The soundtrack, composed by Shiro Sagisu, is equally iconic. The use of "Komm, süsser Tod" (Come, Sweet Death)—a upbeat, pop-style track with lyrics about suicide and despair—plays over the literal end of the world, creating a jarring, nihilistic irony that has become the film’s hallmark.

The film influenced everything from Madoka Magica to Attack on Titan . It remains the gold standard for how animation can tackle mental illness.

Post-Game / New Game+ Mode (Unlocked after completing the main film's narrative)

Instead of a standard health/stamina bar, Shinji's mental state is the primary resource. As you fight, the Anti-AT Field gauge fills. When full, you can activate "Instrumentality Break." For 15 seconds, the barriers between all characters dissolve:

Neon Genesis Evangelion- The End Of Evangelion [updated] Link

The soundtrack, composed by Shiro Sagisu, is equally iconic. The use of "Komm, süsser Tod" (Come, Sweet Death)—a upbeat, pop-style track with lyrics about suicide and despair—plays over the literal end of the world, creating a jarring, nihilistic irony that has become the film’s hallmark.

The film influenced everything from Madoka Magica to Attack on Titan . It remains the gold standard for how animation can tackle mental illness. Neon Genesis Evangelion- The End of Evangelion

Post-Game / New Game+ Mode (Unlocked after completing the main film's narrative) The soundtrack, composed by Shiro Sagisu, is equally iconic

Instead of a standard health/stamina bar, Shinji's mental state is the primary resource. As you fight, the Anti-AT Field gauge fills. When full, you can activate "Instrumentality Break." For 15 seconds, the barriers between all characters dissolve: composed by Shiro Sagisu