Blue Lock Quiz
Cutthroat football academy where 300 strikers fight to be Japan's number 9
Cutthroat football academy where 300 strikers fight to be Japan's number 9
Blue Lock manga sales surged from 100,000 to over 30 million volumes in 5 years — partly fueled by the 2022 World Cup hype around Japan's win over Germany. The manga by Muneyuki Kaneshiro and Yusuke Nomura revolutionized sports anime by framing football through the lens of psychological competition, ego, and self-destruction. This quiz covers Isagi's spatial awareness, Bachira's monster, Rin's genius, the Neo Egoist League, and everything that makes Blue Lock unique.
Each round presents 10 randomized questions from a pool of 50, with four multiple-choice options and instant feedback after every answer. Your final score comes with a performance tier and shareable results.
You'll explore the Blue Lock facility's phases, Coach Ego Jinpachi's philosophy, Isagi's 'spatial awareness' and 'chemical reaction,' the top strikers including Bachira, Rin Itoshi, Sae Itoshi, Nagi, and Baro, the Neo Egoist League teams like Bastard München, and the anime's acclaimed first and second seasons.
Blue Lock is a special football facility created by the Japan Football Union after Japan's humiliating 2018 World Cup group-stage exit. It gathers 300 of the best high school strikers in Japan and puts them through a brutal elimination program — with the last one standing becoming Japan's chosen striker for the World Cup. Any player eliminated is permanently banned from the national team.
Yoichi Isagi is the protagonist of Blue Lock — a high school forward with exceptional spatial awareness who can read the field and find the optimal shooting positions. His key ability is 'chemical reaction' — the instinctive synergy he creates with certain players that unlocks new heights of play. He enters Blue Lock ranked 299th out of 300.
A 'chemical reaction' in Blue Lock describes the rare, powerful synergy that occurs when two players' individual styles combine to produce football that exceeds what either could achieve alone. Isagi frequently uses this concept to find unexpected ways to overcome superior opponents by finding the perfect partner whose ability complements his own.
Last updated: April 2026