp telling him to find her.<ref name="The Swamp">{{cite episode|title=The Swamp|airdate=2006-04-14|season=2|number=4|credits=Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Tim Hedrick|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> On their journey, they are chased by Zuko’s sister Princess ] and her friends ] and ].<ref name="The Chase">{{cite episode|title=The Chase|airdate=2006-05-26|season=2|number=8|credits=Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Joshua Hamilton|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> The group learns about the Day of Black Sun in a secret underground library, and they attempt to reveal the information to the Earth King at Ba Sing Se. However, their flying bison, ], is captured by Sandbenders. Aang grows upset and angry and confronts the Sandbenders, learning that Appa has been sold. After stopping a Fire Nation drill threatening the safety of Ba Sing Se, they look for Appa only to find themselves dealing with the Dai Li before exposing their leader's deception. The group reunites with Jet helping them find Appa at Dai Li headquarters. They expose the Hundred Year War to the Earth King, who promises to help them invade the Fire Nation. Soon after, Aang meets a guru who attempts to teach Aang to open his seven '']s'' in order to control the defensive 'Avatar State'; but when Aang perceives Katara in danger, he leaves before the seventh ''chakra'' is opened, and thus loses his progress until the seventh is opened.<ref name="The Guru">{{cite episode|title=The Guru|airdate=2006-12-01|season=2|number=19|credits=Director: Giancarlo; Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> Though Aang manages to unlock the Seventh Chakra, he is fatally ] by Azula. He is later brought back to life by Katara, using the spirit water given to her by the Northern Water Tribe at the start of the second season.<ref name="The Crossroad of Destiny">{{cite episode|title=The Crossroad of Destiny|airdate=2006-12-01|season=2|number=20|credits=Director: Michael Dante DiMartino; Writer: Aaron Ehasz|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref>

====Book Three: ''Fire''====
In the beginning of third and final season, after he woke after being knocked out by Azula, Aang grew some hair. After that, Aang is unable to use the Avatar State for quite a while. Although reluctant with the plan at first, Aang accepts to have everyone think he had died and his remaining allies attack the Fire Nation's capital, but are thwarted by Azula.<ref name="The Invasion">{{cite episode|title=The Day of Black Sun Part 1: The Invasion|airdate=2007-11-23|season=3|number=10|credits=Director: Giancarlo Volpe; Writer: Michael Dante DiMartino|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> However, Zuko has a change of heart, rebels against his father,<ref>{{cite episode|title=The Day of Black Sun Part 2: The Eclipse|airdate=2007-11-30|season=3|number=11|credits=Director: Joaquim Dos Santos; Writer: Aaron Ehasz|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> and offers to teach Aang Firebending. Aang and Zuko also improve their Firebending powers with the help of their world's last two ]s.<ref name="The Western Air Temple">{{cite episode|title=The Western Air Temple|airdate=2007-12-14|season=3|number=12|credits=Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writers: Elizabeth Welch Ehasz, Tim Hedrick|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> During the finale, finding himself on a strange island, Aang is reluctant to actually kill Fire Lord Ozai, despite his four previous past lives (Roku, Kyoshi, Kuruk, and Yangchen) convincing him it is the only way. But upon learning that he was actually on the back of a Lion Turtle, one of four that made the first benders by manipulating humans' chi, Aang receives the Lion Turtle's Energybending. During the final battle, Aang's scar is pressed against a jutting rock, opening his chakras and allowing him to enter the Avatar State. Aang wins the battle, but before he delivers the final blow, he stops himself. Instead, Aang removes Ozai's firebending ability, rendering him harmless and ending the Hundred Year War. Later, in the Fire Nation capital, Aang is seen beside Zuko, the new Fire Lord. The series ends with Aang and his friends relaxing at Iroh's tea shop at Ba Sing Se, where Aang and Katara share a ].<ref name="Sozin Comet">{{cite episode|title=Sozin's Comet|airdate=2008-07-19|season=3|number=58-61|credits=Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writers: Elizabeth Welch Ehasz, Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref>

====Graphic Novel Trilogies====
{{main|Avatar: The Last Airbender (comics)}}
After beginning the Harmony Restoration Movement, an event that was meant to remove Fire Nation remnants from the Earth Kingdom, Aang agrees to end Zuko's life should he go down a path similar to his father, after the latter requests it, being stopped by Katara from entering the Avatar State as he began a later encounter with Zuko<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). The Promise Part 1 (January 25, 2012), Dark Horse Comics.</ref> and then tries to mediate protestors and the Yu Dao resistance,<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). The Promise Part 2 (May 30, 2012), Dark Horse Comics.</ref> afterward assembling members of a fan club and forming the "Air Acolytes", a group that he intends to teach the ways of the Air Nomads.<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). The Promise Part 3 (September 26, 2012), Dark Horse Comics.</ref> Aang then participated in a search for Zuko's mother Ursa,<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). The Search Part 1 (March 20, 2013), Dark Horse Comics.</ref> successfully finding her and entering the Spirit World to assist in locating the Mother of Faces,<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). The Search Part 2 (July 10, 2013), Dark Horse Comics.</ref> convincing her to grant Rafa a new face.<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). The Search Part 3 (October 30, 2013), Dark Horse Comics.</ref> After a period of entertainment,<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). Smoke and Shadow Part 1 (September 23, 2015), Dark Horse Comics.</ref> Aang is contacted by his former life Yangchen,<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). The Rift Part 1 (March 5, 2014), Dark Horse Comics.</ref> who tried contacting him about Old Iron's return.<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). The Rift Part 3 (November 5, 2014), Dark Horse Comics.</ref> Aang also has a fight with the Rough Rhinos when they try to oust him from the Eastern Fire Refinery.<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). The Rift Part 2 (July 2, 2014), Dark Horse Comics.</ref> Aang then aids in preventing Azula, disguised as the Kemurikage, from stealing any more children.<ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). Smoke and Shadow Part 2 (December 16, 2015), Dark Horse Comics.</ref><ref>DiMartino, Michael Dante; Konietzko, Bryan; Yang, Gene (writer), Sasaki of Gurihiru (penciling, inking), Kawano of Gurihiru (colorist), Heisler, Michael; Comicraft (letterer). Smoke and Shadow Part 3 (March 16, 2016), Dark Horse Comics.</ref>
He later returns to the South Pole and reunites with Katara and Sokka during the festival of the rebuilt and newly expanded Southern Water Tribe, with assistance from dozens of waterbenders and healers from the Northern Water Tribe.

===''The Legend of Korra''===
While frozen in an iceberg for 100 years, the Avatar State drained much of Aang's life energy. While he did not feel the effects for many years, after he entered middle age in his 50s, the strain of this exertion increasingly weighed upon his body. Ultimately, it resulted in Aang dying at the relatively young biological age of 66 (since he was in the ice for 100 years, in 153 AG). Aang was outlived by his wife, Katara, and his three children, but he did not live to see his grandchildren, all of whom would become powerful airbenders. As his death drew near, Aang tasked the Order of the White Lotus with finding and guiding the new Avatar after him. When Aang died, the Avatar spirit reincarnated into ] of the Southern Water Tribe. Aang intended for the Order to simply guide and guard Korra, but several mishaps in the aftermath of Aang's death (including a kidnapping attempt by the anarchist ]) and the still-fragile state of relations between the now-Five Nations resulted in Katara and Tenzin sequestering Korra in a compound at the South Pole, bringing teachers to her instead of allowing her to seek out her own.

====Book One: ''Air''====
] in ''The Legend of Korra''.]]
In the sequel series' first season, Avatar Aang's spirit occasionally serves as the spiritual advisor to seventeen-year-old Korra (much like the previous Avatar incarnation, Roku, did for Aang). Korra struggles with the spiritual aspects of bending and being the avatar, so initially Aang is only able to give Korra glimpses of his memory concerning Yakone in relation to her confrontations with his two sons, ] and Tarrlok, the products of Yakone's Bloodbending vendetta on the Avatar. It is only after she loses her ability to bend that Korra allows herself to listen to her past lives, at which point Aang is able to manifest more directly to her and helps to restore her powers by triggering the Avatar State and teaching her to Energybend.

====Book Two: ''Spirits''====
The sequel series' second season reveals that Avatar Aang apparently treated Tenzin as his favorite child, due to his son's Airbender status; Kya and Bumi mentioned to Tenzin that Aang always took Tenzin on vacations with him, but never them. Aang's Air Acolytes also were unaware that Aang had two other children besides Tenzin. Tenzin himself insists that Aang loved all his children equally, but that Aang took more precedence in raising him since Tenzin would have to take care of future generations of airbenders. Aang himself later appears, along with Roku, Kyoshi and Kuruk, before Korra in a vision and encourages her to learn the origins of Wan (the first Avatar) and Raava. Aang, or possibly a vision of him, later appears in the Spirit World, encouraging Tenzin to move past the enormous legacy of being Aang's son and find his own path. Korra's connection to Aang and the other preceding Avatars is severed when Vaatu extracts and subsequently kills Raava, the divine Avatar Spirit entity within her. Even though Raava is reborn and fused again with Korra, she discovers, to her dismay, that her spiritual connection to Aang and all past Avatars is presumably gone forever.


