The World in Chaos
The Paramount War changed everything. Whitebeard survived but was broken, his influence shattered. The power vacuum he left behind destabilized the entire pirate ecosystem. The World Government tightened its grip. Smaller nations and islands fell into tyranny. And in the shadows, the Revolutionary Army began to move, searching for a weapon—a force they could either control or eliminate.
That force has a name: Luffy Monkey D.
Starting his journey earlier than fate intended, with nothing but a small boat and a fierce determination, Luffy sets out to become King of the Pirates. But his dream is bigger than piracy. He's witnessed the world's corruption firsthand, and he refuses to accept it. He will challenge the system itself. He will topple the World Government. He will change everything.
The Hunt Begins
What Luffy doesn't know is that he's being hunted. The Revolutionary Army watches his every move, uncertain whether he's an asset or a threat. As he gathers his crew—the skilled swordsman Zoro, the strategic navigator Nami, the courageous storyteller Usopp, the honorable cook Sanji, the innocent doctor Chopper, and the mysterious scholar Robin—his legend spreads across the Grand Line. Each island he liberates, each tyrant he defeats, each impossibility he accomplishes brings him closer to the truth: that there are larger forces at play, that his father's identity is intertwined with his destiny, and that the world is locked in a three-way struggle between the Yonko, the World Government, and a revolutionary force seeking to tear it all down.
When Luffy finally discovers the Revolutionary Army's existence and learns that his own father leads it, he faces an impossible choice. Join the revolution and sacrifice his freedom? Remain independent and ignore the world's suffering? There is no simple answer. And as the Void Century's secrets begin to surface, as ancient weapons wake from their slumber, as the three major forces of the world converge on the same battlefield, Luffy must forge his own path—one that is neither pirate nor revolutionary, but something entirely his own