Hello, everyone! To those of you who knew me from the Oro Jackson days, good to see you again! To those who didn't, nice to meet you!
I used to have a ton of theories on that good old ship, but sadly I was unable to find the time to move any of them over here with how busy I was at the time. I also just had far...far too many to migrate them all. I was able to archive all of them, though, so if anyone would ever like to see any of those, please just let me know!
Looking forward, though, I've decided that rather than simply rehash all of my old content, I'm only going to revive the ones that are A) still active (haven't been debunked or made irrelevant) and B) have had new information arise since I originally posted them.
Now sadly, my absolute favorite theory, that Monet's wings were taken from a Birdfolk (linked here), was savagely debunked, so I won't be revisiting that one unless something rebunks it later. Instead, I've decided to start my voyage upon this new vessel with my second favorite theory: the Female Straw Hat Patterns!
Some of you may recall that this was originally posted in three parts on Oro Jackson, as I was analyzing every female character I could think of, but it shouldn't become nearly as long this time, so I'm going to consolidate them into one solitary theory. If you're interested in these theories in their original, segmented incarnation, feel free to give them a look here (1) (2) (3) god willing that those links work.
For some background, these ideas are an offshoot of the theory that launched a thousand theorists (or at least this one in particular), beck's Scaling the Red Line, wherein it was speculated that the recruits of each sea (East Blue, Paradise, and the New World) followed a specific pattern: a male seen as a monster and introduced bound in some way, a female villain who betrays her captain, a male leader of a group of troublemakers, and a perverse gentleman introduced carrying something steaming. I adore this theory, but I have always had one problem with it: aside from being a villain, all of the aspects of the female pattern are delayed in the narrative. They betray their captains (at the end of their saga), leave the Straw Hats (some arcs after joining), and end up in a race-against-time situation (in their respective retrieval arcs). beck also noted that at a certain point they wear the Straw Hat, but Nami didn't wear it until pretty late in her story. Robin wore it pretty much immediately, but the argument was that Tashigi would be the next female recruit and that she'd wear the Straw Hat...eventually. I don't mind using the Straw Hat as a visual key for recruitment, but it doesn't match beck's conclusions, so for all intents and purposes, it doesn't support the theory in its current state. The only aspect that Tashigi fits aside from being a villain is the fact that her dream is academics based, but the rest of the theory is pretty much just speculating on how her hypothetical arc would go, not establishing a real precedent for new recruits.
In my opinion, the patterns should be something that can either be identified visually upon their introduction (an aspect of their character design or the composition of their introductory panel) or an action that they take while still considered an antagonist. I also don't want to hold tight to the villain aspect myself, as I think that Oda may want to subvert expectations, so I'm open to the idea that the female recruit doesn't have to strictly speaking be a villain, though I'll go into more detail on that later.
First, we need to establish what the patterns are and how Nami and Robin set them up. They are as follows:
1. The Looking Down Pattern
In their introductory panels, both Nami and Robin are sitting at an elevated position, allowing their legs to dangle, while looking downward at Luffy. This one is the most self-explanatory, as the potential new recruits should theoretically mimic this pose. They don't necessarily have to do it in the panel with their name card, but that does net bonus points.
2. The Hair Pattern
Refer back to the previous image: both Nami and Robin have short hair in their original appearance, approximately shoulder length, which grows longer post-timeskip.
How this applies to candidates met post-timeskip is difficult to tell, but they will presumably either A) be introduced with short hair, or B) be introduced with long hair and shown in a flashback to have had once had short hair.
3. The Cage Pattern
Before becoming allies, both Nami and Robin trick Luffy, resulting in him being put in a cage. This one is the least immediate, as Robin didn't do this until well into Alabasta, at least two arcs after her introduction, but it still occurs before any definitive friendship is formed (or at least the friendship is part of the deception, as it was for Nami). This could be subverted with a female character personally placing Luffy in a cage through force or otherwise, but Luffy being deceived first is preferable. It may also help for Luffy to be endangered in said cage, preferably with some kind of time limit, as Buggy nearly fired a Buggy Ball on Luffy and Crocodile left Luffy and friends to drown as the room he was in filled with water.
It's also worth noting that both Nami and Robin save Luffy from certain death situations, wherein Nami extinguishes the fuse on the Buggy Ball cannon and Robin later retrieves Luffy from a sand dune created by Crocodile.
This can definitely be seen as a pattern in and of itself, but I think this is more or less the point where they pretty definitively betray their captains and become allies, so I personally want to focus on their actions that occur before this point, but I would be remiss not to at least mention it. Consider it pattern 3.5 I guess. What it means to "save Luffy" can potentially vary, but maximum points go to betraying the arc villain by directly protecting Luffy from being killed by them.
Now let's look at our potential candidates. Like I said, I'm not going to go over every single female like I did originally, I'm only going to go over the ones that I think are at all likely based on these patterns. They have to either fulfill one of the patterns or be a clear subversion or inversion of them. What I mean by that should become clear soon.
[I originally meant to post this all at once, but I didn't realize that this forum had a picture/character limit, so I'll be posting all of the character analyses one or two at a time within the thread. I'll try to get them all up ASAP, so please bare with me until then.]