====Book Three: ''Change''====
Aang is marked as an Airbender by his shaven head and blue ] striping along his head and limbs, terminating as arrowheads on his forehead, the backs of his hands, and the tops of his feet.
When Zaheer gave an ultimatum: Surrender to him or lose the new airbenders, Korra meditated into the spirit realm, she expressed her wish to call upon Aang's spirit and ask his advice in saving the new Air Nomads. Iroh's spirit assured her that, even though Aang was no longer able to guide her, she could ask one of Aang's closest friends: ].


===Appearances in other media===
{{spoilers}}
== History == ====Games====
Aang's character appeared in the '']'' on a multitude of cards.<ref name="Trading Cards"/><ref name="Trading Cards 2"/> He appeared in the ] as one of the four ].<ref name="AvatarVideoGame">{{cite web|url=http://www.nick.com/games/avatar-games|title=Avatar: The Last Airbender Video Game|access-date=2008-03-22|work=Nick.com|publisher=Nickelodeon|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130206045806/http://www.nick.com/games/avatar-games|archive-date=2013-02-06|url-status=dead}}</ref> Two sequels were made: '']'',<ref name="The Burning Earth"/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ign.com/games/avatar-the-last-airbender-the-burning-earth|title=Avatar: The Burning Earth|access-date=2022-02-10|publisher=IGN|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080925154305/http://wii.ign.com/objects/905/905219.html|archive-date=2008-09-25|url-status=dead}}</ref> followed by '']''. Aang also appeared in ''Escape from the Spirit World'', an online video game found on Nickelodeon's official website. The game includes certain plot changes that are not shown in the show. The show's directors, Michael DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, claim the events are ].<ref name="EscapeFromSpiritWorldGame"/>
=== A Century Past ===
Raised by Airbender monks, Aang grew up in the idyllic surroundings of the Southern Air Temple. Aang was a carefree young boy, given to frequent travel and play and possessing an almost effortless mastery over his native element. Then his world irrevocably changed when the monks revealed that he was the Avatar, destined to master all four elements and bring peace to the world.


Aang is also a playable character in Nickelodeon crossover titles such as '']'', '']'', and the '']'' series, including '']'' and ].<ref name="AangandKorra">{{cite web|url=https://nintendoeverything.com/nickelodeon-all-star-brawl-aang-korra-movesets/|title=Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl videos highlight Aang and Korra movesets|date=October 1, 2021|website=Nintendo Everything|access-date=October 3, 2021|archive-date=October 2, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211002195513/https://nintendoeverything.com/nickelodeon-all-star-brawl-aang-korra-movesets/|url-status=live}}</ref>
Usually, the Avatar is told of his/her true identity only after turning sixteen; however, Aang's caretakers feared that a war between the Four Nations was on the horizon, and that the Avatar would be needed to help maintain ]. Aang soon began to feel overwhelmed with the burden of his position. His peers ostracized him for his airbending skill, while his caretakers pressured him to mature into his responsibilities too quickly.


On April 12, 2024, Aang was released as a ] in the video game ].<ref name="AangFortnite">{{cite web|url=https://www.fortnite.com/news/use-techniques-from-avatar-the-last-airbender-in-fortnite-brs-elements|title=Use techniques from Avatar: the Last Airbender's 'elements'!|access-date=18 May 2024}}</ref>
The only monk sympathetic to Aang's feelings was the elder ], Aang's airbending ] and guardian. When the burden weighed heavily on his favorite ], Gyatso worked to instill a sense of fun through jokes and games. He sincerely believed that Aang should be allowed to grow up as a normal boy. The other monks disagreed. Citing Gyatso's attachment to the boy as an interference, they decided to send Aang away to the Eastern Air Temple to focus on his training, oblivious to the fact that Aang had overheard their caucus.


====Films====
Confused and frightened by what he'd learned, Aang fled from his home on his ], Appa, towards the ]. While over the ], a sudden ] caused Appa to plunge deep into the sea. Channeling his ], Aang reflexively used ] to freeze Appa and himself in an ice sphere, putting them in a state of ] in the icy waters surrounding the South Pole.
] has published a ] (sometimes referred to as cine-manga), in which Aang, being the main character of the show, appears repeatedly.<ref name="Web Comics"/>


In 2010, director ] cast 12-year-old ] practitioner ] as Aang in the film adaptation of the series, '']''.<ref>{{cite news | first = N | last = Sperling | title = Movies | publisher = ] | volume = 1026 | date = 2008-12-17 | page = 15}}</ref> His name in the film is pronounced instead of . The casting of a presumed ] actor in the role of Aang (as well as a primarily ] cast) in the Asian-influenced ''Avatar'' universe triggered negative reactions from some fans, marked by accusations of racism, a letter-writing campaign, and a protest outside of a ] casting call for movie extras.<ref>{{cite news|author=Graeme McMillan|title=Avatar Casting Makes Fans See... White|access-date=2022-02-10|date=2008-12-17|url=https://gizmodo.com/avatar-casting-makes-fans-see-white-5111680| work=]| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20081220073248/http://io9.com/5111680/avatar-casting-makes-fans-see-white| archive-date= 20 December 2008 | url-status= live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=Jeff Yang |title='Avatar' an Asian thing- why isn't the cast? |access-date=2022-02-10 |date=2008-12-29 |url=https://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/article/Avatar-an-Asian-thing-why-isn-t-the-cast-3252822.php |work=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090201034055/http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=%2Fc%2Fa%2F2009%2F01%2F28%2FDDMU15ICE4.DTL |archive-date= 1 February 2009 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=Naomi Tarlow|title=Protesters oppose "whitewashing" in new Shyamalan film|access-date=2008-12-29|date=2008-12-29|url=http://thedp.com/node/58215|work=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110725022507/http://thedp.com/node/58215|archive-date=2011-07-25|url-status=dead}}</ref> The casting decisions were also negatively received by several critics, who stated that the original casting call expressed a preference for Caucasian actors over others.<ref name="Casting controversy">{{cite web|last=Hoffman |first=Jordan |url=http://www.ugo.com/movies/airbender-casting-call-controversy-continues |title=Racebending&nbsp;— The Controversy Continues&nbsp;— The Last Airbender |publisher=UGO.com |date=2010-05-21 |access-date=2010-06-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100524121422/http://www.ugo.com/movies/airbender-casting-call-controversy-continues |archive-date=24 May 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Noah Ringer later identified himself to '']'' as an ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://popwatch.ew.com/2010/11/03/noah-ringer-last-airbender-cowboys-aliens/|title=Noah Ringer of 'The Last Airbender' has nothing up his sleeve: EW at 'The Kids' Table'|author=Karen Valby|date=November 3, 2010|publisher=]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111223161246/http://popwatch.ew.com/2010/11/03/noah-ringer-last-airbender-cowboys-aliens/|archive-date=December 23, 2011|access-date=October 8, 2011}} <!-- ATTENTION: The reporter Karen Valby had re-confirmed that Noah Ringer self-identified as "American Indian", not a "clerical" error. For details please check ]'s entry and talk page. --></ref>
=== Present Tense ===
In the present day, two teenage ] from the ] - Katara, a Waterbender, and her brother Sokka - discovered and freed Aang from his ] prison. Aang soon saw that in his absence, fears of war had became a reality. The very year he vanished, the then-leader of the Fire Nation, the ruthless Fire Lord Sozin, took advantage of both the Avatar's absence and the ]-enhancing powers of a mystical ] to launch a war on the three other nations. To Aang's shock and disbelief, the Fire Nation's opening gambit had been a ] assault on the Air Nomads. The Air Temples were stormed and the monks and Air Nomads slaughtered in an effort to break the Avatar Cycle, leaving him as the last known Airbender in existence.


