Why I Still Read One Piece (Even after more than 20 years)

By @gibic1/16/2026hive-158489

Recently I read a post about how hard it is to get into One Piece . I get it. The length alone is scary. If you begin with episode one, the anime doesn’t make it easy. It was produced in 1998 so it may feels outdated.

I wouldn't recommend it to anyone.

But of course there's a reason why One Piece got this big. One Piece sits next to Batman and Superman in comic sales. That sounds crazy, but it's true. Google it!

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I'm not a hardcore fan. I don't read theories or join discussions. I just read it every week. I started around 2010, so I never had to catch up on everything all at once. It just grew with me, chapter by chapter. And somewhere along the way, I realize Oda built something bigger than most weekly manga.

What keeps me reading, even after two decades and 1170 chapters, is wanting to know what happens next. Not whether Luffy becomes Pirate King, and not even whether the One Piece really exists. (Spoiler alert: it does.)

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The Void Century. The Will of D. These things showed up early in the story, and then just sat there for years. They felt like background information. But now they matter. Going back to old chapters feels different once you know where it's all going.

The world building helps too. Eiichiro Oda made each arc and saga have its own feel. Alabasta was political. Skypiea was kinda Indiana Jones adventure. Water Seven had mystery and betrayal. Thriller Bark went full horror comedy. They mixed well together, even after hundreds of chapters.

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Water Seven and Enies Lobby hit different for me. The stakes felt higher. The story stopped being about simple adventure and became something heavier. You could feel the weight of the decisions characters had to make. That's when I realized this series could go deeper than I expected.

The Marineford arc was another level entirely. The scale was massive. So many characters from different arcs came together in one place. It felt like everything the story had been building finally collided. I won't spoil what happens, but it changed the tone of the series going forward.

Problem is, all of these greatness happened much later in the story. Waaay later.

Another thing that I like about One Piece is how Oda uses real history and myths too—giants, mermaids, corrupt governments. The world doesn't just exist for Luffy, the main character. The world moves on its own.

Luffy is the reason it all works, though.

For one, Luffy doesn’t think of himself as a hero (he’s a pirate!). He does what he wants. Compared to most shōnen heroes, his sense of right and wrong feels odd. When someone is taking away another person’s freedom, Luffy steps in. That alone is enough reason for him.

Most shōnen heroes are driven by duty or responsibility. Luffy isn’t built that way.

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Take Naruto Uzumaki. Naruto wants recognition. Becoming Hokage means being accepted and protecting his village. Even when he fights the system, he still wants to become part of it.

Or Izuku Midoriya. Deku spends much of his story wondering if he deserves his power. He tries to live up to expectations and become a symbol for others.

Luffy doesn’t care about recognition, systems, or symbols.

He doesn’t want to save the world.
He doesn’t want to fix governments.
He doesn’t want praise.

He even says he doesn’t want to be a hero, because heroes have to share their meat. It’s a joke, but it captures his mindset perfectly.

Luffy’s morals are simple and immediate. He doesn’t think in terms of big ideas like justice or order. He reacts to what’s right in front of him. If someone is being hurt, or if a dream is being crushed, he acts.

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Compared to Tanjiro Kamado, who leads with empathy and tries to understand even his enemies, Luffy doesn’t slow down to reflect. He doesn’t need to understand people. He only decides whether they’re in the way.

That’s why Luffy feels less like a traditional hero and more like a force of nature. When he enters a place, things change. Not because he wants to lead, but because freedom doesn’t stay still.

And that’s why he works in a story this long. Luffy doesn’t carry the weight of the world on his shoulders. He keeps moving forward, and the world is forced to move with him.

Not only that, allies and enemies shift are quite common in the story. People change sides. Characters grow and sometimes help others even when it costs them. It feels messy in a human way.

One thing I really like is the found family idea. Whitebeard with his crew. Shanks in the early chapters with Luffy. These father figure relationships add something warm to a story about pirates. There’s fighting and treasure, sure. But what matters more is belonging somewhere, and knowing someone’s got your back.

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Luffy's dream of becoming Pirate King feels less like a finish line and more like a direction. For comparison, when I read Kingdom and saw Li Xin finally achieve his rank as general, I got emotional. That moment felt final, like everything built up to it. In One Piece, the title almost doesn't matter. What matters is everything that happens along the way.

Even side characters get real stories. Buggy, Crocodile, Bon Clay—they start as villains. Years later, they come back doing different things. They had their own lives going on after their arc with Luffy ended.

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I’d argue, another thing that might make it hard to enjoy One Piece is that the early parts of the story kinda follow a pattern: new island, new problem, move on. But around Arlong Park, something changes. It stops being just an adventure and the story starts to show its heart.

Many fans would say that Arlong Park is the deciding point. If you get that far and still don’t get it, One Piece probably isn’t for you. I agree with that.

Themes like freedom, slavery, racism, and corruption start showing up more. The Fish-Man arc is about discrimination. The World Government is about control gone too far. When Nico Robin says, "I want to live," it hits hard because the story earned it.

But the series never stays dark for long. Victories feel real. Emotional moments don't feel forced.

I understand why people don't want to start. But once you're in, all those scattered pieces start coming together. Piece by piece, into one piece.

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