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AFP
AFP
World
Tomohiro OSAKI

Manga mindset: Japan's biggest 'One Piece' fans

A fan of Japanese manga series 'One Piece' who goes by the online moniker Arimo looks at copies of the comic he has plastered on his toilet walls. ©AFP

Tokyo (AFP) - Shohei Sato's devotion to the pirate manga "One Piece" culminated in a wedding themed on the series, and he's not the only superfan obsessed with its intricate plots and swashbuckling characters.

The Japanese comic-book saga began 25 years ago and is one of the biggest-selling mangas of all time, with more than 500 million copies sold globally.

It follows straw hat-wearing Monkey D. Luffy and his team as they hunt for treasure, and has grown into a sprawling cultural franchise -- now riding even greater waves of popularity thanks to a new hit film and an upcoming live-action Netflix series.

Since childhood, 29-year-old Sato estimates he has spent "well over 10 million yen ($67,000 at current rates), if not 20 million" amassing merchandise and crisscrossing Japan to attend "One Piece" events.

So the office worker's friends weren't surprised when he and his bride Junna had a pirate-ship cake at their wedding in July and posed for photos beside a giant poster of Luffy and his gang in formal attire.

"They told me, 'Shohei, it was so you,'" Sato told AFP at his home in Tokyo, where plush toys of the reindeer-like character Chopper sit next to bookshelves packed with "One Piece" volumes.

"I've lived my whole life alongside 'One Piece', so I wanted my wedding to honour it."

The latest movie in the franchise, "One Piece Film: Red", was released in August and is already Japan's highest-grossing film this year.

Sato has seen it 21 times.

The film has also been a hit abroad, especially in France, while fans came out in costume for a huge Times Square ad campaign ahead of the US release in November.

- Knowledge king -  

Inspiring dialogue, clever foreshadowing and relatable characters -- author Eiichiro Oda is said to shed tears as he draws them crying -- are often cited by "One Piece" superfans as the reason for their infatuation.

The manga's plots are so intricate that publisher Shueisha holds a yearly quiz in which tens of thousands of fans compete to become its "knowledge king".

Sato once came in 10th, winning a golden trophy.

Another regular contestant, whose record is 15th place, is a systems engineer who goes by the online moniker Arimo.

Every night, after tucking his son into bed, the 32-year-old reads "One Piece" in his study, which is decorated with illustrations from the series.

Even the walls of Arimo's toilet are plastered with pages from the manga, and the geography-lover has crafted his own globe to map the islands and oceans explored by Luffy.

"The 'One Piece' world is so meticulously thought-out, I sometimes feel like there's truly an alternative universe like this somewhere," Arimo said.

"One Piece" is serialised in the weekly Shonen Jump magazine, which is aimed at teenage boys.

But its exaggerated humour, adrenalised action scenes and hundreds of varied characters appeal to a far broader readership.

'One Piece is my energy'

Natsumi Takezawa, 34, said she had "forgotten 'One Piece' is supposed to be a boy's manga", because it "strikes a chord with all generations".

She works part-time and reads "One Piece" for a little relaxation after picking up her five-year-old daughter from nursery, making dinner, bathing and playing with her, before finally putting her to bed.

"Without 'One Piece', I might feel drained", she told AFP.

"I might be too exhausted by chores to do anything but sleep.That's all my life could've been about.'One Piece' is my energy."

Takezawa says the manga has even helped her with grief.

Seeing the bawling Luffy realise "I still have my friends" after the death of his brother resonated deeply after she lost a close friend this year.

"What kind of experience does a person have to go through to be able to draw such a powerful scene?" she said.

The "One Piece" saga entered its final arc in July.

Oda said in 2019 that he wants to wrap up the story "within five years", technically leaving little time until its conclusion.

Sato thinks "another seven to eight years" would be a reasonable bet, however.

"'One Piece' is part of my life now, so I definitely want to see it through to the end," he said.

"Until then, I refuse to die".

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