==Creation and conception==
Aang has since realized that the future of the Four Nations rests in his hands. It is his duty to defeat the Fire Nation and restore peace and harmony. To achieve this goal, Aang and his newfound friends (and pets) set off on a quest to find and learn from Master Benders, while evading capture by the Fire Nation's ].
Aang's character was developed from a drawing by Bryan Konietzko of a "balding human man in his forties wearing a futuristic outfit" based on Michael Dante DiMartino's appearance with an arrow design on his head.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Konietzko |first=Bryan |url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/on1154191221 |title=Avatar, The Last Airbender: The Art of the Animated Series |last2=DiMartino |first2=Michael Dante |last3=Yang |first3=Gene Luen |date=2020 |publisher=Dark Horse Books |others=Nickelodeon (Television network) |isbn=978-1-5067-2169-9 |edition=Second |location=Milwaukie, OR |pages=10-11 |oclc=on1154191221}}</ref> Konietzko later developed this man into a child with a flying ].<ref name="NickMagInterview1">{{cite journal|last=DiMartino|first=Michael Dante|author2=Konietzko, Bryan|title=In Their Elements|journal=Nickelodeon Magazine|page=6|date=2006|issue=Winter 2006}}</ref> Meanwhile, DiMartino was interested in a documentary about explorers trapped in the ], which he later combined with Konietzko's drawing.
{{blockquote|''"There's an air guy along with these water people trapped in a snowy wasteland...and maybe some fire people are pressing down on them..."''|Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko<ref name="NickMagInterview1" />}}


The plot they described corresponds with the first and second episodes of ''Avatar: The Last Airbender'', where the "water people" (] and ]) rescue the "air guy" (Aang) while "trapped in a snowy ]" (the Southern Water Tribe) with "some fire people are pressing down on them" (] and the Fire Nation troops).<ref name="NickMagInterview1" /><ref name="The Boy in the Iceberg">{{cite episode|title=The Boy in the Iceberg|airdate=2005-02-21|season=1|number=1|credits=Director: Dave Filoni, Writers: Michael Dante DiMartino, Bryan Konietzko|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref><ref name="The Avatar Returns" /> The creators of the show intended for Aang to be trapped in an iceberg for one thousand years, later to wake up to a futuristic world, wherein he would have a ] named Momo and a dozen flying bison. The creators eventually lost interest in this science fiction theme and changed it to an Asian-inspired fantasy world. Aang was changed to being stuck in a hundred years of ], his bald head was explained away by him hailing from a culture inspired by ], the robotic Momo became a flying ], and the herd of bison was reduced to one.<ref name="NickMagInterview1"/>
=== Future Deadline ===
Although it takes years of discipline and training to master any particular element, Aang must master them all and defeat current ] before ]'s end, when the return of Sozin's Comet will grant the Firebenders the power needed to win the war. If these events come to pass, not even the Avatar will be able to restore balance to the world.


In the episode "Tales of Ba Sing Se", Aang's name was written as 安昂 (ān áng) in Chinese.
==Personality==
Aang is fun-loving, ], and adventurous. He craves the stimulation of new people and places; in short, he's the consummate ]. His frequent off-course detours frustrate both allies and pursuers alike. Yet Aang has always prided himself on a complex ] of friends extending over all four nations, and a little thing like war won't stand in his way. As well, he looks forward to playing with all the exotic ] in each place he visits. Whether it's ]s, ]-] or gigantic ]s, no fit animal Aang sees goes unridden. But while Aang can be a showoff and a jokester, therein lies his fatal flaw of taking foolish risks. Relatively cavalier in the face of danger, Aang can get into terrible trouble. Luckily for him, his friends are there to help him out.


===Personality and characteristics===
Aang feels a terrible guilt and burden in his duties as Avatar. Very much the ], he wishes he'd been there to help his people a ] ago, but he'd still rather live a child's carefree life. This initally caused him to conceal his true identity from friends, and still has a tendency to slack off in his studies of the ], even though he naturally excels at it.


Michael Dante DiMartino, the show's co-creator, said:
==Avatar==
{{blockquote|''"We wanted Aang to solve problems and defeat enemies with his wits as well as his powerful abilities"''.|Michael Dante DiMartino<ref name="IGN Interview-Solving Problems">{{cite interview|last=DiMartino |first=Michael Dante |last2=Konietzko |first2=Bryan |interviewer=Eduardo Vasconcellos |work=IGN |title=Interview: Avatar's Bryan Konietzko and Michael Dante DiMartino |url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2007/09/06/interview-avatars-bryan-konietzko-and-michael-dante-dimartino |date=2007-09-06 |access-date=2022-02-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071118151020/http://tv.ign.com/articles/818/818284p1.html |archive-date=18 November 2007 |url-status=live }}</ref>}}
===Bending===
As the Avatar incarnate, Aang possesses the ability to manipulate all four elements. He is already an ] master, so incredibly skilled that he's able to invent new techniques, like his "Air Scooter," a propelled sphere of air currents he can ride. His ] is substantially less polished. Though he's able to master techniques with more ease than his young Waterbender friend Katara, his lack of focus allowed her to surpass him. Now he must learn from her, as their teacher ] deemed her a master. He has had no instruction in ], but has received a rudimentary object lesson in breath control and ]. When he was briefly instructed by the ] firebending master ], he ignored warnings to restrain himself and accidentally ]ed Katara. Newly respectful of ]'s destructive power, he hasn't used firebending since.


According to the show's creators, "Buddhism and ] have been huge inspirations behind the idea for ''Avatar''."<ref name="NickMagInterview2" /> As shown in "The King of Omashu"<ref name="The King of Omashu">{{cite episode|title=The King of Omashu|airdate=2005-03-18|season=1|number=5|credits=Director: Anthony Lioi; Writer: John O'Bryan|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> and "The Headband",<ref name="The Headband">{{cite episode|title=The Headband|airdate=2007-09-28|season=3|number=2|credits=Director: Joaquim dos Santos; Writer: John O'Bryan|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> a notable aspect of Aang's character is his ] diet, which is consistent with ], ], and ].<ref name="NickMagInterview2">{{cite journal|last=DiMartino|first=Michael Dante|author-link=Michael Dante DiMartino|author2=Konietzko, Bryan|title=Myth Conceptions|journal=Nickelodeon Magazine|page=7|date=2006|issue=Winter 2006}}</ref> In the ], a Buddhist code of ethics, vegetarianism is encouraged.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.purifymind.com/BrahmaNetSutra.htm|title=Brahmajala Sutra Translated Text|access-date=2008-02-12|last=Jing|first=Fanwang|publisher=Purify Out Mind|page=4|quote=He must not create the causes ... and shall not intentionally kill any living creature.| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080204235921/http://www.purifymind.com/BrahmaNetSutra.htm| archive-date= 4 February 2008 |url-status= live}}</ref> Furthermore, the writers gave Aang a consistent reluctance to fight and an aversion to killing. In "The Spirit World (Winter Solstice, Part 1)", Aang encounters an angry spirit destroying a village and kidnapping villagers; but instead of fighting the spirit, Aang negotiates.<ref name="The Spirit World (Winter Solstice, Part 1)">{{cite episode|title=The Spirit World (Winter Solstice, Part 1)|airdate=2005-04-08|season=1|number=7|credits=Director: Lauren MacMullan; Writer: Aaron Ehasz|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon}}</ref> He is also depicted showing ethical reluctance in killing the Phoenix King,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.toonzone.net/news/articles/25009/sozins-comet-produces-an-epic-season-finale-for-avatar-the-last-airbender |title="Sozin's Comet" Produces an Epic Season Finale for "Avatar the Last Airbender" |author=Liu, Ed |publisher=Toon Zone |date=2008-07-18 |access-date=2008-07-20 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110613195155/http://www.toonzone.net/news/articles/25009/sozins-comet-produces-an-epic-season-finale-for-avatar-the-last-airbender |archive-date=2011-06-13 }}</ref> and eventually strips Ozai of his bending instead of murdering him.<ref name="Sozin Comet"/>
===Spirit===
Aang is host to the Avatar Spirit, a ] continually reincarnated since time immemorial. In life-threatening situations or instances of extreme emotional stress, Aang involuntarily channels this spirit as a defense mechanism, entering the powerful Avatar State. His tattoos, eyes and mouth glow blue, and the spirit either uses bending as an immediate means of self-preservation, or lapses into a dangerous fit of elemental volatility until Aang is calmed down.


