I straight-up reactivated my Netflix subscription just for One Piece Live-Action Season 2. The first season had me hooked so hard that when the second season dropped (subtitled Into the Grand Line), I was like “yep, sub is back on.” No regrets at all. I’ve already watched the whole thing twice, and I’m still grinning about it.

This season takes us from Loguetown all the way through Drum Island. A full five arcs packed into eight episodes. It feels way more confident than Season 1. The show knows exactly who it is now, and it’s not afraid to lean into the wild, heartfelt, over-the-top One Piece energy. Some of the dialogue is super cliché and predictable… but in the best way possible. It’s sincere, it’s direct, and it hits you right in the feels.

I dive deeper into One Piece Live-Action Season 2 episodes with my episodic reviews, busy releasing, but here is a quick look at each episode so long.

Five characters in stylised pirate outfits gather on a ship's deck, with a bright blue sky in the background.

Episode 1: The Beginning and the End (Loguetown) I enjoyed how this episode truly feels like the end of East Blue and the beginning of everything the story has been building toward, especially with Loguetown getting the proper focus instead of rushing straight to the Grand Line. Seeing Luffy stand on Gold Roger’s execution platform hit harder than I expected, while Smoker and Tashigi were introduced in a way that made the crew’s escape feel earned and set up a great mirror for Zoro. The ending surprised me most, though, showing Dragon’s face with Sabo beside him and including a young Bartolomeo witnessing Luffy’s fearless laugh felt like smart long-term groundwork for the story ahead.

A person wearing a straw hat stands on a cliff's edge, overlooking a vast ocean with a large stranded whale near the shoreline. Towering cliffs and a distant lighthouse are visible in the background under a clear sky.

Episode 2: Good Whale Hunting (Reverse Mountain) This was the first episode that actually made me tear up, because Laboon’s story hit me hard even though I knew it was coming. I was surprised they kept the inside of his stomach looking like an actual whale rather than recreating the manga’s “sky inside,” but the more biological approach really worked. Seeing Brook appear as part of Laboon’s past, singing to him before everything that happens later, gave the moment immediate emotional weight instead of saving it for a far-future reveal. On top of that, Miss Wednesday and Mr. 9 show up just enough to start teasing the Baroque Works storyline without giving too much away.

A large sailing ship navigating through water near Cactus Island, featuring massive cactus-shaped landforms and a clear sky.

Episode 3: Whisky Business (Whisky Peak) The slow-burn reveal that the whole town is a Baroque Works trap is chef’s kiss. Robin (Miss All Sunday) is way more hands-on and physically involved than in the anime, and I loved it. She feels dangerous from the jump. Val’s whole vibe had me paying attention every time she was on screen. I also liked how Mihawk’s influence still hangs over Zoro like a lingering trauma, adding some sharp and snarky dialogue.

A ship sailing on calm waters near a lush, mountainous island under a cloudy sky.

Episodes 4 & 5: Big Trouble in Little Garden / Wax On, Wax Off Little Garden gets the two-parter it deserves. Giants Dorry and Brogy in full scale are glorious. David Dastmalchian as Mr. 3 is perfect casting, those wax nails are weirdly hypnotic. The nose-picking from Mr. 5 though… I had to look away every single time.

A dramatic landscape featuring towering rock formations amidst snow-covered mountains, with a calm reflective lake in the foreground and misty clouds overhead.

Episode 6: Nami Deerest (Drum Island – Part 1) One of my favourite small additions in this episode is when Sanji quietly mentions that his mother was sick when he was younger and that cooking for her was the only way he could help. It’s a brief moment, but it lands because Nami is sick now and Sanji is once again in that position of being able to feed someone but not fix them. That parallel adds a lot of emotional depth to both characters. Sanji is still my favourite Straw Hat in the live action just as he is in the anime, and moments like this are exactly why.

An elderly character with wild white hair sits up, gesturing animatedly, while a small anthropomorphic creature with antlers lies in bed, looking at him attentively. The setting is a dimly lit, cozy room filled with books and natural wooden elements.

Episode 7: Reindeer Shames (Drum Island – Part 2) Full Chopper origin story. His backstory with Hiriluk is handled with so much care. I teared up again. Chopper is genuinely cute, the voice acting is spot-on… but those human teeth in close-ups? Yeah, I still can’t unsee them. Uncanny valley is real. I also missed the snow bunnies/beasts, for me they would’ve added such warmth.

