(Note that several alternate features may break chapters instead, most often the Usopp Gallery Pirates or a Storyboard Presentation. Each installment is placed between two chapters of the corresponding volume, serving as chapter breaks as well as maintaining the pages' recto and verso alignments so double-page spreads will stay intact. 4 What does SBS stand for? By the Voice ActorsĪ standard SBS column is split into several one-page installments.Because of the nature of the SBS and the appeal of One Piece, Oda will get questions of all kinds of nature from the serious to silly and the 'mature'. The SBS was also where the author revealed the existence of the hidden characters Pandaman and Tomato Gang, who appear hidden in the background at many points during the series. Sometimes the information on the characters is just suggested in this section by the fans, which Oda just agrees with and makes it official for example, Tashigi's, Chopper's and Robin's birthdays which were all fan suggestions. It is here that the ages of the Straw Hat Pirates were first revealed, as well as various facts about the story that are not immediately apparent (but nevertheless present) in the chapters themselves. Depending on the specific question, Oda's answer(s) may be short and flippant, or long and detailed. It is generally formatted as a straightforward question-and-answer column, with Eiichiro Oda replying to fan letters on a wide variety of subjects. This is for everyone with whom -by some means or another- I've managed to create a bond, in other words, the ONE PIECE FANS of the world! My story is a long one.The SBS ( 質問を募集する, Shitsumon o Boshū Suru ?, "I'm Taking Questions") is a special column featured in most tankoban collections of the manga, beginning with Volume 4. The story waiting for you will defy expectations! I mean it! I have a favor to ask. However, it's because I've completed a thousand chapters that you must believe I'll take us to the end. It's taken us a long time to reach one thousand chapters. So here we are, ready to dip our toes into the final stages of the story. Your belief in Luffy has led me to believe in all of you, and that is what allows me to continue drawing exactly the kind of manga I want to draw. Let me say that all of you have put me to shame for thinking such a thing. It's like they say, "Pride cometh before a fall." I convinced myself that I shouldn't get too full of myself because my readers would eventually leave the series and move on with their lives. There's a certain theory that exists for long-term readership in the entertainment world that states, "A given pool of readers will rotate out of a series after five years." And so for a while now, I've avoided calling my readers, 'fans'. Meanwhile, my readers have been leading their own bustling lives. All of these people have supported me through the years and I am deeply indebted to each of them. At this point, even I'm not sure how many lives they've touched along the way! But it's thanks to them that so many special people have entered my own life first and foremost among them being my family. But it's not just me, Luffy and the Strawhats have navigated themselves to so many different islands and found themselves caught up in so many adventures. Literally half of my life has revolved around the almighty 'WEEKLY SERIALIZATION' hehe. Him and Toriyama have also made a one-shot manga called "Cross Epoch", a crossover containing characters from both Dragon Ball and One Piece.ġ000 Chapters! I, uh, wow.Words pretty much fail to describe the whirlwind these past 23 years have been. Also known as the creator of "Dragon Ball" and "Dr. In 1997, One Piece appeared for the 1st time in Weekly Shonen Jump magazine issue #34 and promptly became one of the most popular manga in Japan (after the "Dragon Ball" series). During this time, he drew two pirate-themed one-shot stories, called "Romance Dawn". At the age of 19, he worked as an assistant artist for Nobuhiro Watsuki on the manga "Rurouni Kenshin", before winning the Hop Step Award for new artists. And won several awards, including 2nd place in the coveted Tezuka manga awards. At the age of 17, he submitted his work "Wanted!" in 1992. He later submitted a character named Pandaman for Yudetamago's classic wrestling manga "Kinnikuman", who was not only used in a chapter of the manga but would later return as a recurring cameo character in Oda's own works. As a kid, Oda was inspired by vikings and aspired to become a manga artist.
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