===Bending the elements===
This spiritual state is also the manifestation of all the Avatar's previous incarnations, which allows Aang to tap into the sum total of their power. When in this state the Avatar is at his most powerful, but also his most vulnerable. If the Avatar dies while in the Avatar State, the previous incarnations of the Avatar will die along with him, and the cycle of reincarnation will be permanently broken.
{{further|Korra#Bending the elements}}
As the Avatar, Aang is capable of bending ] (air, water, earth and fire). The series' creators consulted a professional martial artist in the design of the show's fighting style; each of these styles' philosophies and set movements corresponds to a specific "bending arts".<ref name="Kisu">{{cite web | title=Kisu – Filmography by TV Series | url=https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0457467/filmoseries?ref_=nm_flmg_msc_1#tt0417299 |publisher=IMDb | access-date=2013-10-21}}</ref>


The creators made bending a natural extension of consistent limitations and rules of the world. Everything in Avatar's world, whether it be clothing, culture or infrastructure, is influenced by bending. The City of Omashu uses a complex system of gravity and earthbending to transport supplies. The Water Tribes were a naval superpower: their buildings are made of ice and used waterbending as mechanisms for their walls and gates. Airbenders built temples atop high mountains and cliffs that could only be easily reached by Airbending and they have a hermetic ideology to reflect this isolation. The Fire Nation were the first to industrialize due to their ability to generate power and master ] with their bending of fire and lightning.
This spirit's most immediate spiritual aspect is ], the previous Avatar incarnate. Born into the Fire Nation in life, Roku is a benign force in spirit, serving as Aang's advisor and protector. On the ], he informed Aang of the impending return of Sozin's Comet, and manifested to defeat a group of Firebenders holding his friends hostage. (When Roku manifests, his voice can be heard behind Aang's when he speaks.) He's guided Aang several times since, appearing to Jeong Jeong to persuade him to teach Aang, offering critical wisdom in the ways of the ] during the ] of the ], and most recently, revealing to Aang the nature of the Avatar State.


At the start of the series, Aang is initially only proficient in air, having been able to bend it with ease since he was a young child. Through the teaching of Katara and Zuko, he gradually learns waterbending and firebending; but struggles with Toph's teachings of earthbending due to its rigid nature conflicting with his desire for freedom. Aang utilizes all elements equally, but heavily favors airbending for crowd control and non-lethal purposes, in accordance with his ] principles.
===Medium===
The Avatar also has the capacity to act as a ], a bridge between mortal world and the Spirit World, the plane of existence where the universe's disembodied spirits dwell. Through inducing a deep ] state, Aang can separate from his body and travel the physical world's ] in ], or, with the help of a gateway, travel completely to the Spirit World. Once in the Spirit World, Aang can travel freely and communicate with beings such as Avatar Roku or ]. This position as intermediary also allows him to channel other spirits in concert with his Avatar Spirit. He once acted as the Avatar of the ] to defeat the Fire Nation during the siege of the North Pole.


*'''Airbending''': The bending art Aang primarily uses in the entire franchise, is a ''Southern Temple Style'' based on an "]" ] called ]. Aang is the only person in ] to have mastered this form of airbending, and would later pass down this knowledge to his son, ], who with the aid of ], would prove instrumental in the reconstruction and preservation of Air Nomad oral and ]. Due to the genocide of his people, all other "styles of airbending arts" have been forever lost to history. This fighting style focuses on circular movements, and does not have many finishing moves; traits meant to represent the unpredictability of air and the peaceful character of Airbenders.<ref name="NickAv">{{cite web| url = http://www.nick.com/shows/avatar/| title = Nickelodeon's Official Avatar: The Last Airbender Flash Site| access-date = 2006-12-02| publisher = Nick.com| archive-date = 2010-08-19| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100819182658/http://www.nick.com/shows/avatar/| url-status = live}}</ref> Airbending represents the element of freedom,<ref name="Ehasz, Aaron 2006">Ehasz, Aaron (writer) & Spaulding, Ethan (director). (June 2, 2006). "Bitter Work". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 2. Episode 9. Nickelodeon.</ref> and is categorized as the ''most elusive'' of the "four bending arts". Airbending utilizes '']'', which involves retreating and dodging attacks. Airbending involves "smooth coiling and uncoiling actions"; dynamic footwork, throws, and open-handed techniques; and swift, evasive maneuvers designed to evoke the "intangibility and explosive power of wind". These techniques are intended to increase the difficulty for opponents to attack directly or land a lethal blow—allowing airbenders to defend themselves while also protecting their attacker from injury—a pacifist-philosophy that is prevalent among the Air Nomad people. Airbending lacks "finishing moves" or effective methods for permanently disabling foes, a weakness frequently exploited by opponents.
==Family==
*'''Waterbending''': Waterbending is the bending art Katara, later Pakku, teaches Aang in the series, which is based on ] techniques of "]" ] and ]. When Aang traveled north, he learned ''Northern Tribe Yin-style''. During '']'', Katara is the only Master of "]", forced to reconstruct the style from surviving manuscripts; all other masters were killed, their collective knowledge ] by the Fire Nation.<ref>The Lost Scrolls: Water, page 31 of The Lost Scrolls Collection.</ref><ref name="kungfumagazine.com">{{Cite web |url=http://www.kungfumagazine.com/ezine/article.php?article=1038 |title=Archived copy |access-date=2019-08-18 |archive-date=2019-11-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191127043329/http://www.kungfumagazine.com/ezine/article.php?article=1038 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="NickAv"/><ref name="Return To Omashu">{{cite episode|title=Return to Omashu|airdate=April 7, 2006|season=2|number=3|credits=Director: Ethan Spaulding; Writer: Elizabeth Welch Ehasz|series=Avatar: The Last Airbender|series-link=Avatar: The Last Airbender|network=Nickelodeon|episode-link=Avatar: The Last Airbender (Season 2)#ep23}}</ref> Waterbending represents the element of change—a shapeshifter constantly changing forms<ref name="Ehasz, Aaron 2006"/>—and is categorized as the most adaptive or pliable of the "four bending arts". Waterbending emphasizes "softness and breathing" over "hard aggression"; fluid and graceful, acting in concert with the environment; creating opportunities where none exist; this "flow of energy" allows their defensive maneuvers to translate into focus on control and counter-offenses, turning their opponents' momentum against them. Despite these advantages, Waterbending is almost entirely dependent on inertia; it is essential for practitioners to not be rigid, but to be fluid and able to adapt to any situation.
===Monk Gyatso===
*'''Earthbending''': Earthbending is the martial art Toph teaches Aang in the series, which is based on ] techniques of '']'' and ].<ref>The Lost Scrolls: Fire, page 159 of The Lost Scrolls Collection. The Lost Scrolls: Earth, page 93 of The Lost Scrolls Collection.</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120226175923/http://www.avatarspiritmedia.net/con_reports.php?id=3 |date=2012-02-26 }} – Avatarspirit.net</ref><ref name="kungfumagazine.com"/><ref name="NickAv"/><ref name="Return To Omashu"/> Earthbending represents the element of substance.<ref name="Ehasz, Aaron 2006"/> Toph's earthbending style is Chu Gar Praying Mantis, as opposed to the more common Hung Gar, taught to her by the original earthbenders, badgermoles. Earthbending is categorized as the ''most diverse and enduring'' of the "four bending arts".<ref name="Avatar Earth"/> Earthbending is the geokinetic ability to manipulate earth, rock, sand, lava, and metals in all their various forms. Earthbending utilizes '']'', which involves waiting and listening for the right moment to act decisively. Earthbending involves enduring attacks until the right opportunity to counterattack reveals itself, emphasizes "heavily rooted stances and strong blows that evoke the mass and power of earth", and demands precise ] to maintain constant contact with the ground. Earthbending parallels ] movements (such as the tiger's hard blows and the crane's affinity to landing gracefully). Earthbending is at its strongest when the feet or hand are in direct contact with the ground, enabling earthbenders to transfer their kinetic energies into their bending for fast and powerful moves. This reliance on direct contact with the earth is a literal ]; separating earthbenders from any contact with the earth renders them ineffective.
The closest person to a ]-figure in Aang's days at the Southern Air Temple, Monk Gyatso was a caring and understanding teacher. He seems to have been the source of Aang's love for fun, games and jokes. When Aang returns to the temple after a century in suspended animation, he is devastated to find the ] of his beloved mentor surrounded by the remains of Fire Nation ]s. This prompts Aang to enter the Avatar State, causing a violent emotional episode of involuntary airbending and channeling of his Avatar Spirit, which only abates when his friend Katara promises that she and her brother will be his new surrogate family.
*'''Firebending''': Firebending is the martial art Zuko teaches Aang in the series, which is based on ] techniques of '']'', ], ] and '']''.<ref>The Lost Scrolls: Fire, page 159 of The Lost Scrolls Collection.</ref><ref name="kungfumagazine.com"/><ref name="NickAv"/><ref name="Return To Omashu"/> Firebending represents the element of power—desire and will paired with energy to achieve it,<ref name="Ehasz, Aaron 2006"/> a philosophy reflected in firebending's unique capability for its users to generate their central element, rather than manipulating already present sources. Firebenders use breath control to manipulate chi in their own bodies and convert the energy from breathing into fire once it exits the body.<ref name="DiMartino, Michael Dante 2006">DiMartino, Michael Dante & Bryan Konietzko (writers) & Filoni, Dave (director). (February 21, 2005). "The Boy in the Iceberg". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 1. Episode 1. Nickelodeon.</ref> A century of warfare have corrupted the Fire Nation's rich culture, and with it, their firebending-styles "regressed" into militarized format based on hatred and raw aggression; Zuko and Aang sought to learn firebending in its purest and most harmonious form, and rediscovered ''Dancing Dragon Style'' from the last surviving dragons. Dragon Style is the bending art first practiced by the Sun Warriors, the earliest incarnation of the modern Fire Nation; for the Sun Warriors, fire is life, energy, and creativity, rather than destruction and hate.<ref name="O'Bryan, John 2008">O'Bryan, John (writer) & Volpe, Giancarlo (director). (July 15, 2008). "The Firebending Masters". Avatar: The Last Airbender. Season 3. Episode 13. Nickelodeon.</ref> Firebending is categorized as the most determined and powerful of the "four bending arts".<ref name="Avatar Earth">{{cite web | title=Inside the Nicktoons Studio: Avatar: "Firebending" Episode Clip | url=http://spongebob.nick.com/videos/clip/nicktoon-studio-avatar-earth.html | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131021113936/http://spongebob.nick.com/videos/clip/nicktoon-studio-avatar-earth.html | archive-date=2013-10-21 |publisher=Nickelodeon | access-date=2013-10-21|url-status=dead}}</ref> All Firebending styles emphasize initiative and speed, overwhelming their opponents with powerful jabs and kicks that hurl fire before building to an explosive finishing move, mirroring the vitality and explosive power of fire. This is often seen in the "Agni Kai" or fire-duels that Zuko competes in. A master firebender will confidently control fire, rather than allowing their energy to become unfocused rage. A select few high-level firebenders can access highly destructive and lethal skills, such as lightning-bending and combustion-bending. Firebending's offensive power comes with a trade-off: a lack of blocks or evasive maneuvers, particularly when facing other elements.
*'''Energybending''': Aang learned about energybending from the last living lion turtle, as he did not wish to kill Ozai, and was given the ability to do so. He is able to use energybending to connect with his inner spirit and gain cosmic energy from the universe. In '']'', Aang gave Avatar Korra, the current Avatar, the ability to energybend, which was used to restore people's bending abilities after Amon removed them using bloodbending.


