Avatar: The Last Airbender ruined one of its fan favorite characters

Fans of Avatar: The Last Airbender have began to point out how the Netflix’s adaptation ruined one of their favorite characters.

Netflix‘s adaptation of the hit animated seriesAvatar: The Last Airbendercontinues to be beloved by some fans despitemaking some major changes from the source material.

Bumi and Aang in Avatar: The Last Airbender

Set in a fictional world where people can bend the elements,the fate of humanity rests on the shoulder of Aang, a preteen air bender, and his two friends Katara, a water bender, and Sokka, a water tribe warrior.

While some viewers are enjoying the series, some have taken issue to some of the changes made by Netflix and one in particular has to do with fan favorite character King Bumi.

Charithra Chandran as Vivi in One Piece Season 2

ALTAB fans are unimpressed by major change in Bumi’s character

In both the original and adaptation series, Bumi is the king of the Earth Kingdom city of Omashu and Aang’s only friend who is alive when he unfrozen from the ice after 100 years.

The Bumi fans meet in the animated series is a kooky old man who uses outlandish tricks and schemes to get Aang to realize who is. After they reconnect, Bumi becomes one of Aang’s strongest allies and a real life connection to the life that was ripped away from him.

Noh Jae-yun and Kim Mi-ji in Better Late Than Single

However, the Netflix version of Bumi is completely different as he is revealed to be a bitter, insensitive personwho constantly blames Aang for abandoning his role as the Avatarand “allowing” the world to plunge into a 100 year war.

[THREAD:] Because people are curious here’s a thread of Bumi clips in the Netflix#AvatarTheLastAirbendershow 🧵"The world is on fire, people are dying, and you got to sleep through it all"@TChalla_1966@hernandy_s@RedLReviews@_TheSmartAlec1pic.twitter.com/0HitltB73W

Anime cyclist

Netflix’s Bumi constantly rubs salt into Aang’s wounds and reminds him that his actions costed the lives of his people the Air Nomads, who were wiped out by the Fire Nation.

Unsurprisingly, fans of the original series took great issue with Bumi’s entire personality and motivations being changed as he’s one of the OG favorites from the animated series.

One Piece star slams backlash to Vivi live-action casting and calls out “creeps”

Better Late Than Single creators confirm fans’ biggest complaint about the cast

Popular Wind Breaker webtoon canceled over plagiarism scandal

“The way they RUINED Bumi was f*cking crazy…in what world would Bumi treat Aang like that???”One fan wrote on Twitter.

Another fanlamented that Netflix’s adaptation turned Bumi into a “douchebag”and expressed how much they hated the way the show seemed to misinterpet the strong relationship between Bumi and Aang.

Below are some more fan reactions surrounding the major breach in character:

Bumi would never… he absolutely adored Aang.https://t.co/VnB28w5Fexpic.twitter.com/hWPWNYcw76

Here’s the thing: give this to any other character, it could be interesting. Pakku, A earth kingdom general, the fisherman who did it in the Storm, Hell, Koh in an attempt to have Aang emote! But Bumi? Nah. He’s a weirdo who wouldn’t hold this grudgehttps://t.co/AyR8YCxjar

Holy crap dude, the Live-action Avatar made a lot of changes I REALLY disagree with, but how they handled Bumi and Aang was so bad. Aang just immediately recognizes Bumi, taking all drama and anticipation away from their confrontation. I am very mixed on this show. 6/10 so far.pic.twitter.com/r1UNP5oWXC

weird ass direction for bumi’s character. hes not supposed to take shit seriously or personally. literally dgaf when the fire nation invaded omashu and captured him 💀 aang, katara and sokka go through a whole ordeal to save him in book 2 and it turns out he’s just chilling therehttps://t.co/AOSruLb6oU

While no one would expect a Netflix adaptation of a children’s show to completely stick to its source material, one aspect that really shouldn’t be changed is the essence of a character or else you could end disrespecting what that character stood for in the first place.