I used to have a ton of theories on that good old ship, but sadly I was unable to find the time to move any of them over here with how busy I was at the time. I also just had far...far too many to migrate them all. I was able to archive all of them, though, so if anyone would ever like to see any of those, please just let me know!
Looking forward, though, I've decided that rather than simply rehash all of my old content, I'm only going to revive the ones that are A) still active (haven't been debunked or made irrelevant) and B) have had new information arise since I originally posted them.
Now sadly, my absolute favorite theory, that Monet's wings were taken from a Birdfolk (linked here), was savagely debunked, so I won't be revisiting that one unless something rebunks it later. Instead, I've decided to start my voyage upon this new vessel with my second favorite theory: the Female Straw Hat Patterns!
Some of you may recall that this was originally posted in three parts on Oro Jackson, as I was analyzing every female character I could think of, but it shouldn't become nearly as long this time, so I'm going to consolidate them into one solitary theory. If you're interested in these theories in their original, segmented incarnation, feel free to give them a look here (1) (2) (3) god willing that those links work.
For some background, these ideas are an offshoot of the theory that launched a thousand theorists (or at least this one in particular), beck's Scaling the Red Line, wherein it was speculated that the recruits of each sea (East Blue, Paradise, and the New World) followed a specific pattern: a male seen as a monster and introduced bound in some way, a female villain who betrays her captain, a male leader of a group of troublemakers, and a perverse gentleman introduced carrying something steaming. I adore this theory, but I have always had one problem with it: aside from being a villain, all of the aspects of the female pattern are delayed in the narrative. They betray their captains (at the end of their saga), leave the Straw Hats (some arcs after joining), and end up in a race-against-time situation (in their respective retrieval arcs). beck also noted that at a certain point they wear the Straw Hat, but Nami didn't wear it until pretty late in her story. Robin wore it pretty much immediately, but the argument was that Tashigi would be the next female recruit and that she'd wear the Straw Hat...eventually. I don't mind using the Straw Hat as a visual key for recruitment, but it doesn't match beck's conclusions, so for all intents and purposes, it doesn't support the theory in its current state. The only aspect that Tashigi fits aside from being a villain is the fact that her dream is academics based, but the rest of the theory is pretty much just speculating on how her hypothetical arc would go, not establishing a real precedent for new recruits.
In my opinion, the patterns should be something that can either be identified visually upon their introduction (an aspect of their character design or the composition of their introductory panel) or an action that they take while still considered an antagonist. I also don't want to hold tight to the villain aspect myself, as I think that Oda may want to subvert expectations, so I'm open to the idea that the female recruit doesn't have to strictly speaking be a villain, though I'll go into more detail on that later.
First, we need to establish what the patterns are and how Nami and Robin set them up. They are as follows:
1. The Looking Down Pattern
In their introductory panels, both Nami and Robin are sitting at an elevated position, allowing their legs to dangle, while looking downward at Luffy. This one is the most self-explanatory, as the potential new recruits should theoretically mimic this pose. They don't necessarily have to do it in the panel with their name card, but that does net bonus points.
2. The Hair Pattern
Refer back to the previous image: both Nami and Robin have short hair in their original appearance, approximately shoulder length, which grows longer post-timeskip.
How this applies to candidates met post-timeskip is difficult to tell, but they will presumably either A) be introduced with short hair, or B) be introduced with long hair and shown in a flashback to have had once had short hair.
3. The Cage Pattern
Before becoming allies, both Nami and Robin trick Luffy, resulting in him being put in a cage. This one is the least immediate, as Robin didn't do this until well into Alabasta, at least two arcs after her introduction, but it still occurs before any definitive friendship is formed (or at least the friendship is part of the deception, as it was for Nami). This could be subverted with a female character personally placing Luffy in a cage through force or otherwise, but Luffy being deceived first is preferable. It may also help for Luffy to be endangered in said cage, preferably with some kind of time limit, as Buggy nearly fired a Buggy Ball on Luffy and Crocodile left Luffy and friends to drown as the room he was in filled with water.
It's also worth noting that both Nami and Robin save Luffy from certain death situations, wherein Nami extinguishes the fuse on the Buggy Ball cannon and Robin later retrieves Luffy from a sand dune created by Crocodile.
This can definitely be seen as a pattern in and of itself, but I think this is more or less the point where they pretty definitively betray their captains and become allies, so I personally want to focus on their actions that occur before this point, but I would be remiss not to at least mention it. Consider it pattern 3.5 I guess. What it means to "save Luffy" can potentially vary, but maximum points go to betraying the arc villain by directly protecting Luffy from being killed by them.
Now let's look at our potential candidates. Like I said, I'm not going to go over every single female like I did originally, I'm only going to go over the ones that I think are at all likely based on these patterns. They have to either fulfill one of the patterns or be a clear subversion or inversion of them. What I mean by that should become clear soon.
[I originally meant to post this all at once, but I didn't realize that this forum had a picture/character limit, so I'll be posting all of the character analyses one or two at a time within the thread. I'll try to get them all up ASAP, so please bare with me until then.]