When Did Mangekyou Eternal Sharingan First Appear In Manga?

2025-08-27 22:51:14
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3 Answers

Quinn
Quinn
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I’m pretty sure the very first time the Eternal Mangekyō Sharingan showed up in the manga was tied to the Uchiha backstory — the part where Madara takes his brother’s eyes and stops the degenerative blindness that the regular Mangekyō causes. That origin is revealed in the war arc flashbacks, so if you trace the concept chronologically in-universe, Madara’s transplant is the first instance.

But if you mean the first moment readers actually saw the Eternal Mangekyō on a living character in publication, most of us remember it when Sasuke acquires Itachi’s eyes and awakens the Eternal Mangekyō shortly after their fight. The manga made that transition clear: It explains why transplanting a sibling’s Mangekyō can create a permanent, stronger Sharingan, and then it shows the new eye pattern on Sasuke. So there are two useful ways to answer — the in-universe origin (Madara/Izuna transplant in flashbacks) and the first on-page depiction for many readers (Sasuke after the Itachi battle). Both are important to understanding how the Eternal Mangekyō concept was introduced and used later in the story.
2025-08-31 11:17:58
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Insight Sharer Sales
I like thinking about this as a two-part reveal. First, the Eternal Mangekyō Sharingan as a concept is introduced through the Uchiha history — Madara transplanting his brother’s eyes to stop the Mangekyō’s blindness is the origin shown in the flashbacks. Then, the earliest time readers see the Eternal Mangekyō actually appear on a modern character is when Sasuke receives Itachi’s eyes after their fight and awakens the Eternal Mangekyō. So depending on whether you mean the in-universe historical origin or the first on-panel appearance for contemporary characters, the first ‘‘appearance’’ can point to Madara’s transplant in the flashbacks or to Sasuke’s post-battle transformation — both are key moments that cemented the Eternal Mangekyō in the manga.
2025-09-02 01:21:10
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Hudson
Hudson
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I still get a little giddy thinking about that reveal — the Eternal Mangekyō Sharingan is one of those moments that rewired how I read 'Naruto' for the rest of the series. In-universe, the concept shows up first in the Uchiha backstory: Madara transplanting his brother Izuna's eyes and thereby achieving an 'eternal' form of the Mangekyō is the origin. In the manga that origin is shown in flashbacks during the war-era chapters (the Uchiha/Madara history scenes), so chronologically Madara’s awakening is the earliest event that establishes the Eternal Mangekyō Sharingan.

If you ask about the first time we as readers actually saw the pattern on a living character during the original run, that happened later — when Sasuke receives Itachi’s eyes after their battle and then awakens the Eternal Mangekyō. That transition from Mangekyō to Eternal Mangekyō is presented right after Itachi’s death and the eye transplant sequence, so for many fans the first visible instance they remember is Sasuke’s new eyes. Either way, the idea — that transplanting another Mangekyō-bearing eye prevents blindness and produces a new, stable form — was introduced through the Uchiha flashback and then reinforced visually with Sasuke.
2025-09-02 12:10:08
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Which Naruto episodes show mangekyou eternal sharingan powers?

3 Answers2025-10-07 20:18:12
If you’re in the mood for eye-gore and epic Uchiha moments, the quickest way to spot the Eternal Mangekyō Sharingan is to follow two names: Madara and Sasuke. Madara’s EMS shows up in both his old flashbacks and his reanimated, war-time rampages, while Sasuke’s EMS appears after he replaces his Mangekyō eyes with Itachi’s. In terms of where to look in 'Naruto Shippuden', start with the Itachi vs Sasuke sequence (the arc around 'The End') to get the lead-up — that’s where Itachi’s Mangekyō story ends and Sasuke’s path toward transplanting Itachi’s eyes begins. For Madara, the big moments start when he’s brought into the Fourth Great Ninja War; the episode titled 'Madara Uchiha' is the dramatic entrance, and many of his signature EMS-powered moves are shown throughout the war arc (watch the flashback episodes too — they explain how he gained Eternal Mangekyō by taking his brother’s eyes). Sasuke’s Eternal Mangekyō becomes visually obvious later in the war/final arcs when he uses his upgraded Susanoo and more intense ocular techniques — those later episodes in the final arc show the distinct, darker pattern and the way it removes the blindness drawback of the normal Mangekyō. If you want a watchlist vibe: (1) the Itachi–Sasuke confrontation arc (for the origin story), (2) the episodes around 'Madara Uchiha' and the Fourth Great Ninja War (for Madara’s EMS in action), and (3) the late-war/final episodes where Sasuke displays his new eyes and Susanoo techniques. Binge those slowly — the animation quality and music really sell the eyeball drama. Happy rewatching; I still get chills when those tomoe flare up!

Which characters acquire eternal mangekyou sharingan in canon?

4 Answers2026-01-24 14:18:35
The canon list is remarkably short but legendary: only two characters achieve the eternal mangekyou sharingan in the official storyline. I get a little giddy whenever I think about how rare and emotional those moments are, because the whole concept ties power to loss and brotherhood in 'Naruto' in a way that actually hurts in a good storytelling sense. Madara Uchiha is one. He gains the eternal form by transplanting his brother Izuna's eyes after Izuna dies, which stops the blindness that comes from heavy mangekyou use and supercharges his ocular powers. That upgrade let him use sustained Susanoo and other crazy ocular techniques without collapsing, eventually paving the way for his later rise to the Rinnegan and near-godlike status. The other is Sasuke Uchiha, who receives Itachi's eyes after Itachi's death. Sasuke's eternal mangekyou lets him wield prolonged Mangekyou jutsu like Amaterasu and Susanoo with less strain, and it becomes a springboard to his later supernatural transformations. Those are the only two in canon — it feels fitting that both gains are rooted in those intense sibling bonds and tragedies. I still find the mix of tragedy and power in those scenes really moving.
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