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Episodes

38

Browse all episodes in the Blue Lock universe.

Episode 4: Premonition and Intuition

The fourth Blue Lock episode sends Team Z into a patient, counter-heavy clash with Team Y, where Isagi hunts for his personal weapon and finally trusts the goal-scent instinct that lets him read the field a beat ahead of everyone else.

Episode 5: To Be Reborn

The fifth Blue Lock episode turns the Team Y match into a mind duel between Isagi and Niko, ending with Isagi reading a final trick play to win it, discovering his goal-scent weapon, and climbing to the top of Team Z's re-ranked roster.

Episode 6: I'm Sorry

The sixth Blue Lock episode pits Team Z against the Wanima twins of Team W, and a commanding lead collapses when Kuon reveals he sold out his own side, turning the contest into a twelve-on-ten to secure his solo advancement.

Episode 7: Rush

The seventh Blue Lock episode has a betrayed, outnumbered Team Z chasing a draw, until Isagi's belief reignites Chigiri, who unleashes the blistering speed he had buried and sprints in a last-gasp equalizer against Team W.

Episode 31: Sae Itoshi

The thirty-first Blue Lock episode, seventh of the second season, opens a U-20 Arc chapter named for Sae Itoshi and draws from chapters 114 through 117. Its documented bonus content is an Additional Time short where Reo Mikage rehearses how to face Nagi.

Episode 32: Blue Genes

The thirty-second Blue Lock episode, eighth of the second season, sits inside the U-20 Arc and adapts chapters 118 through 121. Its documented bonus content is an Additional Time game-show skit hosted by Raichi that grades objects as ordinary or original.

Episode 33: Night Snow

The thirty-third Blue Lock episode, ninth of the second season, belongs to the U-20 Arc and adapts chapters 122 through 126. Its documented bonus content is an Additional Time short in which a young Rin recalls the small habits of his brother Sae.

Episode 34: Dramatic Exchange

The thirty-fourth Blue Lock episode, tenth of the second season, sits in the U-20 Arc and adapts chapters 126 through 129. Its documented bonus content is an Additional Time short where the mothers of Isagi and Bachira bond in the stands during halftime.

Episode 35: What You Taught Us

The thirty-fifth Blue Lock episode, eleventh of the second season, belongs to the U-20 Arc and adapts chapters 130 through 133. Its documented bonus content is an Additional Time short in which four players snoop through Sae Itoshi's bags.

Episode 36: Flowers

The thirty-sixth Blue Lock episode, twelfth of the second season, sits in the U-20 Arc and adapts chapters 134 through 138. Its documented bonus content is an Additional Time short built around competing daydreams of Baro running a maid cafe.

Episode 37: You're Not Alone

The thirty-seventh Blue Lock episode, thirteenth of the second season, belongs to the U-20 Arc and adapts chapters 139 through 143. Its documented bonus content is an Additional Time short where Shido, Aiku, and Sendo pull absurd faces at a mirror.

Episode 38: Final Attack

The thirty-eighth Blue Lock episode closes the second season as its fourteenth and last installment. Part of the U-20 Arc, it adapts chapters 144 through 149 and, unlike its neighbors, carries no Additional Time bonus short.

Ep. 1Episode 1: Dream

The series opener that sets the Blue Lock experiment in motion. A generous pass costs Yoichi Isagi his high school its ticket to Nationals, but a summons from the Japan Football Union soon drags him into a program engineered to build a single world-class striker.

Ep. 2Episode 2: Monster

The recruits absorb what egoism really means as the tag game closes and the true structure of Blue Lock emerges. Ego lays out the ranking buildings and the First Selection, while a returning prodigy weighs whether Japanese football is worth his time.

Ep. 3Soccer's "Zero"

Team Z's first-selection opener against Team X dissolves into a selfish scramble as every player chases the top-scorer bonus. Baro's crushing dominance forces Isagi to see the truth Ego was pointing toward: the meaning of turning football's zero into one.

Ep. 8Episode 8

Cornered into a ten-against-eleven fight with Team V after Kuon's betrayal, Team Z learns that only an outright win keeps their run alive. Isagi goes hunting for the science behind scoring, cornering Baro to decode how a striker manufactures goals on purpose rather than by luck.

Ep. 9Episode 9

Buried three goals down by Team V's untouchable trio, Team Z stares at the end of their careers. Then Bachira turns terror into thrill, and his fearless dribble ignites a chain of awakenings as Chigiri, Kunigami, and the rest each uncover a new version of themselves under Ego's watchful theory.

Ep. 10Episode 10: Just the Way It Is

The clash between Team Z and Team V ignites a chain of awakenings. Nagi finally seizes the initiative, Isagi decodes his own weapon, and Kuon faces the choice of whether to fight or coast toward a comfortable draw.

Ep. 11Episode 11: The Final Piece

Isagi completes his scoring formula in the dying moments against Team V, closing the First Selection. Then Ego exposes the great deception behind the ranking buildings and opens the far harsher Second Selection.

Ep. 12Episode 12: The Second Selection

Isagi conquers the holographic training gauntlet and refines his shooting formula, then navigates the team-forming stages of the Second Selection, ending up on a squad with Bachira and Nagi and staring down Rin Itoshi.

