Summary

  • One Piece non-canon plots offer unique perspectives on the series diverging from the main narrative.
  • One Piece Pirate Warriors 2 presents a post-timeskip storyline with contradicting elements, offering a new take for fans.
  • Shokugeki no Sanji delves into Sanji's cooking skills in a slice-of-life manner, providing a fresh angle on established lore.

The long-winded narrative of One Piece is truly something to behold. The continual implementation of plot points, whether sketched out years prior or added on a whim, manage to blend together into a continually developing narrative that remains fairly fresh even decades later.

That said, the current narrative's incomplete nature and a need to sell various forms of merchandise have led to several branching alternative plots that have nothing to do with the current direction of the story. The various forms of non-canon sometimes tie into the narrative in ways one may not expect, whether inadvertently predicting or contradicting it if they even interact with it at all, that is.

5 One Piece Film: Gold

Profiling Profiteers of Government Corruption

One Piece - Gild Tesoro
  • Medium: Anime (Movie)
  • A story exploring the Straw Hats being drawn to the Gran Tesoro, and ultimately fighting their way to freedom after incurring massive debt

Thematically, Film: Gold inhabits an interesting niche in the context of the greater series. One Piece often looks at the shortcomings of the World Government. This can be seen often by how easily crimes are ignored or accepted if the right kind of people commit them. Gold takes place on a ship that serves as a demilitarized zone, and is officially recognized as being tied to the World Government.

Gild Tesoro is a robber baron who can effectively buy off anyone, or otherwise deprive them of their money at his casino, building up his resources on the backs of those who can't pay up. One of his concierges can notably even rob people of their luck with a touch, effectively ushering more people into debt. After falling into this debt pit themselves, the Straw Hats are aided by one of his confidants, a similarly greedy thief named Carina, who wishes to take over the ship. From there, they team up to depose Tesoro, but Carina gets the last laugh, having stolen the ship and its wealth. The movie does an interesting job of putting into perspective a criminal figure who is neither a pirate (in the traditional sense) nor a noble, that benefits from getting the government to turn a blind eye to their crimes.

Although the exact context is different, the marines have been met with another precarious force in the canon narrative. The recently formed Cross Guild is attempting to bribe people with money to turn over marines. Although they are more firmly contextualized as "pirates", they too showcase that perhaps the government isn't always the biggest fish in the pond.

4 One Piece Historical Drama Series: Luffy's Detective Story

A Two-Part Special

Luffy, Usopp, Nami, and Chopper, all living in an alternate 19th century japan
  • Medium: Anime (Special Episode)
  • A pair of stories exploring the Straw Hats, as well as the broader cast of One Piece in an alternate version of 19th-century Japan

This special episode differs from others, which are usually hour-long filler episodes recounting earlier arcs, aspects of the series, or otherwise covering non-canon events within the continuity of the series. However, this special episode breaks the format, instead taking place in an alternate version of 19th-century Japan. This episode restructures the cast, giving most of the characters new roles separate from the actual series. Luffy serves, ironically, as a form of law enforcement, with Usopp acting as his partner. The main villain of the two parts of this series is Buggy, who serves as a feudal crime lord.

featured one piece every fight in wano luffy Kaido zoro
One Piece: Every Fight In Wano

The land of Wano served as the battleground for some of the most memorable fights in One Piece.

This episode came out roughly 10 years before the introduction of Wano Country, a location that also takes after Feudal Japan. However, this detail is where the similarities end. The Wano Arc was on a very large scale and was deeply connected to the greater series in terms of its history and its consequences. Luffy's Detective Story is a much more relaxed interpretation of One Piece, with two relatively low-stakes episodes.

3 One Piece Film: Z

A Look at Marine Mutiny

one piece film z luffy fight
  • Medium: Anime (Movie)
  • A story where the Straw Hat Pirates face off against the Neo Marines, a splinter movement that wishes to massacre all pirates, led by the ex-admiral, Z

One Piece Film: Z focuses on Zephyr or Z, a dissident marine admiral in his mid-70s. He notably formed a splinter movement, the neo-marines, who were against government protocol and effectively wished to eliminate all pirates on sight. This has led to them also being branded as criminals by the World Government. Z's hatred stems from the government giving the rank of "warlord" to the pirate that took his arm and crew from him (who exactly this pirate has not been explicitly stated, but it is likely Dracule Mihawk, who had a history of wiping out crews and hunting marines.)

featured One Piece: Marines Who Deserve A Promotion Smoker Koby Kujaku
One Piece: 7 Marines Who Deserve A Promotion

These Marines deserve more recognition for the effort that they have put in.

