3 คำตอบ2025-08-26 11:40:39
Man, the moment Shiryu reappeared in 'One Piece' I was grinning and also a little sick to my stomach — he was this stone-cold head jailer at Impel Down and then suddenly he’s sailing under Blackbeard. The short version of how he joined is: it wasn’t shown on-screen. After Luffy’s breakout at Impel Down, Shiryu used the chaos to escape custody, and sometime after that he turned up as one of Blackbeard’s crew. The manga and anime don’t give us a neat recruitment scene; instead it’s implied that Teach scooped him up during his post-war power grab, the same way he gathered other dangerous people and criminals.
Why would Shiryu join? From a storytelling perspective it makes brutal sense. He’d been a cog in the World Government’s prison machine and clearly had contempt for anyone who crossed him. Blackbeard’s crew is built for people who want power, revenge, or simply don’t care about the law. Teach famously recruits by offering freedom and a shot at real power — sometimes a Devil Fruit, sometimes a crew that won’t betray you — so for Shiryu the deal would be: drop your old allegiance, get your freedom and a platform to be feared. I like to imagine a grim little scene where Shiryu, free from irons, hears Teach’s pitch and realizes he gets everything he ever wanted: chaos, impunity, and a chance to strike at the people who once restrained him. It’s off-screen but thematically perfect, and it gives Shiryu a nasty, satisfying arc in the wider world of 'One Piece' — a reminder that the line between guard and monster can be paper-thin.
3 คำตอบ2025-08-26 17:57:01
Man, the twist that the former head jailer of 'Impel Down' becomes one of Blackbeard's goons hit me hard when I first read it. In canon, Shiryu doesn’t have some melodramatic, screen-printed escape scene — he walks out during the chaos surrounding the War at 'Marineford' and the breakouts that followed. 'Impel Down' was in utter disarray after Luffy’s infiltration and the huge disturbance leading into the summit war; the prison’s defenses were compromised, and a lot of order collapsed. Shiryu, who once controlled that place, used that chaos to his advantage and got out.
A few chapters after the war we see him again — bloodied, grinning, and clearly with a new allegiance. He surfaces as a member of Blackbeard’s crew, which implies he either escaped amid the turmoil and was later recruited, or was directly freed during raids in the aftermath. Canonically, the simplest, supported reading is: Shayru left 'Impel Down' during the post-war chaos and subsequently joined up with Blackbeard. I still get chills seeing the ex-jailer turned pirate sword in hand; it’s one of those grim little ironies in 'One Piece' that makes the world feel wild and believable.
3 คำตอบ2025-08-26 08:20:48
Shiryu is one of those characters who gives me chills every time his name pops up in 'One Piece'. He’s built as a straight-up brutal swordsman with a nasty tactical streak — remember he was the head jailer of 'Impel Down', which tells you a lot about his baseline level. Running that prison meant dealing with top-tier prisoners and surviving intense situations; that experience alone sets him apart from plenty of other pirates who never had to control that kind of chaos. On top of that, his swordplay is shown to be precise and lethal, and his personality leans into cold calculation rather than flashy theatrics.
If we compare him to other Blackbeard commanders, context matters more than raw power. Some of Blackbeard’s crew are long-range specialists like the snipers, or heavy-hitters and wildcards who rely on brutal fruit powers and bizarre abilities. Shiryu’s edge is close-range lethality and intimidating presence — in a straight swordfight or a prison-brawl-style situation, I’d put him near the top. But against commanders who specialize in Devil Fruit tricks or massive physique advantages, the matchup could swing either way. We’ve only seen limited fights where he’s the focal point, so a lot is implied rather than flatly demonstrated.
Personally, I love imagining him matched with a high-Haki swordsman or a quick DF user; those fights would highlight his strengths and limits. If you want to judge him better, flip back to the 'Impel Down' scenes and his early Blackbeard appearances — they give the best clues about what kind of threat he really is.
3 คำตอบ2025-08-26 14:20:46
I got hooked on the Impel Down arc during a weekend binge, and one thing that really stuck with me was the gruff, menacing voice of Shiryu in the English dub of 'One Piece'. In the Funimation English dub, Shiryu (Shiryu of the Rain) is voiced by Jamieson Price. His performance nails that cold, cutthroat prison-warden vibe — the kind of voice that makes you sit up and pay attention the moment he speaks.
If you’re curious about other work by Jamieson Price, he’s the kind of actor who often gets cast as deep-voiced antagonists, so his name pops up a lot across anime and video games. I personally first noticed him in another show where his antagonist energy was unmistakable, and then realized it was the same tone behind Shiryu. If you want to double-check credits, Funimation’s cast list, IMDb, or Behind The Voice Actors usually list the English dub cast for specific episodes. Listening to a few scenes side-by-side (Japanese and English) is also a neat way to appreciate how different VAs interpret the same character.
3 คำตอบ2025-08-26 11:01:03
I get ridiculously excited whenever a new wave of 'One Piece' merch drops, and for 2025 I'm watching the usual official suspects where Shiryu of the Rain tends to show up. If you want a quick mental checklist: prize figures from Banpresto/Ichiban Kuji lotteries, collectible PVC statues from Megahouse's 'Portrait of Pirates' line, Bandai/Tamashii Nations figs like 'S.H. Figuarts' (when they decide to make tougher, villain-style sculpts), smaller goods like acrylic stands, keychains, phone charms, clear files and towels that the official 'One Piece' Jump Shops or Toei-licensed stores often sell, plus trading-card promos for the 'One Piece Card Game'. Apparel collabs (think limited tees, hoodies, and caps) show up sometimes via Uniqlo-style collabs or specialty shops too.