A group of characters standing outside in a snowy environment, with one character, wearing a large hat, holding a smaller character resembling a bear. The scene features a snowy landscape and characters in winter clothing, with playful expressions.

Episode 8: Deer and Loathing in Drum Kingdom (Drum Island – Part 3) Zoro’s instant quiet soft spot for Chopper? Pure awe moment. Chopper joining officially, the cherry blossoms, Vivi aboard, and that final tease of Crocodile? Season 3 cannot come soon enough.

A close-up of a person with green hair and facial markings, looking confused or surprised, in a festive fairground setting with lights and colourful tents in the background.

I knew the name and I clocked him immediately on screen. I was surprised by how much actual interaction he gets with the crew in Loguetown. He is not a blink-and-miss-it cameo. He has scenes, he has dialogue, and Nami thoroughly outmanoeuvres him when he tries to pick her pocket, which is a very funny and very Nami moment. The show adapts a Dressrosa flashback reveal and lets us witness it directly. Smart timeline work.

A close-up of a man wearing a dark green hooded cloak, featuring a distinctive facial tattoo. The background is softly illuminated with warm, blurred light.

This one caught me off guard. In the anime and manga, Dragon’s face is treated as a deliberate long-term mystery. The live action just shows him clearly in the final moments of episode 1, standing in the rain watching Luffy sail away. Seeing him as a person rather than a silhouette added weight rather than removing mystery. Knowing who he is and watching him watch his son sail off into the Grand Line hit harder than I was prepared for.

A figure dressed in period clothing, including a white frilly shirt and a hat, stands in a dark doorway with a large, textured door behind him. The scene has a dimly lit atmosphere with contrasting shadows.

Standing behind Dragon, top hat and all, at the end of episode 1. Not a word, just presence. The show has no reason to rush him into the story properly, and it does not, but establishing that he exists and that he is already in Dragon’s orbit this early is another piece of that careful groundwork the season lays throughout.

A musician with curly hair wearing a top hat and round sunglasses plays the violin on a ship, with a crew member climbing a rigging in the background and a clear blue sky above.

Not a surprise exactly, but I was happy to see him as part of Laboon’s story. It is the show doing what it does best: taking something the manga reveals much later and weaving it into the existing story so the emotional connection is immediate. Seeing him sing to Laboon as a living person made the whale’s grief more acute.

A young girl with red pigtails wearing a large brown hat and a blue shirt with white patterns, looking thoughtfully into the distance, with a blurred green background of foliage.

She did not get a huge amount of screen time but she made every second of it count. The unnerving stillness, combined with that completely detached, almost unhinged quality, made her genuinely captivating. The kind of villain performance where you cannot quite look away because you are not sure what she is going to do next.

A woman in a purple hat and outfit poses confidently against a ship's backdrop under a clear blue sky.

A lot more hands-on than I expected and I liked it. In the anime she tends to hold back and operate from a cool distance. The live-action version of her is more physically present and more willing to get into it early, which made her feel like a genuine threat from the moment she appeared.

Close-up of a man with an elaborate moustache and a wide-brimmed hat, partially illuminated, displaying a solemn expression.

It is fun to see Mihawk as a ‘trauma’ response from Zoro and have snarky dialogue coming from him. During the Zoro vs 100 scene and training on the ship, the memory of the Hawk-Eyed swordsman flashes in Zoro’s head, and he mutters this perfect deadpan inner monologue that is so in character it had me laughing out loud on rewatch. It’s exactly the kind of small, self-aware touch that reinforces why he’s chasing the world’s greatest swordsman title without needing extra exposition or flashbacks. The live action keeps nailing those quirky little character moments that make Zoro feel completely authentic, and this one is pure gold.

The one absence I noticed Pandaman. Oda’s legendary panda-faced Easter egg is nowhere to be found, even in the crowd scenes at Whisky Peak. Small sadness for the super-fans, but not a deal-breaker. Unless, he is being replaced by panda teddies, then we saw plenty in episode 1.

The title 'One Piece' displayed in bold letters with a skull and crossbones motif, set against a calm ocean and sky backdrop, featuring a ship sailing in the distance.

Every episode has its own distinct One Piece logo treatment, which I genuinely love. It reflects the arc-specific visual style Oda uses in the manga and seeing that care carried through to the live action made me happy every single episode.

