Future Events Will the afterlife ever be an important thing?

Will the afterlife be brought up again and discussed more or important?


  • Total voters
    16
#1
With Brook's fruit having to do with his soul, religious christian symbolism with Kuma and Nika, which have to do with a really important future event called the dawn, and with Imu having a lot of demonic imagery, do you think the afterlife will ever be an important point that's talked about or around which some things may happen?
 
#11
Owner of Enma.
User of Asura.
King of Hell.

Try again dude.
Two different things blud.

Afterlife is different and death is different.

Owner of enma and king of hell is same thing.

What does ashura has to do with Afterlife, zoro doesn't care about superstitions and Spirits kind of things.

Ruling over Hell means he is tied to afterlife.
And since I think Zoro will die and resurrect... :myman:
Zoro symbolizes a man who walks alongside death — who has accepted it, lives close to it, and never runs from it. He doesn't pursue the afterlife or its mysteries; he embodies the resolve of someone who has already made peace with dying, which makes him unstoppable in life.


Zoro dances with death and plays between life and death.

He has nothing going on. For him for afterlife.
 
#12
It will be limited to what we've seen of it in the story so far
Fruitsight be related to regret or wishes of dead people etc but we will never see a heaven or hell.
Imu might be a "devil" but your not gonna Satan or God.
 
#15
Two different things blud.

Afterlife is different and death is different.

Owner of enma and king of hell is same thing.

What does ashura has to do with Afterlife

He has nothing going on. For him for afterlife.
You're a special type of thick, aren't you?

Zoro is symbolically tied to the Afterlife, or more precisely to the Underworld, which is merely a side of the Afterlife (more or less half of it, depending on the culture of reference).

Zoro brandishes a sword called Enma, who is the Judge of the Japanese Afterlife.

He has a power-up he himself named Asura, who are the mythological Hindu demons opposing the Devas, or angel-gods. I mean, the dude literally turns into a three-headed, six-armed monster holding nine swords!

Also, the three-headedness of it also connects to hell, as a subtle reference to Cerberus, the guardian of the Greco-Roman Afterlife.

During the Asura form, Zoro even uses various techniques with overt references to hell, such as Jigoku-bakkei Mōja no Tawamure (地獄八景亡者戯, "The Eight Scenes of Hell, Jest of the Dead")

King of Hell is a different technique from Asura, a more powerful haki-infused attack staking the hellish royalty symbolism on top of the demonic one.

He has met the Soul Reaper, albeit it as a hallucination.

What the fuck more do you need to see the link between Afterlife and Zoro's character?

Having a character built around certain references and connection does not mean that it has to be what the character believes in. Luffy has already declared that nobody should act as a deity, yet he has a godly DF. Similarly, Zoro doesn't have to be pursuing a path to hell for him to be connected, conceptually, to hell and its Eastern connotations.
 

nik87

Kitetsu Wanker
#16
Agaim that's a theory.

Zoro is more closely linked to death than afterlife.

Against mr.1 - Nearly dies
Against Kuma - Near death
Against kizaru - Almost dead
Against Kaidou - Ashura - " Deadman game "
Against King - Resching the Styx river
All those times, Death was coming after Zoro...
It is time for the King of Hell to return the favor and pay Death a visit.
I am pretty sure Zoro will die. Brook as someone who already went through death and rebirth will serve as the guide for the one clueless with directions. This is a unique plotline that only Brook can accomplish, it has to lead somewhere.
While in Afterlife, Zoro has a chance to beat Death before Brook guides him back to life.
 
#17
You're a special type of thick, aren't you?

Zoro is symbolically tied to the Afterlife, or more precisely to the Underworld, which is merely a side of the Afterlife (more or less half of it, depending on the culture of reference).

Zoro brandishes a sword called Enma, who is the Judge of the Japanese Afterlife.

He has a power-up he himself named Asura, who are the mythological Hindu demons opposing the Devas, or angel-gods. I mean, the dude literally turns into a three-headed, six-armed monster holding nine swords!

Also, the three-headedness of it also connects to hell, as a subtle reference to Cerberus, the guardian of the Greco-Roman Afterlife.