===Avatar Roku=== ===The Avatar State===
]
Avatar Roku, while not "family" per se, is a facet of Aang's self, the previous incarnation of the Avatar. He serves in much the same capacity as Monk Gyatso before him, guiding Aang through the difficult process of becoming a fully realized Avatar. Though a deep relationship has not yet been established, each knows the other instinctively, and both are pleased to communicate with one another when the opportunity arises.


As the Avatar, Aang serves as a bridge between "]" and the "]", the plane of existence where the universe's disembodied spirits dwell. His spirituality training progressed swiftly, granting visions and access to the various memories from his past lives.
==Relationships==
===Katara===
The first face Aang sees on waking from suspended animation, the young Waterbender ] was his liberator from the iceberg. Aang developed a crush on the fourteen-year-old. This unrequited infatuation has gradually deepened as Aang has progressed from making amateurish gifts to eavesdropping on Katara's meeting with the ] ]. (Her prediction that Katara will "marry a powerful bender" prompted a silent celebratory fit of glee.) Also, it is positively speculated, but never seen, that in the episode ], Aang kisses Katara.


Like his predecessors, his most powerful ability is the ], in which he receives a massive boost in raw power from the cosmic energy, enabling him to easily overcome any opponent that tries to fight him head-on. In addition, this state allows him to access bending techniques he would not have learned during his own lifetime but throughout those of his past lives. If he is killed in the Avatar State, then this would cause the Avatar to cease being reincarnated and end the Avatar Cycle.
===Sokka===
Aang, and Katara's older brother ] have had their rough patches. While Aang has long-since disproved the young ]'s initial suspicions that he was a Fire ] ], his occasional carelessness can raise Sokka's hackles. For his part, Aang often makes light of Sokka's serious demeanor. Along with Katara, he views Sokka's skeptical favoring of ] over ] with some bewildered amusement, though he's grown impressed with Sokka's ] skills.


==Critical reception==
===Appa===
{{Expand section|date=November 2021}}
Appa the flying bison is both Aang's dear pet and the group's primary means of travel. Appa is not only a skilled flyer, but also adept at swimming and seems fairly impervious to adverse weather. Aang loves his fellow survivor of a century of sleep, as they both may be the last of their kind. Aang possesses a flying bison ] (inaudible to humans) to summon Appa from a distance, and commands him to fly with a cry of "Yip-yip!" Appa is a natural airbender, and legend has it that his species inspired the locals to develop their own airbending skills. The airbenders even tatoo themselves with the flying bison's arrow shaped markings. Appa seems to be able to communicate with animals of other species such as Momo, as is seen in the "Lover's cave" episode. Appa dislikes being underground, again as seen in the "Lover's cave" episode.
Aang was received exceptionally by critics and fans. Kendall Lyons stated, "Aang seems to be the lighthearted kid that you can easily familiarize yourself with", and that he "seems to bring comfort in the most dangerous or hostile situations."<ref name="Lighthearted Personality">{{cite web|url=http://www.animationinsider.net/article.php?articleID=613 |title=Avatar: The Last Airbender |access-date=2008-02-15 |last=Lyons |first=Kendall |date=2005-12-08 |publisher=Animation Inside |page=2 |quote=Aang seems to be the lighthearted kid that you can easily familiarize yourself with. He seems to bring comfort in the most dangerous or hostile situations. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080222171926/http://www.animationinsider.net/article.php?articleID=613 |archive-date=22 February 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref> There are many similar descriptions about Aang as a childlike character who is "reckless and excitable".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.scifi.com/sfw/anime/sfw12366.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080217013803/http://www.scifi.com/sfw/anime/sfw12366.html|archive-date=2008-02-17|title=Avatar: The Last Airbender|access-date=2008-02-15|last=Robinson|first=Tasha|date=2006-03-07|publisher=Sci-Fi Weekly|page=2|quote=Aang, meanwhile, is as reckless and excitable as a kid his age should be, but he also shows the marks of a monastic life of training and responsibility.}}</ref> Reviews point out that "as the Avatar, Aang seems unstoppable, but as Aang, he is just another Airbender"; the review states later that the show continues to focus on a more realistic character instead of a perfect one by revealing many character flaws.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.ign.com/articles/2008/02/28/avatar-the-last-airbender-the-spirit-world-winter-solstice-part-1-review|title=Avatar: The Last Airbender – "The Spirit World (Winter Solstice, Part 1)" Review|access-date=2022-02-10|last=Mell|first=Tory Ireland|date=2008-02-27|publisher=IGN |quote=As the Avatar, Aang seems unstoppable, but as Aang, he is just another Airbender...| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20080302202924/http://tv.ign.com/articles/855/855270p1.html| archive-date= 2 March 2008 | url-status= live}}</ref>
Appa is very faithful and protective of Aang, and on various occasions has actively entered into battle to protect his little friend.


In 2016, '']'' ranked Aang #15 on its "30 Best Animated TV Characters Of All Time" list.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://screenrant.com/best-animated-tv-characters-of-all-time/|title=30 Best Animated TV Characters Of All Time|website=]|first=Jason|last=Berman|date=June 9, 2016|access-date=February 28, 2018|archive-date=February 28, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180228161812/https://screenrant.com/best-animated-tv-characters-of-all-time/|url-status=live}}</ref>
===Momo===
Momo, a ] discovered wandering about the ruined Southern Air Temple, was quickly named and claimed as a pet by Aang. Aang is very fond of the creature, because he represents the small hope that other fragments of Air Nomadic ], even other Air Nomads,could have survived somewhere in the world.


