It didn't take long for the mega-length One Piece franchise to establish some running themes or cycles. The Straw Hat crew will always visit a new island in a fresh new arc, and they keep getting stronger while meeting new friends. As for Luffy's own habits, fans have noted his biggest act of mercy: his apparent rule of never killing his enemies.

No matter the latest villain's dastardly deeds or power levels, Luffy simply will not execute them after claiming victory. Not even true monsters like Spandam, Doflamingo, or Hody Jones met their end at Luffy's hands. This has contributed to the observation and sometimes critique that One Piece is too generous with plot armor. In Luffy's case, at least, there are good reasons for this constant mercy, and it actually flatters his character a great deal. That, and the narrative itself, demands mercy from Luffy to protect One Piece's intended tone.

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Luffy Won't Kill People Who Are Pursuing Their Own Dreams

Luffy Sees Himself in Most Villains

One Piece's Monkey D. Luffy isn't the only shonen lead who shows mercy to his fallen enemies. Plenty of action stars in the shonen sphere are content to merely defeat and capture the villains, or they might sympathize with certain villains before the antagonists meet their end. Naruto Uzumaki, for example, redeemed villains like Zabuza and Nagato with his famed "talk jutsu," while Tanjiro Kamado built a career out of seeing the humanity in foes like the Hand Demon and Gyutaro. Luffy doesn't cry for his enemies like Tanjiro does, nor is he required to merely capture villains as a duty-bound pro hero. Instead, Luffy spares his villains because he sees himself in them.

This is not the same as Luffy forgiving or supporting his foes -- far from it. More than once in One Piece, Luffy was driven to a genuine rage at the horrific misdeeds of foes like Sir Crocodile the warlord, Spandam, Doflamingo, and Admiral Akainu. Yet despite his anger and the fact some foes thematically resist Luffy's values of freedom, Luffy won't kill them. No matter the stark differences between Luffy and his enemies, Luffy understands that each foe is someone trying to achieve their own dream. Villains have motives and personal desires too, even if their methods are unacceptable to the Straw Hat crew.

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Luffy regards the likes of Captain Blackbeard, Crocodile, and Doflamingo as dark mirrors of himself, pursuing the same goal with vastly different means. Luffy dreams of being pirate king, and he would be devastated in his final moments if someone killed him before he could realize that ambition. Luffy may have suffered many defeats before, such as at the hands of Magellan and Kaido, but those foes spared him. Those enemies played "fair" by giving Luffy another shot at his dream, intentionally or not. Luffy treats combat and the pursuit of goals as a sport that demands sportsmanship and second chances.

Thus, Luffy is content to foil the plans of all these villains, but only to save the day and protect innocent people from harm. In that sense, Luffy makes sure to think in the short term, such as ending the Alabasta civil war with Crocodile's capture or feeing Wano from the joint tyranny of Kaido and Kurozumi Orochi. Luffy will save people now as the immediate stakes demand, but long term, Luffy will mercifully -- and perhaps foolishly -- let his enemies try again someday. Even the noxious Enel was merely flung to the moon from Skypiea, not killed outright. And Crocodile certainly made the most of Luffy's sympathetic mercy when he founded the Cross Guild organization with Dracule Mihawk and Buggy the Clown.

One Piece Wants Parties, Not Funerals, at the End of Story Arcs

Good Times Must Follow Each Villain's Downfall

Luffy and the Straw Hat crew pose together.
Luffy and the Straw Hat crew pose together.
Image via Toei Animation.

The in-universe logic of Luffy's repeated mercy is how he doesn't want other pirates and dreamers to permanently lose their chance to achieve their own goals. A more meta reason, one that author Eiichiro Oda made sure to explain to everyone, focuses on the anime's mood. Even though One Piece delves into tough subjects of slavery, tyranny, and even genocide, the anime wants everyone to feel good in the end. One straightforward and festive way to do that is with victory celebrations. This trend really took shape when Luffy defeated Crocodile and the Straw Hats turned a formal dinner into a raucous party in the king's presence.

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It's now a trend for the Straw Hats and their friends to throw a big party to mark a hard-won victory and toast to the good times at the end of most arcs. That's a surefire way to keep smiles on every fan's faces, as Mr. Oda intended. Those carefree, cheerful vibes would be dampened or even ruined if Luffy killed his enemies, however. It would feel a little odd for Luffy to drink and be merry after taking a life, even the life of true evil, so Luffy doesn't do it. The mercy Luffy shows is emotionally compatible with the fun-loving parties that mark the end of most One Piece arcs, and Mr. Oda is determined to keep it that way.

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One Piece
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Release Date
October 20, 1999
Network
Fuji TV
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  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Mayumi Tanaka
    Monkey D. Luffy (voice)
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Kazuya Nakai
    Roronoa Zoro (voice)

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