One Piece chapter 1107 review

The Egghead climax is definitely in full swing now, but it’s still hard to tell how much of a full length, stand-your-ground fight to expect from this arc. Battles lately have left more like skirmishes. They’re not about beating down your opponent until they physically can’t move anymore, it’s enough to make them dazed and in need of a moment to catch their breath so you get the chance to go on to your own objectives or keep them away from theirs. Plenty of other arcs have featured these kinds of ‘smack the other guy away and get back to the more important stuff’ kinds of confrontations (which people online love to extrapolate into being decisive wins or losses despite the result’s lack of staying power) but never as a substitute for the traditional final battle. And I think this feeling that the final 1v1 could still come is the last thing that makes it hard to predict the remaining length of the arc.

Getting started, it’s awesome seeing the Giant Pirates in action. With the scale normal humans can reach in One Piece, it’s easy to forget how freaking big real giants actually are. They tower over the Marine warships enough to cleave them with single swings. And while there are humans who can also cut a battleship in two with their blades, those are individuals, and generally ones near the top of the food chain. When Mihawk cuts through a ship in an instant, it’s a moment of awe. And giants are a whole race of people who can do that just virtue of their sheer size.

Usopp’s joy at seeing the great warriors again is a wonderful moment. I get the need for a recap for casual readers, but I’d rather have seen some kind of explanation on the giants’ timeline – when and how Dorry and Brogy gave up their duel and reunited with the others.

I feel like I’m starting to see part of the escape taking shape in the sequence with the ship sliding. The talk of Brook ‘passing through in a moment’ and not being able to stop seems to be setting up the crew on top leaping onboard as the Sunny slips past. There’s probably going to be a little bit of tension and last minute saves with Jinbe and Zoro rushing to make the rendezvous and a Vegapunk having to rush inside to turn off the barrier (almost forgot about that) and then have to make it back in time, or just sacrifice themselves so the others can get away. With the giants right underneath, there’s people there who could catch the Sunny and break its fall, or it could just do a coup de burst to ramp off the edge and into the hole in the Marine fleet made by the giants’ arrival. That’s my theory for how things play out from here.

Even though I floated the idea of Bonney being upset with her ‘god’ for not showing up sooner, I’m not at all surprised that she commits to him as a hero instead. While very dramatic, the other thing wouldn’t quite have been Oda’s style. I appreciate Luffy’s casual dismissal of the Nika idea. He’s still himself. But I do wish his reaction to seeing Vegapunk’s injuries was a little more personal and had a bit more staying power before he shifted back into fun mode. Gear Five coming with a strong sense of euphoria isn’t something I mind, but I want to see the difference split a little more evenly. Or at least give Luffy a chance to see a thing like this before transforming. I was close to writing off the lead-up to the attack on Saturn as well. The back and forth with Bonney almost makes it feel like the move is going to be more about showing her up than avenging Vegapunk, and that, to my mind, made it too much of a game. But after taking the stare attack from Saturn, the old Luffy shows his face. Nika will play with Bonney, letting it be her plan and a souped up version of her punch, but Luffy has a score to settle about his friend. The expression in that panel is good. He’s still smiling, but it’s a determined, focussed smile, with a furrowed brow that brings a wilder intensity to the wide Gear Five eyes. This is the version of Gear Five I want to see more of.

Vegapunk not being able to move without dying is an interesting complication to add. On the topic of having to stand and fight, it gives Luffy and Sanji a reason to defend this space to the end instead of stunning or knocking back Borsalino and Saturn before fleeing, but what happens after? Can we get Chopper down here to save the scientist? And if Vegapunk has enough medical knowledge to be sure of that, wouldn’t Atlas, who shares his brain, have the same medical knowhow to do a patch job? Surely Franky has the strength to carry Kuma in her place.

Then there’s the Sanji moment. He doesn’t know. We’d thought that maybe because he’d acted less pervy around Bonney in some recent chapters that he had a sixth sense for it, but now we just have to say he doesn’t know. This does mildly sour the coolness of the laser kick (as does the fact that he did it already two chapters ago without the big reaction). “Physics as we know it is dead” is a great line though.

I’m very interested to see how the choreography for a 2v1 for Luffy, Sanji and Borsalino will play out, even if it ends up being a short, interrupted one. In his earlier fight with Luffy, Borsalino proved an ability to zip around and attack from offshore one moment, up close the next. That speed makes him a terrible foe to have to protect a wounded ally against. In a tag team, however, one person can protect Vegapunk while the other chases Borsalino across the island. Could be fun, especially with Sanji’s speed.

Now, that last scene. That’s where it’s all at this week. I’ve been asking questions about that Blackbeard ship tease for a long time, and we finally see the agenda. If that touch is what it takes for Catarina to be able to imitate Saturn (and what else could it realistically be?), shit’s really about to get serious. It seems like Teach’s go-to tactic is weaseling his way into the good graces of a group that has something he wants (Whitebeard’s crew, the Warlords, and now seemingly the Celestial Dragons) and betray them to run off with the prize. Then there’s this idea of them acquiring “the world” as an ultimate goal. Do we think it’s a mirror of Luffy’s own secret goal in some way, possibly relating to Gaimon’s shoutout to “buy the world” back near the start of the series?

And then, in a one-two punch, we finally get Caribou’s endgame. Oda’s been stringing this one out for literally the whole timeskip, putting this slimey bastard in the right place at the right time to learn all kinds of valuable things about the Ancient Weapons and the Poneglyphs (as well as the Strawhats’ idiosyncrasies) to make him the perfect asset to a final boss.

What a wild chapter. A finale coming together. Exciting action. Mixed feelings about the balance of goofball fun and genuine emotion in Nika. And the last two scenes feeling like they’re bringing things Oda has spent most of the series coming to a head at last. The growing pains of Gear Five’s implementation into moments of drama are easily forgiven in the face of these ultimate payoffs manifesting.

Oh, and Zoro’s fighting Lucci I guess. There’s basically nothing of note here except trash talk. The one clash we’re shown isn’t even particularly dramatic.

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