Ep. 13Episode 13: TOP3

Isagi's makeshift trio takes the fight to the three highest-ranked players, and an early lead breeds hope. But Rin Itoshi's ruthless individual brilliance reveals the true gulf between them and the Second Selection's elite.

Ep. 14Episode 14: The Geniuses and the Average Joes

Demoted after losing Bachira, Isagi and Nagi drop to a two-on-two elimination against Baro and Naruhaya. Facing disqualification, both wrestle with the question of what individual strength wins a one-on-one duel.

Ep. 15Episode 15: Devour

In a survival duel against Baro and Naruhaya, Isagi discovers the blind spot and off-the-ball play, then learns to absorb a rival's weapon as his own. His willingness to tear himself down and rebuild marks a decisive evolution.

Ep. 16Episode 16: Tri-Fusion

Isagi struggles to weld his own game to the clashing egos of Nagi and Baro before a match against familiar rivals. As he studies Baro's rigid rules, Ego defends his philosophy of manufacturing a real genius.

Ep. 17Episode 17: Donkey

Chigiri, Kunigami, and Mikage's fused teamwork punishes Isagi's disjointed trio, and Baro's refusal to cooperate hands the rivals a lead. Isagi answers by learning to devour rather than accommodate his own stubborn teammate.

Ep. 18Episode 18: The Stage for the Lead

Stripped of his throne by Isagi, Baro tastes real defeat for the first time, then rises again by embracing the role of villain. His awakened chop dribble completes the trio's chemistry and decides a razor-thin match.

Ep. 19Episode 19: Dancing Boy

Isagi's team recruits Chigiri for his volatile chemistry, and Bachira's past comes to light. Training with Rin Itoshi, Bachira is forced to confront the monster within him and the fear that drives his search for a kindred player.

Ep. 20Super Link-Up Play

The twentieth Blue Lock episode kicks off the grudge rematch between Isagi's side and Rin Itoshi's fearsome Top 3. What starts as a clash of raw individual skill shifts once Bachira begins sparking chemical reactions, and Isagi discovers that his own eyes and mind are the only weapon able to track Rin.

Ep. 21I'm Not There

With the match level at two apiece, Rin Itoshi seizes command of the field, bending every player to his design. Isagi and Nagi's partnership fires back and Baro's unpredictable thievery keeps the score close, yet Bachira drifts toward irrelevance as two rivals begin reading only each other.

Ep. 22Voice

Trailing his rival, Isagi keeps evolving and levels the match with an improvised back-heel that Rin never saw coming. As the decisive goal draws near, Bachira at last confronts the imaginary monster in his mind and resolves to move forward guided only by his own inner voice.

Ep. 23Luck

Bachira's solo strike is turned aside by Isagi, but the loose ball falls kindly to Rin, who taps in the winner. Rin claims Isagi as his choice, Ego delivers a lecture on what luck truly means, and the Third Selection opens by unveiling the fearsome World Five.

Ep. 24The Time Has Come

Season one closes as the World Five overwhelm Blue Lock's side, laying bare the gulf between the strikers and the global elite. Threatened with cancellation, Ego stakes the project on a bold proposal: a match against Japan's U-20 team, now reinforced by Sae Itoshi, with every finalist's future on the line.

Ep. 25Tryouts

Season two opens with Sae crushing Rin in a one-shot duel before Ego sets the rules of the Third Selection's tryouts. Six top-ranked strikers anchor three pairs, and the remaining finalists must prove they can both assert themselves and coexist to earn a place in the coming U-20 clash.

Ep. 26The Assassin and the Ninja

The Third Selection's opening fixture arrives, placing Isagi on team A1 beside Hiori and Nanase under the aces Rin and Shido, set against Karasu and Otoya's B1. The episode pairs its match setup with light dorm-life vignettes about clashing personalities.

Ep. 27The World of Feeling

The third season-two entry carries the Third Selection's opening tryout match forward while its bonus segment leans into comedy, as Otoya shows off the so-called ninja secrets of his flirtatious repertoire to a pair of thoroughly unimpressed onlookers.

Ep. 28Chameleon

Named for Reo's chameleon-like adaptability, the fourth season-two episode advances the Third Selection tryout, while its extra segment has the dorm roommates likening their fellow finalists to a whole menagerie of animals.

Ep. 29Flow

The fifth season-two episode carries the Third Selection toward its conclusion and edges into the U-20 arc, while its bonus vignette follows Niko as he tries to build rapport with his eccentric new defensive partners, Gagamaru and Aryu.

Ep. 30Grand Stage

The sixth season-two episode moves fully into the U-20 arc as the finalists size up their opponents. Its closing segment has Nagi and Yukimiya matching U-20 starters to animals until Rin channels his loathing of his brother Sae.

Sources & Information

This content is original writing by Daddy Jim Headquarters based on the Blue Lock anime series, manga, and official materials. Episode and chapter references are cited where applicable.

Character and scene imagery on this site is original artwork by Daddy Jim Headquarters, not screenshots or licensed imagery. Official cover art is used on three types of pages for editorial commentary:

  • Movie pages: theatrical key visuals for Blue Lock: Episode Nagi, credited to Eight Bit and the production committee.
  • Game pages: official artwork for Blue Lock: Project World Champion, credited to Kodansha and Rudel.
  • Manga chapter pages: Kodansha Comics volume covers, credited to Kodansha, Muneyuki Kaneshiro, and Yusuke Nomura.
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