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It is interesting to look at this film in contrast to the greater narrative of One Piece since its release back in 2012. Although Z's vendetta against pirates and their collusion with the government is much more personal, the sentiments are echoed in Issho, a freshly inducted marine admiral who debuted the following year. Issho, or Fujitora, as he is more commonly known, is against the warlords, in part due to the corruption stemming from the government letting them run unchecked. Eventually, the warlord system did end up being abolished. Additionally, the covert naval organization, SWORD, has been established, effectively giving certain marines a black ops unit to do what they please without repercussions of the greater system. It's fascinating to think that in the context of the actual canon if Z stuck around for a bit longer, various avenues for his more aggressive anti-pirate campaigns would open up.

2 One Piece: Pirate Warriors 2

An Interesting Rewrite of the Greater Narrative

Luffy facing off against Gecko Moria
  • Medium: Video Game
  • After a mysterious dial is used to brainwash the majority of the Straw Hat Pirates, Luffy and Nami are forced to team up with whoever they can to find their crew and take on a variety of foes along the way.

One Piece: Pirate Warriors has an interesting balance to walk. The series has to simultaneously maintain fidelity to the Dynasty Warriors series it bases its gameplay on, whilst also keeping things interesting for the One Piece fans. The second installment attempted this by branching from the original narrative.

The story offered is a post-timeskip narrative that borrows elements from the pre-timeskip, while also outright contradicting it in a number of ways. The result involves the villains being an alliance formed by Blackbeard and Gecko Moria, two characters who were later established as enemies in the canon storyline. To combat this alliance, a number of pirates and marines, with the Straw Hats and Whitebeard Pirates at their core, band together out of necessity. The inclusion of the Whitebeard Pirates, who lost their two most prominent members (shown in this game, at least) at the end of Marineford, is also a stark contrast. Other similar odd scenarios, like Garp betraying the marines to save his family, Blackbeard's alliance consisting of none of his crewmates, and many characters being brainwashed into evil, highlight an attempt to make a story with a relatively smaller number of characters with established abilities.

Although the newer Pirate Warriors games are also not particularly faithful, they have more characters at their disposal and make more of an attempt to emulate the source material. That said, Pirate Warriors 2 does a fun job of seeing how established characters interact in a scenario completely counter to their status quo, in a fashion not too dissimilar from the Warriors Orochi series.

1 Shokugeki no Sanji

Six One-Shots from the Creators of Food Wars

Manga Spin Offs- Shokugeki no Sanji
  • Medium: Manga
  • From the creators of Food Wars, this One Piece spinoff takes extra focus on Sanji and his cooking.

Of all the spinoffs listed, this one is perhaps the most concretely connected to canon material. It is a collection of manga one-shots, that are, for the most part, largely based on the established lore of Sanji. That said, the exact events written and depicted tend to exist outside what we know of the series. Due to having a different creative team at the helm (namely, Yuto Tsukada and Shun Saeki), the art style and writing are fairly different from what viewers have come to expect from One Piece.

Ultimately, the series tends to stray away from the action of its source, focusing more on Sanji's cooking acumen. This gives the series a bit more of a slice-of-life feel, which is much more closely in line with the creators' original works. Timeline-wise, the stories tend to be placed in proximity to actual events, such as right before the Straw Hats visited Baratie or during Sanji's training with Ivankov. Whatever the story, Sanji's cooking does not disappoint and often turns doubters into believers.

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Release Date
October 20, 1999
Network
Fuji TV
Directors
Hiroaki Miyamoto, Konosuke Uda, Junji Shimizu, Satoshi Itō, Munehisa Sakai, Katsumi Tokoro, Yutaka Nakajima, Yoshihiro Ueda, Kenichi Takeshita, Yoko Ikeda, Ryota Nakamura, Hiroyuki Kakudou, Takahiro Imamura, Toshihiro Maeya, Yûji Endô, Nozomu Shishido, Hidehiko Kadota, Sumio Watanabe, Harume Kosaka, Yasuhiro Tanabe, Yukihiko Nakao, Keisuke Onishi, Junichi Fujise, Hiroyuki Satou
Writers
Jin Tanaka, Akiko Inoue, Junki Takegami, Shinzo Fujita, Shouji Yonemura, Yoshiyuki Suga, Atsuhiro Tomioka, Hirohiko Uesaka, Michiru Shimada, Isao Murayama, Takuya Masumoto, Yoichi Takahashi, Momoka Toyoda
Franchise(s)
One Piece
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  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Mayumi Tanaka
    Monkey D. Luffy (voice)
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Kazuya Nakai
    Roronoa Zoro (voice)

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming
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Seasons
21
Number of Episodes
1122
Studio
Toei Animation