Last time I hunted for Shiryu stuff I found a few prize figures and a slick acrylic stand at a Jump Shop, and honestly the best way to catch 2025 drops is to follow the official channels: the 'One Piece' official site and social accounts, Bandai Namco / Premium Bandai, Megahouse announcements, and the official 'Jump Shop' news. Pre-orders and lottery notices appear there first. If you want rarer pieces, keep an eye on event announcements like 'Jump Festa' or capsule events — those often preview exclusive Shiryu items. I tend to set alerts on my favorite stores (AmiAmi, HobbyLink Japan, Premium Bandai) and follow a couple of unboxing channels; it saves me a lot of frantic searching and prevents impulse buys on knock-offs.
3 คำตอบ2025-08-26 08:07:41
Wading back through the Impel Down and Marineford arcs, what grabs me about Shiryu from 'One Piece' isn’t a flashy named move so much as a set of brutally effective habits and techniques that make him terrifying in close quarters.
First, his swordsmanship: Shiryu fights like an executioner. He uses long, clean slashes and surgical thrusts aimed to finish an opponent in one stroke. You rarely see him waste motion — every swing is designed to sever, disable, or end. That gives him an edge over flashier fighters who trade blows; Shiryu is clinical. In the panels where he’s clearing corridors of prisoners or cutting through obstacles, the impression is of a man who can cut through restraints, metal, and flesh with frightening efficiency.
Second, his use of surprise and psychological cruelty. He combines stealth, intimidation, and sudden violent finishes. That’s a technique in itself: psychologically breaking someone before the physical strike lands. He’s also physically durable and ruthless enough to fight while wounded, and his timing is excellent — he capitalizes on openings other fighters might miss.
Finally, there’s the implied haki and adaptability. The manga never rolls out a bunch of flashy named attacks for Shiryu, but he demonstrates the kind of precision and force application that suggests at least Busoshoku-level control; he’s consistent with how seasoned swordsmen in 'One Piece' behave. Put all that together and his “strongest techniques” read less like moves with cool names and more like a deadly combination of precision swordplay, execution-style finishing strikes, and ruthless battlefield sense. I love how unsettling that makes him — a villain you don’t want to meet in a dim corridor.
2 คำตอบ2025-08-26 15:03:31
Oh man, talking about 'One Piece' bounties always gets me hyped. If you’re asking about Shiryu (the ex-jailer turned Blackbeard crew member), his official manga bounty is 1,777,000,000 Berries. I remember the first time I saw his wanted poster floated around in fan circles — there was this mix of surprise and, honestly, a bit of dread because that number really screams ‘dangerous and prolific criminal.’
Shiryu’s history — running Impel Down, the escape, then joining Blackbeard — makes that bounty make sense. He’s not just some random pirate; he’s behind prison atrocities, jailbreaks, and alliances with some of the nastiest people in the world. For me, it’s one of those moments where you glance back at earlier chapters like the Impel Down arc and go, “Oh, right — he did all that.” It also makes the dynamic within the Blackbeard crew feel weightier, because a lot of members bring terrifying legacies to the table. I still get chills picturing him in those dark, rainy panels — appropriate for someone nicknamed Shiryu of the Rain — and the bounty number just cements how much the World Government fears him.
3 คำตอบ2025-08-26 19:21:11
Man, Shiryu is one of those characters in 'One Piece' who gives you chills the moment he shows up. In the manga he’s introduced as the Head Jailer of Impel Down — ruthless, sadistic, and utterly uncompromising. Before he joined Blackbeard, most of what we actually know is about his time running the prison: he earned the epithet 'Shiryu of the Rain' and was famous (or infamous) for brutal punishments, interrogations, and general enjoyment of crushing convicts. He’s the guy who presided over the darkest corners of the world government’s biggest prison, and his reputation was built on fear and absolute control.
The canon leaves a lot of his earlier life vague, which is where things get fun for fans. There are hints of a violent past and an appetite for cruelty that predate his warden role, but Oda hasn’t walked us through Shiryu’s childhood or how he climbed to that position. What’s clear, though, is motivation: by the time the Impel Down break happens, Shiryu is disillusioned with the system that gave him power. He betrays his post and allies with Blackbeard — it reads less like a sudden turn and more like someone using chaos to get what he wants: freedom to be as violent and influential as he pleases. For me, his arc is a dark mirror to the idea that power can twist people into monsters. I still get shivers flipping through those scenes in 'One Piece' where the prison walls crumble and Shiryu walks away with Blackbeard’s crew — it’s a storytelling beat that shows how some characters seize opportunity out of collapse.
3 คำตอบ2025-01-08 14:41:26
One Piece' designates not a place in general, but rather that legendary wealth located in the Grand Line. This fabulous treasure is sought by all pirates in the world from Eiichiro Oda's popular manga converted interminable anime. It seems everyone is on Luffy's side You get addicted; it's that great. The show is a magnet for all anime fans.
3 คำตอบ2025-06-07 00:31:21
As someone who's followed Eiichiro Oda's work for years, 'From One Piece to the Maltiverse' feels like an exciting expansion of the 'One Piece' universe. It doesn't retell the Straw Hat Pirates' journey but explores parallel dimensions hinted at in the original series. Characters like Luffy appear with altered backstories—imagine a version where he never met Shanks but still gained rubber powers through different means. The artwork maintains Oda's signature style while introducing fresh character designs that longtime fans will appreciate. Key elements like Devil Fruits and the World Government exist but operate under new rules, making it accessible yet surprising. The connections are subtle but rewarding for attentive readers, with Easter eggs referencing iconic moments from the main series.