Which is what happens in that panel...?
That guy is clearly Saturn, his profile is consistently highlighted throughout the chapter; here you have the panels from the colored version:
There's no trait in this face that reminds of Ju Peter.
Can Jack casually spam a technique strong enough to defeat a Tobi Roppo?
Has Jack shown any kind of technique allegedly capable of crushing the whole body of even busoshoku masters?
Does Jack have any answer to invisibility plus electricity plus beams plus an enhanced body all at once?
Is...
Every Celestial Dragon treats lesser races as insects, not only the Elders, e.g. in chapter 763, a citizen says the Celestials treat them as such. It's also not something specific of Celestials, since other people like Mihawk or even Dragon have used the "insect" insult against those who they...
I guess you are trolling here, right? In that animation Vergo is using his left leg all the time.
The coath is hanging from Vergo's left leg, which is why the fabric highly wrinkles so close to Vergo's left side of his hip and why every fold converges into that. This is where
For the fabric...
It took me only one question to get an unreliable answer from ChatGPT:
(Dinosaurs never went extinct as birds are theropods).
Another example more pertinent to our discussion:
Indeed, that makes sense...
...Oh, no...! But wait...
...ChatGPT, you're starting to sound nonsensical...
The stance is the same, Oda's is just more poorly drawn plus from a lower angle.
It's impossible for the yellow area I highligthed here to be clinging from such a high area and for the wrinkles to be forming so vertically if the fabric was covering the right leg:
Among other obvious things...
Professional drawers from both Toei and Bandai: interpret Vergo is using his left leg and accordingly adapt the original panel.
Readers throughout the world with actual spatial intelligence: interpret Vergo is using his left leg.
You who need ChatGPT, an unreliable tool: nah, everybody else is...
Anybody who can draw will see that Oda was trying to convey Vergo spinning to his right as he is kicking Sanji with his left leg. It's indeed poorly drawn, but still, even badly drawn, makes way more sense if Vergo is kicking with his left leg; which is why virtually every adaptation of Oda's...
This is what being a weaboo does to your mind:
You actually believe a character from a manga has a chance at being the most iconic at anything in the real world.
If devil fruits came to exist because of people's dreams,
and if Imu is the final villain representing the maximum opposition to the good guys who follow their dreams,
then Imu rose the sea level in order to threaten devil fruits and, by extension, dreamers.
Yeah, it's 100% impossible Killer is stronger than Kid. Managing to do some damange to Kaidou (Kid made him cry in pain too) is pointless unless you believe Kiku is stronger than Kid too, by the way.
It literally wasn't a vice captains color spread as per Oda's own explanations in SBS 102:
D...
Your argument relied on Zoro being the fighter as a reason to make him the strongest individually, which isn't a role limited to the Straw Hats, so of course I'm using other fighters as counterexamples for your reasoning.
A reasoning that is flawed since day one because we have had one speech...
Luffy didn't say that his role was to lead Zoro so Zoro could defeat Arlong; Luffy said his role was to defeat Arlong. That's all you need to know, saying that Luffy's role is to lead is plainly dishonest because he doesn't lead anybody against the strongest foe: he goes and defeats him himself...
And, at the end of the day, he remains the only one capable of ultimately winning where the rest can't.
The only difference between Luffy and other good guys (like the one in your profile picture) is that Luffy is the only one strong enough to come back and actually defeat the bad guy.
Oda: writes Luffy stating his unique role in the crew isn't to use swords but to defeat the main threat.
Oda: writes Luffy stating his aim is to be the strongest person in the world so he can protect everybody and grant freedom.
Oda: writes Zoro consistently facing foes significantly weaker than...
The main thing wrong with Zoro versus King is that it didn't revolve around Zoro learning how to cut fire; instead, Zoro learned it out of the blue in spite of facing a fire-based enemy later on.
It's obviously not the same because Kizaru never, ever reacted like that and Franky emphasizes that it was a laser only for Sanji to later explain why he could stop light itself, making it obvious that blocking it just like that was far from ordinary.
The boots aren't light touching, never have...
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