TV-Series
Description
Sasha Blouse grew up in Dauper, a southern hunting village within Wall Rose, where post-Wall Maria’s collapse food shortages ignited violent resource disputes. Her father pushed to modernize village customs to assist refugees, but Sasha initially clung to tradition, defending her community’s survivalist mindset. This familial rift drove her to enlist in the military, where she placed ninth among the 104th Training Corps cadets. Her compulsive hunger and food thefts—culminating in being caught devouring a pilfered potato during drills—earned her the moniker “Potato Girl” and harsh disciplinary runs.

At the Battle of Trost District, she sprang into action, deploying her vertical maneuvering gear to rescue Samuel Linke-Jackson from a fatal plunge off Wall Rose. Later, during the supply room operation, her incomplete strike on a Titan forced Mikasa Ackerman to intervene, exposing both her tactical growth and lingering dependence on allies during crises.

Revisiting Dauper amid Wall Rose’s Titan invasion, Sasha confronted her past while evacuating civilians. Unarmed with gear, she encountered Kaya and her mother under Titan attack. Drawing on her hunting expertise, she seized a bow to blind the Titan, enabling Kaya’s escape. This act of courage reconciled her with her rural roots, which she’d once masked out of shame for her accent and upbringing. Kaya, inspired by Sasha’s valor, later joined her family as an adopted sister.

By 854, as a Scout Regiment sharpshooter, Sasha balanced battlefield professionalism with steadfast refusal to target civilians. During the Marley mission, her momentary hesitation to fire on child soldier Gabi Braun proved fatal. Her death fractured alliances among comrades and fueled narrative-shifting motivations, profoundly affecting Niccolo, a Marleyan chef she’d bonded with over culinary passion. Their connection softened his prejudices, steering him from warfare to cooking.

Though Sasha never felled a Titan, her ingenuity and rural-honed instincts repeatedly tipped missions toward success. Her humor and empathy became emotional anchors for peers, while her use of food as a bridge between clashing worlds endured as a quiet legacy long after her death.