The episode names themselves are a different matter. They are all references to classic films: Beginning of the End, Good Will Hunting, Risky Business, Big Trouble in Little China, The Karate Kid, Mommie Dearest, Reindeer Games, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. I can appreciate the wit behind each one. But the framework as a whole does not sit right with me. One Piece has its own distinct identity, and leaning on Hollywood film puns feels like it borrows from somewhere else when the material did not need the help. It never hurt the episodes themselves. It just never fully felt like One Piece to me.

Three fashionably dressed individuals in a vibrant, natural setting. The person on the left wears a yellow ensemble with a matching hat, the central figure showcases a unique striped outfit with an exaggerated collar and quirky hairstyle, while the individual on the right sports a pink coat and shorts with stylish sunglasses.

Still mostly faithful to the anime designs, and I still care about this more than is probably reasonable. The fact that this show keeps returning to the source designs rather than reinventing them is a consistent signal of creative confidence. None of the small departures feel careless.

A close-up split image of four individuals, each with distinct hairstyles and expressions. The first person has green hair and an earring, the second has orange hair with a playful smile, the third wears a red hat with goggles and has dreadlocks, and the fourth has blonde hair and a thoughtful expression.

One of my quiet fears going into this season was that the production might sand down the more specific character quirks to make the show feel more grounded. That did not happen. The characters read as themselves. Luffy is Luffy. Sanji is Sanji. Usopp is Usopp. The quirks are treated as features rather than things to be apologised for. That is not a small thing for a show adapting material this specific.

A tense confrontation between a young man wearing a straw hat and a clown with blue hair and face paint at a circus setting, surrounded by colourful tents and carnival atmosphere.

Think about it, most One Piece arcs canonically happen within a single day. Two seasons in, this show has already covered a remarkable amount of ground. The condensing is inevitable and mostly handled well. I am choosing to read the changes in lore and character direction as foreshadowing and streamlining rather than errors, because the alternative is being upset about things that cannot be undone.

That said, I do wonder how they will handle something like Dressrosa and Wano. Imagine trying to compress those arcs into an hour or three. These are not small problems, and I hope bigger audiences and better budgets give the production room to handle them properly.

A dimly lit dungeon scene featuring a shackled man sitting against a wall and a stern figure in a cape standing over him, with a barred door visible in the background.

I do love how they sprinkle in lines and characters from way later arcs so everything feels connected instead of “wait, who’s this random guy?” later. Some of my favourite manga scenes/dialogue got left out, but the trade-off is worth it for this tighter, smarter structure.

Two characters with bright hair stand on a ship's deck, smiling joyfully against a backdrop of rocky cliffs and turbulent water.

I keep thinking it would make the best amusement park water ride ever. Just saying.

A woman in a yellow outfit with lemon motifs stands confidently, holding a black umbrella while looking down at the camera. She has yellow hair and large circular earrings, set against a clear blue sky.

I genuinely hope more legal viewers translate into a bigger budget. The production value this season is good but you can feel the ceiling in places. Better resources would mean better set scale, better effects, and more room to breathe in the arcs that need it most.

I also wonder how much the cast is filming ahead. With editing cycles and Netflix’s release rhythm, a season a year is the optimistic estimate. If they are filming season by season rather than blocking ahead, the timeline starts looking very long indeed for a story this size. One Piece is enormous and I just want them to do right by the crew and the universe. The promise is clearly there. The patience required is significant.

A blonde man in a striped shirt and apron leans towards a woman with orange hair and glasses, who is seated at a table and smiling, while a person with a bandaged arm gestures in the background.

Eight episodes, five arcs, and it mostly nails it. The pacing is confident, the emotional beats still wreck me (Laboon, Chopper’s backstory, tears every time), and the show clearly respects the source while making smart changes for live action.

Yes, Mr. 5’s nose-picking was a personal trial. Yes, I miss Karoo the duck (I understand why he’s not here yet). Yes, Chopper’s teeth bug me. And yes, I’m already hoping bigger viewership means bigger budget for Season 3 so they can keep doing the rest of the Grand Line justice.

Canonically most arcs happen in like a single day, so if they can condense this much while still making me cry and laugh, I trust they’ll do right by the crew and the One Piece universe.

Let me know in the comments, what was your favourite surprise this season? And be honest… did the human teeth on Chopper throw you off too?

Stream the One Piece Live-Action Season 2 on Netflix


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