Last reviewed on 2026-05-02
Yoichi Isagi
ProtagonistMain protagonist discovering his "weapon" - spatial awareness and positioning. Evolves from ordinary player to genius striker by learning to devour opponents. Adaptable and strategic thinker.
Meguru Bachira
DribblerEccentric dribbler who follows his "monster" - his football instinct. Incredible one-on-one skills and creativity. Isagi's first friend in Blue Lock. Unpredictable and artistic player.
Seishiro Nagi
GeniusLazy genius with incredible ball control. Can trap any ball perfectly. Started soccer only 6 months before Blue Lock. Natural talent seeks to evolve beyond just being gifted.
Rensuke Kunigami
HeroPowerful striker who wants to be a "hero" striker. Strong left leg and muscular build. Initially has idealistic view of soccer. Undergoes Wild Card training changing his playstyle.
Hyoma Chigiri
SpeedSpeedster with devastating acceleration. Overcomes fear of reinjuring his ACL. Has bright red hair and elegant playstyle. "Weapon" is his unmatched speed on the field.
Rin Itoshi
ProdigyTop player in Blue Lock with cold, calculated playstyle. Younger brother of Sae Itoshi. Seeks to destroy his brother's dream. Incredibly skilled with precise shooting and vision.
Shoei Barou
KingSelf-proclaimed "King" with supreme confidence. Powerful physical striker who dominates the field. Egotistical but backs it up with skill. Evolves by learning to use teammates.
Reo Mikage
All-RounderWealthy heir with ability to copy techniques. Nagi's partner who feels abandoned when Nagi teams with Isagi. Jack-of-all-trades seeking his own unique weapon.
Jinpachi Ego
Blue Lock CoachCreator and director of Blue Lock program. Believes Japan needs egotistical striker to win World Cup. Eccentric genius who designs revolutionary training. Controversial methods.
Michael Kaiser
Bastard MunchenGerman prodigy striker from Bastard Munchen. Arrogant with blue rose tattoo. Incredible shooting technique called "Kaiser Impact." World-class talent with superiority complex.
Alexis Ness
MagicianKaiser's devoted midfielder with magical playmaking abilities. Excellent passer and reads the game brilliantly. Obsessively devoted to making Kaiser shine on the field.
Julian Loki
World's BestConsidered world's best U-20 player from France. Master League's top player. Calm and composed with incredible technical ability. The ultimate goal for Blue Lock strikers.
Oliver Aiku
DefenderJapan U-20 captain and defensive genius. Can predict offensive plays with incredible accuracy. Two-timing personality off the field. Represents what Blue Lock strikers must overcome.
Sae Itoshi
Prodigy MidfielderRin's older brother who plays in Spain. Switched from striker to midfielder. Cold and brutally honest. Japan's best player. Creates conflict driving Rin's development.
Tabito Karasu
AssassinAnalytical player with sharp tactical mind. Excels at reading opponents and exploiting weaknesses. Works well as support striker. Intelligent and opportunistic playstyle.
About Blue Lock Characters
Blue Lock is a soccer manga by Muneyuki Kaneshiro and illustrated by Yusuke Nomura, with an anime adaptation by 8bit. It follows 300 high-school strikers locked in a training facility, competing to become Japan's ultimate striker and lead the national team to World Cup victory.
The series builds its cast around the idea that a great striker is selfish on purpose — the "ego" that lets a player back themselves to score when the easier choice would be to pass. Every character on this page is a study in a different version of that ego: spatial intelligence (Isagi), instinct (Bachira), raw talent (Nagi), aspiration (Kunigami), speed (Chigiri), cold superiority (Rin), kingship (Barou), copying (Reo), or showmanship (Kaiser). Reading a player by their declared "weapon" is the fastest way to understand how they fit into Blue Lock's tournaments.
How the cast is grouped
The filter buttons above sort the cast into the four phases of the story most readers care about. Team Z is the introductory squad — the first lineup Isagi joins and the easiest entry point for new readers. U-20 covers the players who feature in Japan's under-20 national-team match, where Blue Lock graduates clash with the established Japanese youth setup. World Class covers the Neo Egoist League arc, where Blue Lock players are paired with foreign professionals at clubs like Bastard Munchen, Ubers, PXG, and Manshine City. Coaches covers the staff who design the program. New chapters keep adding characters, so this page is updated when a new arc settles enough to describe a player without spoilers.
If you're new to Blue Lock
Start with Team Z. The selection war and the first-round matches teach you how the program's vocabulary works — what a "weapon" is, why pass-reluctance is a virtue inside the facility, why Ego Jinpachi rewards behaviour that would normally get a young player benched. Once Isagi has settled into a recognisable identity, the U-20 arc tests it. The Neo Egoist League is best read after that: it relies on you already knowing how each Blue Lock graduate has been redefined by the program.
Reading order vs. watch order
The anime tracks the manga closely through the early arcs but is paced more slowly. Readers who started with the show can switch to the manga at the end of any anime season without missing context. The spin-off Blue Lock: Episode Nagi retells Nagi and Reo's recruitment from Nagi's perspective; it's a complement, not a prerequisite, and most readers benefit from reading it after they've met both characters in the main series.
For more soccer-anime context and broader sports-anime reading, see the Haikyuu!! characters guide and the all-anime characters hub.