At the ], Dutch windsurfer ] won the gold medal in ] while having a blue arrow haircut inspired by Aang's design.<ref>{{cite news |last1=O'Connor |first1=Phillip |title=Sailing-'Last Airbender' Badloe in control for final RS:X gold |url=https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/sports/sailing-last-airbender-badloe-control-final-rsx-gold-2021-07-30/ |website=reuters.com |date=30 July 2021 |access-date=30 July 2021 |archive-date=30 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210730153149/https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/sports/sailing-last-airbender-badloe-control-final-rsx-gold-2021-07-30/ |url-status=live }}</ref>
===Prince Zuko===
The Firebender Prince Zuko is ostensibly one of Aang's greatest enemies. His quest to capture Aang, thus ensuring the Fire Nation's victory, is a threat to Aang's work and the world at large. Yet each has worked in the other's service. Because Zuko's throne and right to return home from exile are forfeit if he does not find the Avatar, he must protect Aang from other potential threats. When Aang was captured by Zuko's rival, ], Zuko posed as a blue-masked, dual-]-wielding ] to free Aang from custody. In turn, Aang rescued Zuko from capture when he was knocked unconscious in their escape attempt. Afterward, reflecting on an old Fire Nation friend named Kuzon, Aang asked Zuko if they could ever be friends, only to receive a fireblast in reply. Aang also saved Zuko from freezing to death in the icy tundras of the North Pole. '''A'''ang and '''Z'''uko are opposites. (A to Z)


===Admiral Zhao=== ==Family tree==
{{Water Tribe–Air Nomad family tree}}
Since the Firebender Admiral Zhao has an even bigger temper than Zuko, Aang knows just how to push his buttons. Exploiting Zhao's low impulse control, ego, and hatred of being humiliated by his youngers, Aang once mocked and egged Zhao on until he destroyed a convoy of his own ships.


===King Bumi=== ==References==
{{reflist}}
So far, ], the Earthbender ruler of the ] city of Omashu, is the only known peer of Aang's still living. Aang fondly remembers how a young Bumi taught him to use Omashu's mail chutes as a giant ]. Now a ], Bumi maintains the eccentric and unconventional thinking that caused Aang to dub him, "a mad genius." In the second season premire it is revealed Bumi will teach Aang earth bending.


===Meng=== ==External links==
<!-- Do not add any fanfic/fanon or fanart websites -->
Meng had a crush on Aang in the episode ''].'' However Aang did not really care for Meng, seeing as he likes Katara. During the episode, Meng "stalked" Aang to the point that she actually admitted to Aang that she liked him. Meng was very jealous of Katara, seeing as Aang likes her. At the end of the epppisode when Aang, Katara, and Sokka leave, Meng says "floozy" in an upset or mad voice, when she said "floozy" she was most likely refering to Katara.
* at ]
* at Nick.com


{{Avatar: The Last Airbender}}
===Koko===
{{Portal bar|Animation|Television}}
Koko was another young girl who had a crush on Aang in the eppppisode ''].'' Koko and her little friends liked to chase Aang all over the island. In fact Koko and her friends made a Aang fan-club, and Koko called Aang "John Michael Albert Lee" most of the time.


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Latest revision as of 05:35, 28 December 2024

Fictional character from Avatar: The Last Airbender For the first episode of the 2024 live-action television series, see Aang (Avatar: The Last Airbender episode). Fictional character
Aang
Avatar: The Last Airbender character
Aang kneeling in a battle pose, holding his new staff behind him.Avatar Aang in Avatar: The Last Airbender, kneeling in a battle pose, holding his new staff behind him.
First appearance
Last appearance
Created byMichael Dante DiMartino
Bryan Konietzko
Voiced by
Portrayed byNoah Ringer (2010 film)
Gordon Cormier (2024 television series)
In-universe information
GenderMale
Title
SpouseKatara (wife)
Children
NationalityAir Nomads
Animal guideAppa
Bending element

Avatar Aang (Chinese: 安昂; pinyin: Ān Áng), or simply Aang, is the titular protagonist of Nickelodeon's animated television series Avatar: The Last Airbender (created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko), voiced by Zach Tyler Eisen. Aang was the last surviving Airbender, a monk of the Air Nomads' Southern Air Temple, and the youngest ever airbending master (for his time).

He is an incarnation of the "Avatar", the spirit of light and peace manifested in human form. As the Avatar, Aang controls all four elements (water, earth, fire, and air) and is tasked with bringing balance and keeping the Four Nations at peace. At chronologically 112 years old (biologically 12), Aang is the series' reluctant hero, spending a century in suspended animation in an iceberg before being discovered and joining new friends Katara and Sokka on a quest to master the elements and save their world from the imperialist Fire Nation ,as Aang progressed on his journey he is joined by Toph, Zuko and Suki.

Aang's character has appeared in other media, such as trading cards, video games, T-shirts, and web comics. Avatar Aang has also been portrayed by Noah Ringer in the live-action film The Last Airbender (2010) and voiced by D.B. Sweeney in the sequel series The Legend of Korra. Gordon Cormier portrays Avatar Aang in the Netflix live-action adaptation of the same name.

Appearances

Avatar: The Last Airbender

Upon death, Avatar Roku was reincarnated and Aang was born, and later raised by Monk Gyatso, a senior monk at the Southern Air Temple and friend of the late Avatar Roku. Even prior to learning he was the Avatar, Aang distinguished himself by becoming one of the youngest Airbending Masters in history by inventing a new technique. As a result of Fire Lord Sozin's increasingly hostile attitude towards the other nations, the senior monks decided to reveal Aang's nature as the Avatar four years before the traditional age (Avatars are usually told of their status once they turn 16) and relocate him to one of the other Air Temples. Learning that he was to be taken from Gyatso caused Aang to flee the monastery on his flying bison, Appa, before being caught by a storm; the life-or-death conditions triggered the Avatar State, encasing the young Avatar and his bison in an air-pocket among icebergs, where he remained suspended for a century. Although Monk Gyatso had snuck into Aang's bedroom late at night to tell Aang that he will not be relocated to the Eastern Air Temple, it had already been too late.

Book One: Water

After one hundred years of suspended animation in an iceberg, twelve-year-old Aang was freed when found by Katara and Sokka, yet unaware of the events that occurred during his rest. His reawakening catches the attention of Prince Zuko, the banished son of current Fire Lord Ozai, and Aang is forced to leave, with Katara and Sokka accompanying him after they learn that he is the Avatar. Aang and his new friends visit the Southern Air Temple, where they meet a winged lemur whom Aang later names Momo. It is there that Aang learns that the Fire Nation wiped out his people, including Gyatso which causes Aang to summon his avatar spirit and the other 3 nations find out the avatar is back. After a series of misadventures, Aang meets his previous incarnation, Roku, who informs him that he must master all four bending arts and end the war before the coming of Sozin's Comet at the end of summer. Upon arriving to the Northern Water Tribe, after a few conflicts, Aang became an apprentice of Waterbending Master Pakku alongside Katara. After helping the Water Tribe drive off a Fire Nation invasion headed by Admiral Zhao, with Katara as his teacher, Aang and his group journey to the Earth Kingdom to find an Earthbending teacher. Ozai, angered that Iroh betrayed the Fire Nation, sends his daughter, Princess Azula, to hunt down Zuko and Iroh.

Book Two: Earth

In the second season, Aang learns Earthbending from Toph Beifong after he has a vision of the blind Earthbender in a swamp telling him to find her. On their journey, they are chased by Zuko’s sister Princess Azula and her friends Mai and Ty Lee. The group learns about the Day of Black Sun in a secret underground library, and they attempt to reveal the information to the Earth King at Ba Sing Se. However, their flying bison, Appa, is captured by Sandbenders. Aang grows upset and angry and confronts the Sandbenders, learning that Appa has been sold. After stopping a Fire Nation drill threatening the safety of Ba Sing Se, they look for Appa only to find themselves dealing with the Dai Li before exposing their leader's deception. The group reunites with Jet helping them find Appa at Dai Li headquarters. They expose the Hundred Year War to the Earth King, who promises to help them invade the Fire Nation. Soon after, Aang meets a guru who attempts to teach Aang to open his seven chakras in order to control the defensive 'Avatar State'; but when Aang perceives Katara in danger, he leaves before the seventh chakra is opened, and thus loses his progress until the seventh is opened. Though Aang manages to unlock the Seventh Chakra, he is fatally electrocuted by Azula. He is later brought back to life by Katara, using the spirit water given to her by the Northern Water Tribe at the start of the second season.

Book Three: Fire

In the beginning of third and final season, after he woke after being knocked out by Azula, Aang grew some hair. After that, Aang is unable to use the Avatar State for quite a while. Although reluctant with the plan at first, Aang accepts to have everyone think he had died and his remaining allies attack the Fire Nation's capital, but are thwarted by Azula. However, Zuko has a change of heart, rebels against his father, and offers to teach Aang Firebending. Aang and Zuko also improve their Firebending powers with the help of their world's last two dragons. During the finale, finding himself on a strange island, Aang is reluctant to actually kill Fire Lord Ozai, despite his four previous past lives (Roku, Kyoshi, Kuruk, and Yangchen) convincing him it is the only way. But upon learning that he was actually on the back of a Lion Turtle, one of four that made the first benders by manipulating humans' chi, Aang receives the Lion Turtle's Energybending. During the final battle, Aang's scar is pressed against a jutting rock, opening his chakras and allowing him to enter the Avatar State. Aang wins the battle, but before he delivers the final blow, he stops himself. Instead, Aang removes Ozai's firebending ability, rendering him harmless and ending the Hundred Year War. Later, in the Fire Nation capital, Aang is seen beside Zuko, the new Fire Lord. The series ends with Aang and his friends relaxing at Iroh's tea shop at Ba Sing Se, where Aang and Katara share a kiss.

