I love how messy and honorable the Garp–Roger relationship is in 'One Piece' — it’s one of those rivalries that isn’t about hatred so much as pure respect, and that’s exactly why Garp could beat Roger without ending him. They traded blows for years, and each clash felt like two forces testing each other’s limits rather than a fight to the death. Garp is the Marine through-and-through who loves his country and his duty, but he also has this strange, stubborn affection for Roger. When the moment came for Roger to be taken by the Marines, it wasn’t a dramatic assassination or a secret stab in the back — it was capture, surrender, and a mutual understanding. Garp’s victory here is as much moral as it is physical: he subdues and contains, refuses to turn his rivalry into murder, and hands Roger over in a way that respects both the law and their bond.
From what we see in flashbacks and hints sprinkled throughout the manga, Roger didn’t die in some ambiguous battlefield contest — he was turned over to the World Government and publicly executed. That sequence makes sense when you consider the characters involved. Roger, sick and oddly resigned to his fate, had motives beyond simple survival; he wanted to spark a changed world, and the pirate era that followed served that purpose perfectly. Garp, for his part, had orders and a code. Marines are supposed to capture pirates alive when possible, and Garp’s own personal code wouldn’t let him be the one to snuff out a worthy rival. So the physical component is straightforward enough: Garp is absurdly strong and experienced, capable of overpowering Roger in a confrontation. But he deliberately held back lethal intent. The victory was about incapacitation and control — using skill, timing, and brute force to end the fight without delivering a killing blow.
What really sells the scene for me is the emotional complexity. It’s not just about technique or rules; it’s about two legendary men who respected each other so much that killing would’ve cheapened everything between them. Garp could have finished Roger, but then what would that rivalry have meant? Instead, he hands Roger to the world — literally. That act also fuels one of 'One Piece' greatest ironies: Roger’s public execution becomes the spark that sets the entire pirate era in motion. Garp’s restraint and Roger’s acceptance are both pivotal to the story’s history. I always get chills thinking about how their personal choices rippled outward to change everything, and it’s a testament to Oda’s writing that a single decision — to capture rather than kill — carries so much weight. It’s beautifully bittersweet, and it leaves me quietly impressed every time I think about it.
2025-12-01 12:31:15
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Because of his job as a shop keeper, he was treated like a trash in his wife's family. He even served the Woods without any complaint.
However, 3 years passed, there was a man came to him.
"General, we need your power. Would you come back to the Kingdom?"
Seven years ago, Emerald Hutton had left her family and friends behind for high school in New York City, cradling her broken heart in her hands, to escape just only one person. Her brother's best friend, whom she loved from the day he'd saved her from bullies at the age of seven. Broken by the boy of her dreams and betrayed by her loved ones, Emerald had learned to bury the pieces of her heart in the deepest corner of her memories.Until seven years later, she has to come back to her hometown after finishing her college. The place where now the cold-hearted stone of a billionaire resides, whom her dead heart once used to beat for.Scarred by his past, Achilles Valencian had turned into the man everyone feared. The scorch of his life had filled his heart with bottomless darkness. And the only light that had kept him sane, was his Rosebud. A girl with freckles and turquoise eyes he'd adored all his life. His best friend's little sister.After years of distance, when the time has finally come to capture his light into his territory, Achilles Valencian will play his game. A game to claim what's his. Will Emerald be able to distinguish the flames of love and desire, and charms of the wave that had once flooded her to keep her heart safe? Or she will let the devil lure her into his trap? Because no one ever could escape from his games. He gets what he wants. And this game is called...The trap of Ace.
***
Book one of 'Obsessive Billionaires' series
Reborn as the long-lost Rogers heir, missing for fifteen years, I avoided every chance to bond with my two brothers in this family.
When they tossed me Vivi’s discarded, ill-fitting gown for the family gala, I smiled and put it on.
When they sent Vivi to get an elite education while ordering me to scrub the utility room, I picked up the mop without a word.
When they let Vivi chase love and dumped her rejected suitor on me, I didn’t fight. I accepted her leftovers with a calm nod.
This was all because in my past life, I had spent my entire life desperate for my brothers' approval, only to end up despised by everyone for it.
When I died in the crossfire of a gangland shootout, my own son pushed my body away in disgust.
"Mom, did you really waste your whole life on such a petty fight with Aunt Vivi? Dying for the family would have been a more dignified end. At least then you wouldn't have disgraced our name."
I left this world filled with resentment, only to open my eyes and find myself back at the moment I first set foot in the Rogers estate.
This time, I'm done fighting.
The power, the name, the honor. I'm letting them have it all.
I’ve already been accepted into a closed-door medical project. Soon they will never see me again.
Orphaned at birth, Lena Warrick spent twenty years locked away in a secluded academy, training to be a warrior. Her heart longed to be free, to escape far away from the village of Lucania! A strange force beckoned her, making her restless to escape!
Maybe it was an impossible dream!
She was the chosen Luna for Ajax, the future Alpha of the Luceres Pack. His father, Alpha Atticus, promised to divulge her identity only if she gave in.
There was no other way than to surrender.
However, on the eve of the Luna Ceremony, their pack was attacked by the most powerful group of warriors led by their indomitable Alpha, Zephyrus.
In a matter of minutes, he overpowered them, leaving her at his mercy as a war prisoner.
After twenty years, Zephyrus Averoff returned to his village, Lucania, to avenge the death of his family and pack at the hands of the ruthless Alpha Atticus. Soon he wiped out the enemy and reclaimed his land, his pack. What about the prisoner he had captured whom his wolf, Zeus, already acknowledged as his mate?
To what extent will Lena go to know her true identity? Why couldn’t she accept the mate bond between them?
