I've said you can tell when a series is worse when the fake information is more interesting than the real information, and I think this week marks the turning point for One Piece as it's past the point of no return, just like Naruto and Bleach is. This week's fake OP info has Luffy being injected with too much estrogen and got turned into a girl. Now I can tell you this part makes no sense whatsoever since the fake updates came out at the same time as April Fool's Day so it's extra whacky compared to normal. And yet it was more interesting, and arguably it makes more sense than what actually happened.
People have criticized that in Bleach and Naruto, if the main character is dying they'd have a cheesy way to get out of it. Naruto will either just talk to 9 Tails or he'll be infused by the spirit of fire/friendship/whatever. In the case of Ichigo he only needs some inner dialogue with himself to become 10 times powerful, and recently he even skipped that part. Sure these mechanism are kind of dumb, but they're consistent in the world once you accepted them as true. It's no more crazy than say Saiyans mysteriously come back 10 times stronger whenever they recover from a near death experience. That's just a rule of the world you can learn to accept after a while.
So what happens when Luffy is on a near-death experience? Well first we can go into the crazy logic that goes into saving him. He's pretty much already declared as dead, and then this guy offers him a chance to live in exchange for 10 years of his remaining life. Let's see here: certain death, or lose 10 years on your remaining life? How is this even a choice? If you assume Gear 2/3 shortens your remaining lifespan on an order measured in years, then he's probably already lost like 20 years on his remaining life anyway so what's 10 more? Especially compared to certain death? And yet apparently the author actually thought that by having Luffy choose the '10 years' option it's supposed to illustrate... I don't know... something.
And then there's the actual recovery. It's your standard 'even if a miracle occurs it takes at least 3 days before he'll be okay', and then after 1 day he's already recovered demanding food. Now if this is Ichigo nobody would care because he's like a living miracle in terms of beating deadlines, but Luffy is not Ichigo. In the world of One Piece you're supposed to be able to trust that deadlines are absolute. Apparently not. Maybe all Luffy needed was more meat anyway. I bet in about 30 volumes it will turn out eating meat increases your lifespan when Luffy is up to about negative 1000 years on time deducted from his remaining life. I mean he's basically using Gear 2/3 like a Hadoken/Shoryuken right now anyway despite these being moves you should not use since they directly cut into your remaining lifespan. Or maybe it turns out Gear 2 lessens your lifespan by 1 second and Gear 3 lessens your lifespan by 2 seconds.
In other news...
Naruto: Last week's caption says "Stay tuned next week for a surprising outcome to the decisive battle" and it seems like there was no conclusion after all. Sucks for the guy writing the caption. Maybe there will be a conclusion next week.
Bleach: Bleach has surpassed the point where it is no longer meaningful to write fake information about it because everything that sounds remotely interesting is quickly recognized as fake.
People have criticized that in Bleach and Naruto, if the main character is dying they'd have a cheesy way to get out of it. Naruto will either just talk to 9 Tails or he'll be infused by the spirit of fire/friendship/whatever. In the case of Ichigo he only needs some inner dialogue with himself to become 10 times powerful, and recently he even skipped that part. Sure these mechanism are kind of dumb, but they're consistent in the world once you accepted them as true. It's no more crazy than say Saiyans mysteriously come back 10 times stronger whenever they recover from a near death experience. That's just a rule of the world you can learn to accept after a while.
So what happens when Luffy is on a near-death experience? Well first we can go into the crazy logic that goes into saving him. He's pretty much already declared as dead, and then this guy offers him a chance to live in exchange for 10 years of his remaining life. Let's see here: certain death, or lose 10 years on your remaining life? How is this even a choice? If you assume Gear 2/3 shortens your remaining lifespan on an order measured in years, then he's probably already lost like 20 years on his remaining life anyway so what's 10 more? Especially compared to certain death? And yet apparently the author actually thought that by having Luffy choose the '10 years' option it's supposed to illustrate... I don't know... something.
And then there's the actual recovery. It's your standard 'even if a miracle occurs it takes at least 3 days before he'll be okay', and then after 1 day he's already recovered demanding food. Now if this is Ichigo nobody would care because he's like a living miracle in terms of beating deadlines, but Luffy is not Ichigo. In the world of One Piece you're supposed to be able to trust that deadlines are absolute. Apparently not. Maybe all Luffy needed was more meat anyway. I bet in about 30 volumes it will turn out eating meat increases your lifespan when Luffy is up to about negative 1000 years on time deducted from his remaining life. I mean he's basically using Gear 2/3 like a Hadoken/Shoryuken right now anyway despite these being moves you should not use since they directly cut into your remaining lifespan. Or maybe it turns out Gear 2 lessens your lifespan by 1 second and Gear 3 lessens your lifespan by 2 seconds.
In other news...
Naruto: Last week's caption says "Stay tuned next week for a surprising outcome to the decisive battle" and it seems like there was no conclusion after all. Sucks for the guy writing the caption. Maybe there will be a conclusion next week.
Bleach: Bleach has surpassed the point where it is no longer meaningful to write fake information about it because everything that sounds remotely interesting is quickly recognized as fake.