Graphic Novel Trilogies

Main article: Avatar: The Last Airbender (comics)

After beginning the Harmony Restoration Movement, an event that was meant to remove Fire Nation remnants from the Earth Kingdom, Aang agrees to end Zuko's life should he go down a path similar to his father, after the latter requests it, being stopped by Katara from entering the Avatar State as he began a later encounter with Zuko and then tries to mediate protestors and the Yu Dao resistance, afterward assembling members of a fan club and forming the "Air Acolytes", a group that he intends to teach the ways of the Air Nomads. Aang then participated in a search for Zuko's mother Ursa, successfully finding her and entering the Spirit World to assist in locating the Mother of Faces, convincing her to grant Rafa a new face. After a period of entertainment, Aang is contacted by his former life Yangchen, who tried contacting him about Old Iron's return. Aang also has a fight with the Rough Rhinos when they try to oust him from the Eastern Fire Refinery. Aang then aids in preventing Azula, disguised as the Kemurikage, from stealing any more children. He later returns to the South Pole and reunites with Katara and Sokka during the festival of the rebuilt and newly expanded Southern Water Tribe, with assistance from dozens of waterbenders and healers from the Northern Water Tribe.

The Legend of Korra

While frozen in an iceberg for 100 years, the Avatar State drained much of Aang's life energy. While he did not feel the effects for many years, after he entered middle age in his 50s, the strain of this exertion increasingly weighed upon his body. Ultimately, it resulted in Aang dying at the relatively young biological age of 66 (since he was in the ice for 100 years, in 153 AG). Aang was outlived by his wife, Katara, and his three children, but he did not live to see his grandchildren, all of whom would become powerful airbenders. As his death drew near, Aang tasked the Order of the White Lotus with finding and guiding the new Avatar after him. When Aang died, the Avatar spirit reincarnated into Korra of the Southern Water Tribe. Aang intended for the Order to simply guide and guard Korra, but several mishaps in the aftermath of Aang's death (including a kidnapping attempt by the anarchist Zaheer) and the still-fragile state of relations between the now-Five Nations resulted in Katara and Tenzin sequestering Korra in a compound at the South Pole, bringing teachers to her instead of allowing her to seek out her own.

Book One: Air

Avatar Aang's spirit with Korra in The Legend of Korra.

In the sequel series' first season, Avatar Aang's spirit occasionally serves as the spiritual advisor to seventeen-year-old Korra (much like the previous Avatar incarnation, Roku, did for Aang). Korra struggles with the spiritual aspects of bending and being the avatar, so initially Aang is only able to give Korra glimpses of his memory concerning Yakone in relation to her confrontations with his two sons, Amon and Tarrlok, the products of Yakone's Bloodbending vendetta on the Avatar. It is only after she loses her ability to bend that Korra allows herself to listen to her past lives, at which point Aang is able to manifest more directly to her and helps to restore her powers by triggering the Avatar State and teaching her to Energybend.

Book Two: Spirits

The sequel series' second season reveals that Avatar Aang apparently treated Tenzin as his favorite child, due to his son's Airbender status; Kya and Bumi mentioned to Tenzin that Aang always took Tenzin on vacations with him, but never them. Aang's Air Acolytes also were unaware that Aang had two other children besides Tenzin. Tenzin himself insists that Aang loved all his children equally, but that Aang took more precedence in raising him since Tenzin would have to take care of future generations of airbenders. Aang himself later appears, along with Roku, Kyoshi and Kuruk, before Korra in a vision and encourages her to learn the origins of Wan (the first Avatar) and Raava. Aang, or possibly a vision of him, later appears in the Spirit World, encouraging Tenzin to move past the enormous legacy of being Aang's son and find his own path. Korra's connection to Aang and the other preceding Avatars is severed when Vaatu extracts and subsequently kills Raava, the divine Avatar Spirit entity within her. Even though Raava is reborn and fused again with Korra, she discovers, to her dismay, that her spiritual connection to Aang and all past Avatars is presumably gone forever.

Book Three: Change

When Zaheer gave an ultimatum: Surrender to him or lose the new airbenders, Korra meditated into the spirit realm, she expressed her wish to call upon Aang's spirit and ask his advice in saving the new Air Nomads. Iroh's spirit assured her that, even though Aang was no longer able to guide her, she could ask one of Aang's closest friends: Lord Zuko.

Appearances in other media

Games

Aang's character appeared in the Avatar: The Last Airbender Trading Card Game on a multitude of cards. He appeared in the Avatar: The Last Airbender video game as one of the four playable characters. Two sequels were made: Avatar: The Last Airbender – The Burning Earth, followed by Avatar: The Last Airbender – Into the Inferno. Aang also appeared in Escape from the Spirit World, an online video game found on Nickelodeon's official website. The game includes certain plot changes that are not shown in the show. The show's directors, Michael DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, claim the events are canon.

Aang is also a playable character in Nickelodeon crossover titles such as Nicktoons Nitro, Nickelodeon Kart Racers 2: Grand Prix, and the Nickelodeon Super Brawl series, including Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl and its sequel.

On April 12, 2024, Aang was released as a skin in the video game Fortnite.

Films

Tokyopop has published a films comic (sometimes referred to as cine-manga), in which Aang, being the main character of the show, appears repeatedly.

In 2010, director M. Night Shyamalan cast 12-year-old Tae Kwon Do practitioner Noah Ringer as Aang in the film adaptation of the series, The Last Airbender. His name in the film is pronounced instead of . The casting of a presumed white actor in the role of Aang (as well as a primarily Caucasian cast) in the Asian-influenced Avatar universe triggered negative reactions from some fans, marked by accusations of racism, a letter-writing campaign, and a protest outside of a Philadelphia casting call for movie extras. The casting decisions were also negatively received by several critics, who stated that the original casting call expressed a preference for Caucasian actors over others. Noah Ringer later identified himself to Entertainment Weekly as an American Indian.

Creation and conception

Aang's character was developed from a drawing by Bryan Konietzko of a "balding human man in his forties wearing a futuristic outfit" based on Michael Dante DiMartino's appearance with an arrow design on his head. Konietzko later developed this man into a child with a flying bison. Meanwhile, DiMartino was interested in a documentary about explorers trapped in the South Pole, which he later combined with Konietzko's drawing.

"There's an air guy along with these water people trapped in a snowy wasteland...and maybe some fire people are pressing down on them..."

— Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko

The plot they described corresponds with the first and second episodes of Avatar: The Last Airbender, where the "water people" (Katara and Sokka) rescue the "air guy" (Aang) while "trapped in a snowy wasteland" (the Southern Water Tribe) with "some fire people are pressing down on them" (Zuko and the Fire Nation troops). The creators of the show intended for Aang to be trapped in an iceberg for one thousand years, later to wake up to a futuristic world, wherein he would have a robot named Momo and a dozen flying bison. The creators eventually lost interest in this science fiction theme and changed it to an Asian-inspired fantasy world. Aang was changed to being stuck in a hundred years of suspended animation, his bald head was explained away by him hailing from a culture inspired by Buddhist monks, the robotic Momo became a flying lemur, and the herd of bison was reduced to one.

In the episode "Tales of Ba Sing Se", Aang's name was written as 安昂 (ān áng) in Chinese.

Personality and characteristics

Michael Dante DiMartino, the show's co-creator, said:

"We wanted Aang to solve problems and defeat enemies with his wits as well as his powerful abilities".

— Michael Dante DiMartino

According to the show's creators, "Buddhism and Taoism have been huge inspirations behind the idea for Avatar." As shown in "The King of Omashu" and "The Headband", a notable aspect of Aang's character is his vegetarian diet, which is consistent with Buddhism, Hinduism, and Taoism. In the Brahmajala Sutra, a Buddhist code of ethics, vegetarianism is encouraged. Furthermore, the writers gave Aang a consistent reluctance to fight and an aversion to killing. In "The Spirit World (Winter Solstice, Part 1)", Aang encounters an angry spirit destroying a village and kidnapping villagers; but instead of fighting the spirit, Aang negotiates. He is also depicted showing ethical reluctance in killing the Phoenix King, and eventually strips Ozai of his bending instead of murdering him.

Bending the elements

Further information: Korra § Bending the elements

As the Avatar, Aang is capable of bending all four elements (air, water, earth and fire). The series' creators consulted a professional martial artist in the design of the show's fighting style; each of these styles' philosophies and set movements corresponds to a specific "bending arts".