What would Zephyrus do when the dark secrets of her past are out? Would he accept the enemy, reject her, or claim her as his mate?
The first book of the Overpowered Series, this story can be read as a standalone book.
I’m sorry, it was an accident. I swear it was an accident!” Silver stuttered out in fear.
Rodriguez stared at the trembling girl before him, heart torn in two. He’d usually revel in a sight like this, but not today. Instead he simply swiped away her tears. The feeling of her silky skin underneath his rough palms, sent a jolt of electricity through his veins.
***
Silver was a waitress at the Blue Phoenix Bar. One night she found a flash drive left behind by some customers. She kept it, in hopes that the men would come back for it. Unaware that she has inadvertently stumbled into a sprawling operation between the top echelons of the Russian Mafia.
Rodriguez is known to be the most dangerous man in the world, The Russian Mafia Don. When he discovers that a vital flash drive is missing, he goes into a destructive rage and blames the waitress who took it. He soughts after her life but meeting her alone is enough to change his mind.
He decides instead to kidnap her and take away her freedom, making her a slave in his empire. But as it turns out, his slave holds a strong attraction to both his heart and body.
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She focuses instead on training in warfare with her twin, Alpha Zephyrus. They have only one mission.
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Soon she is captured by a feral wolf, Felixe Andreadis, the Gamma of the Whiteridge Pack. What can be worse than finding out that her ruthless captor is her fated mate?
Felixe Andreadis has everything: power, wealth, a successful business, but no family. His only mission in life is to kill Alpha Zephyrus, to avenge the death of his family.
Unable to do so, he captures Hermoine instead and holds her captive. Can he take his revenge on her when the forbidden attraction between them is fiery and undeniable?
Can Felixe’s feral aura deny the mate-bond between them? Will he still punish Hera in the worst way possible?
Garp sparing Gol D. Roger never felt like a simple mercy to me; it reads as a clash between duty and admiration. I see Garp standing at that crossroads, a marine drilled in orders and honor, but also a man who could look at Roger and recognize something rare — a kind of honesty and purpose that resonated even across enemy lines. They fought, laughed, traded blows, and respected one another. To let a man like Roger live, even briefly, wasn’t just sentimentalism; it was acknowledging that some people belong to a story larger than a single capture.
On top of the personal, there's the institutional angle. If Garp had coldly executed or permanently crushed Roger himself, the political ripples would’ve been different. Roger’s eventual surrender and public execution sparked the age of piracy in a way that an offhand assassination never could. Garp’s restraint preserved that narrative torque: the world needed Roger’s last act to become a spark, and Garp — whether by design or impulse — didn’t snuff it out.
So I read his sparing as both an act of respect and a painful compromise. He honored a rival’s humanity without betraying his own principles outright. It’s messy, noble, and human — exactly the kind of moral gray that makes their relationship one of my favorite threads in 'One Piece'. It leaves me thinking about how sometimes doing nothing can be as meaningful as taking action, and I kind of love that contradiction.
Watching Garp and Roger spar in flashbacks always feels like peeking behind the gears of a giant clock — their rivalry winds the whole machine of 'One Piece'. I see it on multiple levels: personal, political, and mythic. On a personal level, Garp’s clashes with Roger explain so much of his contradictions. He’s a Marine who laughs with pirates in private, who spared Luffy from strict punishment, and who carries pride wrapped up in regret. That complexity grows out of knowing the man he chased for years was more than an enemy; Roger was a mirror and a challenge.
Plotwise, their rivalry seeds key turning points. Roger’s voyage kickstarts the Great Pirate Era, but Garp’s pursuit keeps the Marine perspective alive and humanized — we get a view of the institution through someone who admired its opposite. That tension shows up again and again: in the way secrets about the Void Century are guarded, in how the World Government treats pirates and in Garp’s impossible position during Ace and Luffy’s trials. Their history gives depth to Roger’s execution scene, to the way characters like Rayleigh or Shanks are framed, and to the recurring theme that justice is messy. For me, the best storytelling in 'One Piece' uses Garp vs. Roger to blur black-and-white morality and make every major choice feel earned; it’s one of the reasons the series stays emotionally resonant for me.
Rain-soaked rereads and late-night debates with pals kept nudging me to unpack why Garp sometimes lets pirates off the hook, especially someone like 'Gol D. Roger'. At heart, Garp is a walking contradiction: a hardened admiral who bangs his chest for the Navy's laws, but also a warm, stubborn man who understands the ocean’s pull. One big motivator is respect. Garp sees genius and raw will in certain pirates; that kind of recognition isn’t the same as condoning crime. When two men who love the sea and the climb to freedom meet, there’s an odd camaraderie. It’s clear to me he can admire the spirit behind the crime even while hating the chaos it causes.
Another angle that really resonates is moral complexity. Garp isn’t a caricature of blind justice—he’s more like someone who reads the whole picture. He knows that sometimes enforcing the letter of the law destroys people who, in their own messy way, were seeking something honest. Sparing or showing mercy becomes a pragmatic, almost humane judgment: capture might turn a man into legend or martyr, killing might create a worse cycle. Letting someone live—especially a figure as towering as 'Gol D. Roger'—can be a political choice wrapped in personal empathy. There’s also the family layer: Garp’s choices are shaded by what he wants for his own kin and for the world his grandchildren will inherit.
Finally, I see Garp’s restraint as storytelling gold. 'One Piece' loves grey morality, and Garp embodies it: duty mixed with affection, policy mixed with private sorrow. That makes his moments of mercy feel earned and deeply human. He’s not weak; he’s choosing a different kind of strength. For me, that tension—between duty and heart—is why Garp is endlessly fascinating and why his choices toward figures like 'Gol D. Roger' never feel simple. It’s complicated in the best way, and I can’t help but admire it.