I think Oda wants to tell something with this
Sanji is flexing against S-Shark
As we can see Sanji is in the 3rd floor of building A, and S-Hawk just left the 4th floor.
S-Hawk left to find other opponents because he realized he isn't doing much against Zoro and Kaku, even if he is not being damaged at all. As soon as he spots someone, he will try to attack, since he will take any advantage he can get, especially if the opponent is distracted or busy doing something else like fighting another Seraphim. He must fight someone to see if that someone is strong enough to not get defeated by him, so then he can go for weaker targets. He is a rat basically
Anyway, S-Shark will hit Sanji and break his sword. Which is not a huge problem for S-Hawk by the way since he can still fight
This image literally sums it up to me: Sanji will be fighting S-Shark, then he senses someone is approaching to attack him and looks back (just like in the image), he lets S-Hawk hit him to shatter his blade.
After that i have three possibilities in my mind:
-Zoro attacks S-Hawk as soon as he attacks Sanji, and damages him. Then S-Shark sees an opportunity to attack, but Sanji attacks him first and damages him. There you go: Two birds killed with one stone.
-Sanji gets very pissed and kicks S-Hawk right back to Zoro.
-And the last: Sanji fights two Seraphim at once.
PS: We could get a reaction of Zoro to Sanji shattering S-Hawk's sword on all of these situations of course
-Also this could tell us how Oda views power levels in One Piece in comparison to power scalers
These are power scalers judging the situation to fit agenda A or B:
This is one of the examples of reality striking right back at them:
Sanji is flexing against S-Shark
As we can see Sanji is in the 3rd floor of building A, and S-Hawk just left the 4th floor.
S-Hawk left to find other opponents because he realized he isn't doing much against Zoro and Kaku, even if he is not being damaged at all. As soon as he spots someone, he will try to attack, since he will take any advantage he can get, especially if the opponent is distracted or busy doing something else like fighting another Seraphim. He must fight someone to see if that someone is strong enough to not get defeated by him, so then he can go for weaker targets. He is a rat basically
Anyway, S-Shark will hit Sanji and break his sword. Which is not a huge problem for S-Hawk by the way since he can still fight
This image literally sums it up to me: Sanji will be fighting S-Shark, then he senses someone is approaching to attack him and looks back (just like in the image), he lets S-Hawk hit him to shatter his blade.
After that i have three possibilities in my mind:
-Zoro attacks S-Hawk as soon as he attacks Sanji, and damages him. Then S-Shark sees an opportunity to attack, but Sanji attacks him first and damages him. There you go: Two birds killed with one stone.
-Sanji gets very pissed and kicks S-Hawk right back to Zoro.
-And the last: Sanji fights two Seraphim at once.
PS: We could get a reaction of Zoro to Sanji shattering S-Hawk's sword on all of these situations of course
-Also this could tell us how Oda views power levels in One Piece in comparison to power scalers
These are power scalers judging the situation to fit agenda A or B:
This is one of the examples of reality striking right back at them:
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