General & Others Act 3’s biggest problem is that the Alliance wasn't following any kind of plan

#21
In Dressrosa, it felt like each Strawhat had an essential role in the storyline. Law came up with a plan at the start of the arc. Said plan ended up going wrong due to factors out of their control (Fujitora and the Big Mom Pirates), but the crew was communicating and coordinating with one another and with Law, so instead of things descending into chaos, they formed new plans on a moment's notice and modified existing ones. As a result Franky, Robin, Usopp, and Zoro all ended up playing important roles in the arc's storyline. They were all performing specific tasks that would ensure their victory. Not only did this give each Strawhat more to do, but it made reading arc so much more engaging because you always knew where everyone was in relation to everyone else. No one felt underutilized


Same thing with Enies Lobby. There was a clear objective (Get the keys from CP9 and save Robin from the Bridge of Justice) that guided the crew's actions. You always understood what they were doing and why. Whenever it changed perspective to a character, you automatically knew what they were doing. It makes things easy to follow


In Onigashima though the crew had a plan at the start, but things quickly descended into chaos where each Strawhat was just blindly running around the castle until they stumbled upon a fight that lasted a few chapters and then they either fainted or just continued running around. The arc was just so exhausting to read because of this. It was so hard to keep track of where everyone was even with all of the maps they provided. Everyone was just running around and fighting random people so must of the crew didn't get to shine all that much. You could tell that Oda was trying to make the crew feel relevant with all of the crammed-in character moments, but IMO that made a lot of those moments come off as kinda forced. This is also why I think Usopp and Brook (And to a lesser extent Nami and Chopper) didn't get much to do. They're better suited for support, but there really was no opportunity for that because Act 3 was a bunch of chaotic fighting.
Robin didn't play any important role in Dressrosa
 
#23
Well, is was a war. It is not like they could since the start know what could happen and know all the enemies there was and how strong or weak they were.

Everyone had to improvised according to their character.

It aint that bad IMO. Oda did rush, but like c'mon, Wano has been forever already, Oda indeed rushed and tried to put only relevant thing for future plots and to build characters. Example, Zoro's lineage... like what If he really is from Wano? Nothing will change.
 
#24
If it wasn't for Robin, Law and Rebecca would be dead. Robin was the one to escort Rebecca safely and retrieved the key to Law's handcuffs
Rebecca already had her father protecting her and in a 104 chapter arc, Oda should have given Robin more than just retrieving keys for Law
 
#26
Wano biggest failure was that the Beast Pirates got dog walked by the Alliance. Big Mom pirates in Whole Cake Arc were legit badasses. Whitebeard pirates during Marineford were legit badasses. The Beast pirates were pussies with deformed DFs..
 

Uncle Van

Taxes Are a Sickness
#27
Not being planned? Luffy, Chopper, Kiku, Hyogoro and Kawamatsu all saw Tama tame the gifters and nobody thought to inform the others or stock up on kibi dangos. It was never brought up once. Gotta get those cliffhangers even when they make no sense.
 
#28
Idk about strategy or plan. SHs didn’t know where the main officers of beast pirates were and it’s a war. The plan was to defeat all the main components of Beast Pirates and chase Kaido away from Wano.
The main role of SHs other than Luffy was to help Luffy reach Kaido at the rooftop. They all worked on this plan. The main plan of Beast pirates was to capture Momo and prevent Luffy from reaching Kaido. They were trying to do this.
 
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