Several Adventure Time episodes pinpointed the age of Finn the Human. This information is divulged in the season 10 episode “Seventeen,” where Finn appears older than when Cartoon Network first introduced him. The Finn Sword-wielder (voiced by Jeremy Shada) revealed the age himself as he and his adoptive brother Jake (John Dimaggio) fought against the Ice King.Īs of date, Adventure Time’s main protagonist is currently 17 years old. Known for his courage, the character is beloved by fans of all ages.īut after the show’s 8-year run, 10 seasons, and 283 episodes, exactly how old is Finn from Adventure Time? We have the answer right here! Finn The Human’s Age RevealedĪt the pilot of Adventure Time, Finn was a 12-year-old boy and the only human in the Land of Ooo. 8/10.Finn the human fills half the Finn and Jake duo from Adventure Time. Other than that, unless you count being a royalty as a personality trait she is pretty plain. PB and the candy people get the most attention after Finn, and Jake's more of a side character throughout the episode, but that's mostly okay as the very next episode builds his character. This is a good way to deliver moral messages in cartoons imo. He's virtuous not because of an authority demanding it, but because he thinks that's the right thing to do. He also is unfazed by the Gumball Guardians trying him for breaking the promise (he's thrilled actually), which again demonstrates that his trustworthiness doesn't originate from an external source. And when he does, it's only because he's been mislead by the Princess about the reason of the promise. Finn doesn't break his promise until the end of the episode even though he doesn't know what significance a "royal" promise carries over a normal one. The message is delivered trough action and not just verbally, and is also used as an opportunity to build Finn's character. I usually find such episodes to be weak, but Adventure Time is not an ordinary cartoon. Moral messages are expected from of kids cartoons, especially in their first couple episodes. Something that caught my attention is how the episode handles its moral message. The invention of the decorpsinator serum at the end of the episode helps set a lighthearted tone for rest of the series. It serves as an on screen introduction of Finn, PB, Jake, Lady Rainicorn and some candy people while also reincarnating many others in-universe. The episode is centered around Finn trying to keep his "royal" promise to Princess Bubblegum while also protecting the candy people from the zombies. "Slumber Party Panic" was a strong start for this series (Well, there is also the pilot, though there are some differences between that animated short and the rest of the series, so this chapter could be considered as the "official beginning" of Adventure Time) In my opinion, this was the best introduction that any casual viewer could have of this cartoon, that could be easily considered as one of the best parts of the whole series. In many ways, "Adventure Time" is one of the most satisfying and enjoyable cartoons from the recent years: While at first sight, this just seems as something completely "random" and "wacky" (Like several modern cartoons) it also reunites several virtues that made it very entertaining and charming, such as the fluid and colorful animation, the unpredictable plots, the likable characters, the atypical sense of humor (Which uses some archetypes from fantasy stories and video-games in a very unusual way) the combination of all those elements is certainly something crazy and unexpected, and yet, at the same time, it has a cute and endearing quality that gives this show a strong possibility to became a future classic. This was the first "Adventure Time" episode that I've watched, and my impressions about it were very positive, renewing much of my hopes about the future of television animation.
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