As a child, Monkey D. Luffy dreamed of becoming the King with the Pirates. But his life changed when he accidentally gained the energy to stretch like rubber in the expense of never being in a position to swim once more! Now Luffy, with all the assist of a motley collection of pirate wannabes, is setting off in search with the “One Piece,” said to be the biggest treasure inside the world
If Luffy wants to get out of a year’s worth of chore-boy duty around the oceangoing restaurant Baratie, he’s got to rid the seas with the evil Don Krieg. Unfortunately, Keieg’s armed to the teethe and aided by his Demon Man Commander Gin. The battle takes a surprising turn as Krieg reveals his increasingly deadly military may well! Meanwhile Nami has sailed off around the Merry Go with treasure in tow, and she’s headed to Arlong
Monkey D. Luffy always dreamed of becoming the King of Pirates, but he accidentally gains the energy to stretch like rubber in the expense of never being in a position to swim once more, so now Luffy, with all the assist of pirate wanabees, sets off in search of One Piece as the biggest treasure inside the world.
Animation, whilst fairly nice, isn’t entirely totally free with the penny-pinching shortcuts that typically plague shows of this length. Backgrounds are frequently rather ugly and hastily drawn, and anything drawn at a distance tends to be a little too oversimplified. The show also sports some genuinely ugly character designs that take a fantastic deal of time to get utilized to, and a fantastic deal longer to really appreciate.
The battle scenes are virtually surely the highlight with the animation, which appear to involve a lot more money than the rest with the show. The action is often fairly well timed, and character movements are suitably lithe and convincing (and by that, I mean as convincing as a person made of rubber could possibly be). a lot of battle scenes in other anime tend to overuse repeated footage, but One Piece doesn’t appear to have this problem.
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