In One Piece Chapter 790, “Heaven and Earth,” Monkey D Luffy used his Gum-Gum King Kong Gun to finish Donquixote Doflamingo forcefully and instantaneously. In Episode 733, “Attack on a Celestial – Luffy’s King Kong Gun of Anger,” Toei Animation recreated this scene, but fans were displeased with them for dragging it out. Despite this, Oda did the same thing with Luffy’s Gum-Gum Bajrang Gun against Kaido in Chapters 1048 through 1049. Now, Episodes 1075 and 1076 of the anime recreated this dragged-out scene. The difference is that the punch was canonically dragged out in the manga. The anime is copying Oda’s example in this instance.However, something about the latest depiction of Luffy’s punch being slowed to a halt yet having enough force to knock the bad guy through the ground works. It’s the same mistake and even drawn out for much longer, but things are different. The struggle is warranted, and the punch, despite all the cushioning, still feels like it should hit as hard as depicted. This might have to do with Wano’s punch being canonically dragged out in the manga, whereas Dressrosa’s was pure Toei padding. In any case, it’s as though One Piece built off the mistake and made it into something viable. It’s still an awkward scene in concept, but the anime did its best to present it believably.Chapter 790 set up the clash with Luffy flying above Doflamingo and inflating his arm to the appropriate size. Doflamingo, in turn, protected himself with the defensive Spider Web and the offensive God Thread. Between the moment Luffy launched his attack and hit Doflamingo, one page passed. There were a few more pages of buildup and payoff, but the punch itself was powerful, impactful, and instantaneous.RELATED: Why One Piece Live Action Performances Are Better Off Not Copying The Anime
In One Piece Chapter 790, “Heaven and Earth,” Monkey D Luffy used his Gum-Gum King Kong Gun to finish Donquixote Doflamingo forcefully and instantaneously. In Episode 733, “Attack on a Celestial – Luffy’s King Kong Gun of Anger,” Toei Animation recreated this scene, but fans were displeased with them for dragging it out. Despite this, Oda did the same thing with Luffy’s Gum-Gum Bajrang Gun against Kaido in Chapters 1048 through 1049. Now, Episodes 1075 and 1076 of the anime recreated this dragged-out scene. The difference is that the punch was canonically dragged out in the manga. The anime is copying Oda’s example in this instance.
However, something about the latest depiction of Luffy’s punch being slowed to a halt yet having enough force to knock the bad guy through the ground works. It’s the same mistake and even drawn out for much longer, but things are different. The struggle is warranted, and the punch, despite all the cushioning, still feels like it should hit as hard as depicted. This might have to do with Wano’s punch being canonically dragged out in the manga, whereas Dressrosa’s was pure Toei padding. In any case, it’s as though One Piece built off the mistake and made it into something viable. It’s still an awkward scene in concept, but the anime did its best to present it believably.
Chapter 790 set up the clash with Luffy flying above Doflamingo and inflating his arm to the appropriate size. Doflamingo, in turn, protected himself with the defensive Spider Web and the offensive God Thread. Between the moment Luffy launched his attack and hit Doflamingo, one page passed. There were a few more pages of buildup and payoff, but the punch itself was powerful, impactful, and instantaneous.
#Piece #Wanos #Final #Punch #Dressrosas
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