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Post-Arabasta Arc

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The Post-Arabasta Arc is a set of five standalone anime-original episodes following the Arabasta Arc. Grouped together as the second filler arc, each installment spotlights the history or ambitions of a single Straw Hat, with Luffy and Robin the only members left out.

Arc Type: filler
Next Arc: Jaya Arc
Previous Arc: Arabasta Arc
Release Year: 2002
Episode Count: 5
Classification: anime-only
Filler Arc Number: 2
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Overview

This collection of five self-contained anime stories runs immediately after Arabasta and is counted collectively as the second filler arc. The episodes share neither a continuous plot nor even a single location, but each turns its attention to one crew member's past or personal goal, skipping only Luffy and Robin. Reflecting their disconnected nature, the episodes open without the recap clips that usually begin a story arc.

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Summary

The first installment leaves Chopper alone aboard the ship, where he reminisces about creating his first Rumble Ball and treating his earliest patient under Doctorine. The second follows Nami as she buys a thousand sheets of unusually durable paper from an odd salesman and, despite constant interruptions, completes the first map for her dream world atlas. In the third, the crew nearly stumbles into Marine ships and takes aboard an apprentice cook named Tajio, whom Sanji coaches through veiled criticism so the young man can later prepare a flawless curry for his superiors.

The fourth story lands the crew on an island famed for fireworks, where Usopp befriends a girl named Kodama and helps her grandfather finally launch the giant shell that killed her parents, leaving Usopp more determined to become a brave warrior of the sea. The fifth and final episode flashes back to Zoro's wandering days in the East Blue, where he meets the bounty hunters Johnny and Yosaku and, after his prized sword Wado Ichimonji is repaired, steps in to cut down a band of thugs terrorizing a town and rescue the outmatched pair.

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Mr. Popo Took Your Girl

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Aftermath

Because these are isolated filler vignettes, none of them alter the canon storyline or carry forward into the next arc. All but Zoro's chapter were skipped in the 4Kids English dub. The set functions purely as character-flavor interludes, deepening individual backstories before the crew resumes its main journey.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What comes after the Arabasta Arc?

The Post-Arabasta Arc immediately follows the Arabasta Arc. It is a set of five standalone, anime-original episodes that lead into the Jaya Arc.

Should I skip the Post-Arabasta Arc?

The Post-Arabasta Arc can be skipped without missing canon story, since it is a collection of five self-contained filler episodes that do not alter the manga's main plot. Fans who enjoy extra character backstory may still want to watch it.

What is the Post-Arabasta Arc about?

The Post-Arabasta Arc is five standalone, anime-original episodes that each spotlight the history or personal goals of one Straw Hat crew member.

Which Straw Hat members are not featured in the Post-Arabasta Arc?

Luffy and Nico Robin are the only Straw Hats who are not given their own spotlight episode in the Post-Arabasta Arc.

What does Zoro's episode in the Post-Arabasta Arc cover?

The final episode of the Post-Arabasta Arc flashes back to Zoro's wandering days in the East Blue, where he meets the bounty hunters Johnny and Yosaku and rescues them from a gang of thugs after his sword Wado Ichimonji is repaired.

Sources & Information

Looking for more on Post-Arabasta Arc? The One Piece Wiki on Fandom has a dedicated page with community notes.

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This content is original writing by Daddy Jim Headquarters based on the One Piece anime series, manga, and official materials. Episode and chapter references are cited where applicable.

Character and scene imagery on this site is original artwork by Daddy Jim Headquarters, not screenshots or licensed imagery. Official cover art is used on three types of pages for editorial commentary:

  • Movie pages: theatrical posters and key visuals, credited to Toei Animation and Toei Company.
  • Game pages: official box art for the One Piece console and mobile games, credited to Bandai Namco.
  • Manga chapter pages: Jump Comics volume covers, credited to Shueisha and Eiichiro Oda.

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