The creators made bending a natural extension of consistent limitations and rules of the world. Everything in Avatar's world, whether it be clothing, culture or infrastructure, is influenced by bending. The City of Omashu uses a complex system of gravity and earthbending to transport supplies. The Water Tribes were a naval superpower: their buildings are made of ice and used waterbending as mechanisms for their walls and gates. Airbenders built temples atop high mountains and cliffs that could only be easily reached by Airbending and they have a hermetic ideology to reflect this isolation. The Fire Nation were the first to industrialize due to their ability to generate power and master metallurgy with their bending of fire and lightning.

At the start of the series, Aang is initially only proficient in air, having been able to bend it with ease since he was a young child. Through the teaching of Katara and Zuko, he gradually learns waterbending and firebending; but struggles with Toph's teachings of earthbending due to its rigid nature conflicting with his desire for freedom. Aang utilizes all elements equally, but heavily favors airbending for crowd control and non-lethal purposes, in accordance with his pacifism principles.

  • Airbending: The bending art Aang primarily uses in the entire franchise, is a Southern Temple Style based on an "internal" Chinese martial art called Baguazhang. Aang is the only person in living memory to have mastered this form of airbending, and would later pass down this knowledge to his son, Tenzin, who with the aid of Korra, would prove instrumental in the reconstruction and preservation of Air Nomad oral and intangible cultural heritage. Due to the genocide of his people, all other "styles of airbending arts" have been forever lost to history. This fighting style focuses on circular movements, and does not have many finishing moves; traits meant to represent the unpredictability of air and the peaceful character of Airbenders. Airbending represents the element of freedom, and is categorized as the most elusive of the "four bending arts". Airbending utilizes negative jing, which involves retreating and dodging attacks. Airbending involves "smooth coiling and uncoiling actions"; dynamic footwork, throws, and open-handed techniques; and swift, evasive maneuvers designed to evoke the "intangibility and explosive power of wind". These techniques are intended to increase the difficulty for opponents to attack directly or land a lethal blow—allowing airbenders to defend themselves while also protecting their attacker from injury—a pacifist-philosophy that is prevalent among the Air Nomad people. Airbending lacks "finishing moves" or effective methods for permanently disabling foes, a weakness frequently exploited by opponents.
  • Waterbending: Waterbending is the bending art Katara, later Pakku, teaches Aang in the series, which is based on Chinese martial arts techniques of "internal style" tai chi and Jeet Kune Do. When Aang traveled north, he learned Northern Tribe Yin-style. During The Legend of Korra, Katara is the only Master of "Southern Tribe Yang-style", forced to reconstruct the style from surviving manuscripts; all other masters were killed, their collective knowledge confiscated or destroyed by the Fire Nation. Waterbending represents the element of change—a shapeshifter constantly changing forms—and is categorized as the most adaptive or pliable of the "four bending arts". Waterbending emphasizes "softness and breathing" over "hard aggression"; fluid and graceful, acting in concert with the environment; creating opportunities where none exist; this "flow of energy" allows their defensive maneuvers to translate into focus on control and counter-offenses, turning their opponents' momentum against them. Despite these advantages, Waterbending is almost entirely dependent on inertia; it is essential for practitioners to not be rigid, but to be fluid and able to adapt to any situation.
  • Earthbending: Earthbending is the martial art Toph teaches Aang in the series, which is based on Chinese martial arts techniques of Hung Ga and Southern Praying Mantis. Earthbending represents the element of substance. Toph's earthbending style is Chu Gar Praying Mantis, as opposed to the more common Hung Gar, taught to her by the original earthbenders, badgermoles. Earthbending is categorized as the most diverse and enduring of the "four bending arts". Earthbending is the geokinetic ability to manipulate earth, rock, sand, lava, and metals in all their various forms. Earthbending utilizes neutral jing, which involves waiting and listening for the right moment to act decisively. Earthbending involves enduring attacks until the right opportunity to counterattack reveals itself, emphasizes "heavily rooted stances and strong blows that evoke the mass and power of earth", and demands precise stepping footwork to maintain constant contact with the ground. Earthbending parallels Five Animals movements (such as the tiger's hard blows and the crane's affinity to landing gracefully). Earthbending is at its strongest when the feet or hand are in direct contact with the ground, enabling earthbenders to transfer their kinetic energies into their bending for fast and powerful moves. This reliance on direct contact with the earth is a literal Achilles' heel; separating earthbenders from any contact with the earth renders them ineffective.
  • Firebending: Firebending is the martial art Zuko teaches Aang in the series, which is based on Chinese martial arts techniques of changquan, Shaolin kung fu, Southern Dragon kung fu and xingyiquan. Firebending represents the element of power—desire and will paired with energy to achieve it, a philosophy reflected in firebending's unique capability for its users to generate their central element, rather than manipulating already present sources. Firebenders use breath control to manipulate chi in their own bodies and convert the energy from breathing into fire once it exits the body. A century of warfare have corrupted the Fire Nation's rich culture, and with it, their firebending-styles "regressed" into militarized format based on hatred and raw aggression; Zuko and Aang sought to learn firebending in its purest and most harmonious form, and rediscovered Dancing Dragon Style from the last surviving dragons. Dragon Style is the bending art first practiced by the Sun Warriors, the earliest incarnation of the modern Fire Nation; for the Sun Warriors, fire is life, energy, and creativity, rather than destruction and hate. Firebending is categorized as the most determined and powerful of the "four bending arts". All Firebending styles emphasize initiative and speed, overwhelming their opponents with powerful jabs and kicks that hurl fire before building to an explosive finishing move, mirroring the vitality and explosive power of fire. This is often seen in the "Agni Kai" or fire-duels that Zuko competes in. A master firebender will confidently control fire, rather than allowing their energy to become unfocused rage. A select few high-level firebenders can access highly destructive and lethal skills, such as lightning-bending and combustion-bending. Firebending's offensive power comes with a trade-off: a lack of blocks or evasive maneuvers, particularly when facing other elements.
  • Energybending: Aang learned about energybending from the last living lion turtle, as he did not wish to kill Ozai, and was given the ability to do so. He is able to use energybending to connect with his inner spirit and gain cosmic energy from the universe. In The Legend of Korra, Aang gave Avatar Korra, the current Avatar, the ability to energybend, which was used to restore people's bending abilities after Amon removed them using bloodbending.

The Avatar State

The Avatars standing in line, including Aang, Roku, Kyoshi, Kuruk, Yangchen, Szeto, Salai in that order.
The Avatars (from right to left): Aang, Roku, Kyoshi, Kuruk, Yangchen, Szeto, and other previous Avatars.

As the Avatar, Aang serves as a bridge between "Material World" and the "Spirit World", the plane of existence where the universe's disembodied spirits dwell. His spirituality training progressed swiftly, granting visions and access to the various memories from his past lives.

Like his predecessors, his most powerful ability is the Avatar State, in which he receives a massive boost in raw power from the cosmic energy, enabling him to easily overcome any opponent that tries to fight him head-on. In addition, this state allows him to access bending techniques he would not have learned during his own lifetime but throughout those of his past lives. If he is killed in the Avatar State, then this would cause the Avatar to cease being reincarnated and end the Avatar Cycle.

Critical reception

This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2021)

Aang was received exceptionally by critics and fans. Kendall Lyons stated, "Aang seems to be the lighthearted kid that you can easily familiarize yourself with", and that he "seems to bring comfort in the most dangerous or hostile situations." There are many similar descriptions about Aang as a childlike character who is "reckless and excitable". Reviews point out that "as the Avatar, Aang seems unstoppable, but as Aang, he is just another Airbender"; the review states later that the show continues to focus on a more realistic character instead of a perfect one by revealing many character flaws.

In 2016, Screen Rant ranked Aang #15 on its "30 Best Animated TV Characters Of All Time" list.

At the 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics, Dutch windsurfer Kiran Badloe won the gold medal in Men's RS: X while having a blue arrow haircut inspired by Aang's design.

Family tree

Water TribeAir Nomad family trees
Hakoda's fatherKannaPakku
HakodaKyaAvatar Cycle
SokkaKataraAvatar AangKorra's grandparents
BumiKyaPemaTenzinSennaTonraqUnalaqMalina
JinoraIkkiMeeloRohanAvatar KorraDesnaEska
Color key:
Color Description
  Water Tribe and Waterbenders
  Air Nomads, Air Acolytes, and Airbenders
Notes:
  1. ^ Aang and Korra are both parts of Avatar Cycle of reincarnation, with Korra immediately following Aang.

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External links

Avatar: The Last Airbender
The Last Airbender
(The Legend of Aang)
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