How One Piece Set Nami up as a Strong Shonen Heroine

How One Piece Set Nami up as a Strong Shonen Heroine1

Nami, the protagonist of One Piece, has a tragic past, but her compassion and character development have transformed her into a true shonen heroine.

When it comes to developing strong, three-dimensional female characters, Shonen manga has a shaky track record. While One Piece is far from the first anime to treat its female characters fairly, it has remained consistent in its treatment of them, particularly Nami, the orange-haired protagonist.

Nami has a habit of catching readers and viewers off guard early on in One Piece. She’s the first non-marine character Luffy meets who openly despises pirates, in stark contrast to our future Pirate King’s joyful disposition. To gain the Pirate Captain’s trust and acquire a chart to the Grand Line, she bluntly pawns the rubber boy to Buggy the Clown. Luffy’s protection of Chouchou’s dog and his prized pet business is the only thing that makes her reevaluate her biases against all pirates. Nami quickly joins Luffy’s cause, but not formally until the Arlong Park storyline, which reveals her traumatic past.

Nami, along with her adoptive older sister Nojiko, was adopted by a retired marine officer named Belle-mere. The family struggled to make ends meet, yet they lived happily in Cocoyashi Village. Nami had a natural gift for navigation that Belle-mere fostered from an early age. Nami’s dream, to one day draw a map of the entire planet, is revealed in this way. They didn’t have much other than Belle-tangerine mere trees, but the young mom instilled in her girls the belief that better days were always ahead. However, tragedy came when the threatening Arlong Pirates seized control of the community and imposed an onerous tax on all residents.

Belle-mere only had enough money to save her own life or the lives of her two kids, thus the strong-willed mother sacrificed herself to rescue the young girls. Arlong’s cruelty didn’t stop with the murder of Nami’s mother; he forced Nami to start producing maps for his crew after noticing her cartography skills. Arlong did make a bargain with the young girl, stating that if she could accumulate 100 million Beli, he would allow her to reclaim Cocoyashi Village.

It’s understandable why Nami is so obsessed with money. Her mother would not have perished as a result of Arlong’s evil if she had more of it. Nami gets close to that 100 million, but Arlong breaks his promise, and in a fit of rage, she begins stabbing the tattoo he gave her. Luffy is the one who stops her, and in a desperate moment, Nami learns to rely on those who care about her and seeks help from her friends.

Following Arlong’s defeat, Nami joins Luffy’s crew as their navigator, the most important function in a ship’s navigation. She’s the one who plots a course to each island and makes sure they don’t get caught in a storm or calamity. Nami, like every other Straw Hat Pirate, has a role to play, and it is because of her that they are such a formidable and competent pirate crew.

Furthermore, instead of being a basic love interest, One Piece creator Eiichiro Oda’s apparent indifference in forging a romance between the Straw Hats gives Nami a lot more freedom and reliance. She’s on this crew for her own reasons, and the part she plays isn’t for the sake of romantic tension, but because her friends care about and rely on her.

When a battle breaks out, however, it’s generally Luffy, Zoro, and Sanji that fight first, making Nami feel like a burden despite her abilities as a navigator. During the Alabasta arc, she requests that Usopp create a weapon that only she can use. Although her Clima-Tact begins as a tool for amusing party tricks, it gradually begins to work for her, and she is able to summon thunder and lightning to overcome her foes.

How One Piece Set Nami up as a Strong Shonen Heroine1 (1)

Similarly, Nami’s devotion grows stronger as One Piece progresses. The lightning-fast adversary Eneru orchestrates a Battle Royale between his army, the Shandians, and the Straw Hats during the Skypiea arc, and Nami is the last one standing. Rather than face death like Zoro or Wyper, the navigator reluctantly agrees to join Eneru on his quest “to the World of Dreams.”

 

Nami gets trapped by one of Kaido’s Tobiroppo, Ulti, in Chapter 995 of the Wano arc, but the Pachycephalosaurus devil fruit human claims she’ll spare Nami’s life if she agrees that Luffy will never become King of the Pirates. Despite the fact that her life is in peril, Nami refuses to mock her captain’s dream, instead declaring, “Luffy will never stop until he’s King of the Pirates.”

 

Nami has come a long way since she was a pirate-hating cat burglar in East Blue Village. Without her by his side to map a course to every new island (or deathtrap) the rubber-brained captain will cause trouble in, Luffy would not have made it this far. Nami is cautious and greedy, but she is also brilliant, kind, and cunning, and she will always stand up for herself when the situation demands it. She’s the Straw Hat Pirates’ navigator and the woman who will one day draw a map of the whole One Piece universe.