As she stands before the soldiers, sword raised, she has a flashback. She remembers her father’s refusal to own a weapon, a pacifist stance that ultimately led to his death. She remembers Soo-Won’s betrayal.
Overwhelmed by the danger she has brought to the Wind Clan and the realization that her presence endangers everyone she loves, Yona makes a drastic decision. She approaches the Earth Clan soldiers alone, offering herself up to spare the Wind Clan from punishment.
Titled "The Wind Clan," this episode serves as the definitive conclusion to the series' opening arc. It is the episode where the "Princess Yona" of the first three episodes dies, and the embryo of a future warrior and leader begins to form. For fans and critics alike, Episode 4 is not just another installment; it is the foundational bedrock upon which the entire legend of the Crimson Dragon King stands. To understand the weight of Episode 4, one must contextualize it against the backdrop of the previous three episodes. The premiere of the series introduced us to Yona as the quintessential sheltered princess. Her worries were trivial—her hair wouldn't behave, or her father disapproved of her crush on her cousin, Soo-Won. It was a pastel-colored world of privilege. Akatsuki No Yona Episode 4
By Episode 3, that world had shattered. The assassination of King Il by Soo-Won was a shocking betrayal that redefined the series' tone. Episode 3 ended on a cliffhanger that borders on traumatizing: Yona and her bodyguard, Son Hak, being forced to flee the castle, leaving behind everything they had ever known.
This is a moment of sublime character writing. In a lesser anime, the protagonist might be portrayed as purely heroic for this sacrifice. But Akatsuki No Yona is more nuanced. Yona’s actions here are driven by despair and a lack of self-worth. She believes the world would be better if she simply disappeared. It is a heartbreaking depiction of trauma—she isn't being brave; she is trying to cease existing. As she stands before the soldiers, sword raised,
That pivot point is .
In that split second, something changes. Overwhelmed by the danger she has brought to
Episode 4 picks up immediately in the wake of this escape. Unlike many anime that might skip the messy aftermath of a coup, Akatsuki No Yona forces the viewer to sit in the silence and the grief. The episode opens not with action, but with a haunting sense of displacement. Yona is no longer in the castle; she is in the wilderness, both literally and metaphorically. The narrative thrust of Episode 4 centers on Hak’s decision to take Yona to the lands of the Wind Clan, the tribe he once served as general. This plot point serves a dual purpose: it expands the world-building and highlights the political stranglehold Soo-Won now possesses.