
With this, One Piece Odyssey puts an incredibly refreshing spin on the usual attempts anime games make to cover their source material.

After reconnecting with your crew and having a few battles where everyone is equipped with high levels and a load of different abilities, a mysterious new character named Lum quickly strips them all away from you. Luffy sets out to quickly reunite the crew, getting into a few basic battles along the way. It felt like a bold choice when my first battle saw me doing over 1000 damage to a grunt enemy with my basic attack, and earning 32K in experience – maybe the developers really liked the big numbers of Disgaea? – but it quickly became apparent this wouldn’t last. One Piece Odyssey sees the Luffy and his Straw Hat companions crash landing on the storm-covered island of Waford, losing their ship to the elements and becoming scattered across the island. for the 25th anniversary of the franchise, Bandai Namco are shaking things up with One Piece Odyssey, a turn-based JRPG that delivers a nostalgia-fueled narrative that looks back on the Straw Hat crew’s best adventures with a nostalgic twist instead of the usual trimmed down highlight reel. There have been plenty of One Piece games through this run, but the last two console generations of these interactive spin-offs have mostly been ho-hum action games with unforgettable original stories or overly streamlined adaptations of anime story arcs.

A beast unlike any other, the original manga and anime have been running without interruption for over two decades. Plenty of anime and manga series are popular, but nothing quite rivals the multimedia mega-series that is One Piece. If you say you haven’t heard of One Piece, I don’t believe you.
