Aang, Zuko and the Earth King eventually agree to leave Yu Dao as it is, marking the first step toward the establishment of the United Republic of Nations.
Many of those citizens who technically belong to the Fire Nation have never even been to their ancestral home, and have no intention of leaving Yu Dao to go and live there. In the hundred years since the colony was founded, members of both nations have formed a new kind of culture, where earthbenders and firebenders live alongside one another and mixed families have formed. When attempting to dismantle the oldest Fire Nation colony, in the city of Yu Dao, Aang meets fierce resistance from both the Earth Kingdom citizens and Fire Nation citizens who live there. However, the so-called Harmony Restoration Movement proves to be somewhat less than harmonious. The comics show the roots of that world, starting with the very first trilogy, "The Promise." In this story, Aang plans with Earth King Kuei and Fire Lord Zuko to empty the Fire Nation colonies in the Earth Kingdom and return the Fire Nation citizens to their home country. It is now roughly analogous to the 1920s of our own world, complete with cars, radios, and moving pictures. In The Legend of Korra, which picks up 70 years after the events of the original series, the Four Nations have experienced major technological advancements and the world is barely recognizable. The main theme of the Avatar: The Last Airbender comics is change. Here's everything we know about what happened to Aang after the end of Avatar: The Last Airbender. Fortunately, she still has Aang's children (and grandchildren) around to help her. At the end of season 2, however, Korra loses her connection to her past lives, cutting her off from any contact with Aang.
#THEY SHOULD MAKE A NEW AVATAR SERIES WHEN AANG WAS OLDER TV#
Related: Avatar: Casting Netflix's Live-Action Last Airbender TV ShowĪang makes a few appearances in The Legend of Korra, both in flashbacks and appearing as a spirit guide to Korra. Aang was succeeded as the Avatar by Korra, a member of the Southern Water Tribe who is trained in the art of waterbending by Katara.
His wife, Katara, lived on for at least another 16 years after his death, as did his old friends Zuko and Toph. This led to him aging rapidly in his later years before dying at the relatively young age of 66, unfortunately before any of his grandchildren were born. Thanks to a series of tie-in comics that pick up after the end of The Last Airbender season 3, as well as the presence of Aang's descendants in The Legend of Korra, we know quite a bit about Aang's later life as the Avatar.ĭue to a century spent frozen in an iceberg while in the Avatar state, much of Aang's life force was drained. Avatar: The Last Airbender's series finale concludes with Aang defeating Fire Lord Ozai and bringing an end to the Hundred Year War, but his story didn't send there.