During the Asura form, Zoro even uses various techniques with overt references to hell, such as Jigoku-bakkei Mōja no Tawamure (地獄八景亡者戯, "The Eight Scenes of Hell, Jest of the Dead")

King of Hell is a different technique from Asura, a more powerful haki-infused attack staking the hellish royalty symbolism on top of the demonic one.

He has met the Soul Reaper, albeit it as a hallucination.

What the fuck more do you need to see the link between Afterlife and Zoro's character?

Having a character built around certain references and connection does not mean that it has to be what the character believes in. Luffy has already declared that nobody should act as a deity, yet he has a godly DF. Similarly, Zoro doesn't have to be pursuing a path to hell for him to be connected, conceptually, to hell and its Eastern connotations.
Zoro isn’t symbolically tied to the afterlife — he’s tied to death itself.

He doesn’t guide souls, pass judgment, or seek peace beyond life. He embraces death as a cost of his path. Enma? He wields the judge — he’s not being judged. Asura? It’s not spiritual — it’s raw killing intent. “King of Hell” isn’t about ruling the afterlife — it’s about conquering death on his own terms.

Even when facing the Reaper, Zoro doesn’t fear it — he fights through it.

Zoro isn't about what comes after death.
He's about what it means to face it and survive.

Zoro’s bushidō code is tied to death, not the afterlife.

Bushidō is about living with the constant readiness to die — it’s a warrior’s honor, not a spiritual journey. Zoro doesn’t seek peace in the afterlife or fear judgment. He accepts death as part of his path, sacrifices himself without hesitation, and treats dying as the price for strength.

Even his "King of Hell" title isn’t about ruling souls — it’s about conquering death through sheer will.

Zoro doesn’t represent what happens after death.
He represents what it means to face death and keep walking.
 
#18
Zoro isn’t symbolically tied to the afterlife — he’s tied to death itself.

He doesn’t guide souls, pass judgment, or seek peace beyond life. He embraces death as a cost of his path. Enma? He wields the judge — he’s not being judged. Asura? It’s not spiritual — it’s raw killing intent. “King of Hell” isn’t about ruling the afterlife — it’s about conquering death on his own terms.

Even when facing the Reaper, Zoro doesn’t fear it — he fights through it.

Zoro isn't about what comes after death.
He's about what it means to face it and survive.

Zoro’s bushidō code is tied to death, not the afterlife.

Bushidō is about living with the constant readiness to die — it’s a warrior’s honor, not a spiritual journey. Zoro doesn’t seek peace in the afterlife or fear judgment. He accepts death as part of his path, sacrifices himself without hesitation, and treats dying as the price for strength.

Even his "King of Hell" title isn’t about ruling souls — it’s about conquering death through sheer will.

Zoro doesn’t represent what happens after death.
He represents what it means to face death and keep walking.
Don't reply again to me in the future. I have no time for morons of your caliber.
 
#19
All those times, Death was coming after Zoro...
It is time for the King of Hell to return the favor and pay Death a visit.
I am pretty sure Zoro will die. Brook as someone who already went through death and rebirth will serve as the guide for the one clueless with directions. This is a unique plotline that only Brook can accomplish, it has to lead somewhere.
While in Afterlife, Zoro has a chance to beat Death before Brook guides him back to life.
Again... there should be nothing in after life.
That plot according to Brook.
He died and came back. But that was due to his Devil fruit Powers. On top of that Brook shouldn't be allowed to use the power again given the description of Devil fruit.
Post automatically merged:

Don't reply again to me in the future. I have no time for morons of your caliber.
Coming from idiot who can't even differentiate between related to Death and related to afterlife Sequences lmao
:milaugh::milaugh:
 

nik87

Kitetsu Wanker
#20
Again... there should be nothing in after life.
That plot according to Brook.
He died and came back. But that was due to his Devil fruit Powers. On top of that Brook shouldn't be allowed to use the power again given the description of Devil fruit.
Brook already confirmed there is afterlife tho...
No need to use the same ability again, he can detach his soul and find a way to the afterlife.
All he has to do is guide Zoro's soul back to the land of the living.
 
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