One Piece Episode 1161 Review

One Piece Episode 1161 Review

One Piece Episode 1160 closed with Loki naming himself the Sun God and promising to end the world. One Piece Episode 1161, “A Dangerous Deal! Loki of the Underworld and Luffy,” picks up that thread and runs with it, giving the Accursed Prince his first real conversation with Luffy while the rest of the Straw Hats scatter across Elbaph. The episode is a setup chapter in every sense, loaded with exposition and worldbuilding, but Loki’s presence and a few sharp character beats keep it from buckling under its own weight.

The Luffy and Loki dynamic is the engine of One Piece Episode 1161, and it works because of how perfectly mismatched the two are. Loki is trying to command the room. He’s the self-proclaimed Sun God with a massive bounty, chained in Sea Prism Stone deep in the Underworld, surrounded by loyal followers who flinch at the mention of Shanks’ name. He expects fear. Luffy gives him none.

Instead, Luffy is bouncing off the walls about finally being in Elbaph, talking over Loki like he’s background noise. Anyone who has watched this show for more than five minutes saw that coming, but it still lands. Loki’s visible confusion at having his big villain monologue derailed by a rubber man who won’t stop asking about giants is one of the funniest beats the arc has produced.

Luffy’s earnestness continues to produce the best bits of humor when up against villains.

Loki in One Piece Episode 1161

Then One Piece Episode 1161 flips. Loki, reading Luffy’s devotion to Shanks in real time, calls Shanks a coward. Luffy snaps into Gear Fourth and throws a punch with zero hesitation. No dialogue, no wind-up, just fists. Loki dodges it by tilting his head while still chained and immediately walks the insult back, claiming he was joking.

The whiplash from comedy to violence is peak Luffy. He sat through an entire speech about death realms and ancient prisons without blinking, but one bad word about Shanks and the conversation is over. Toei Animation plays the gag completely straight, which is exactly why it works. The quieter detail of Loki mentally noting that he’s going to kill Luffy the second he’s free slips a layer of menace underneath the comedy without canceling it out.

What makes Loki work as an antagonist goes beyond his size and his bounty. It’s his brain. He picks up on Luffy’s emotional attachment to Shanks almost immediately and tries to weaponize it, dangling information about Shanks’ visit to Elbaph in exchange for his freedom. The offer so obviously seems like a trap, which tracks perfectly for a character named after Norse mythology’s most famous trickster.

Loki is a fantastic antagonist and it shows in One Piece Episode 1161.

One Piece Episode 1161

One Piece Episode 1161 also frames him through the reactions of everyone around him. His followers are terrified. The Underworld beasts answer to him. Even chained and depowered, Loki commands the space like he’s already won. Luffy has spent his entire journey toppling supposed legends, so none of this fazes him. But for the audience, the message is loud: Elbaph is not going to be a vacation.

The beasts themselves sell the danger of the Underworld before anyone has to explain it. They’re massive, hostile, and designed with the kind of detail that makes the environment feel genuinely threatening. The standout moment with them, though, belongs to Luffy. He hears Shanks’ name drop from one of Loki’s followers and perks up, and almost as an afterthought, the creatures that have been terrorizing this place just submit to him. Loki and his men go briefly speechless. It’s a casual flex that reminds you Luffy is a Yonko now, even when he’s goofing around.

The cuts away from the Underworld are a mixed bag. Zoro’s group is still on the rope bridge, fleeing Road with Gerd and Goldberg in pursuit. Goldberg carrying the Thousand Sunny in his hands is a fun visual, even if the scene doesn’t do much beyond keeping the thread alive. Usopp talks Zoro out of turning around to fight, arguing that since Dorry and Brogy were friendly, the smart play is to reach the nearest village.

When the episode pivots to the rest of the group, it struggles to find balance and relevance.

Loki and Luffy in One Piece Episode 1161

These scenes are functional, but that’s really it. They keep all the pieces on the board without advancing any of them in a meaningful way. Elsewhere, Hajrudin and Stansen are hunting a giant moose to prepare a feast for the Straw Hats, and One Piece Episode 1161 confirms that the giant tree of Elbaph is the Treasure Tree Adam. It’s worldbuilding tucked into the margins, and it does its job without demanding your attention.

Robin’s scene is the emotional anchor of the whole episode. Brook nervously cuts her hair back to the pre-timeskip bangs she wore when she first met Jaguar D. Saul as a child on Ohara. Franky, Oimo, and Kashii recognize the look instantly. Dorry and Brogy fill in the significance for the rest of the crew. Toei gives the reveal room to breathe, lingering on Robin’s new look from multiple angles, and it earns every frame.

Pre-timeskip Robin hasn’t appeared on screen in fifteen real-world years, so it hits pretty hard. The haircut is a small, quiet gesture, and the crew’s reaction grounds it beautifully. Then One Piece Episode 1161 yanks the rug out. Someone on Elbaph reports that Saul has collapsed. The reunion Robin has been building toward just hit a wall before it even started.

The reunion between Robin and the group barely gets time to breathe before stopping in its tracks.

Robin in One Piece Episode 1161

The exposition in One Piece Episode 1161 is its weakest stretch. There’s a lot of it, particularly in the Loki half, and while most of it serves a purpose, it doesn’t always move at a pace that keeps you locked in. One Piece Episode 1161 wants to let the atmosphere of Elbaph settle over the viewer, and when that lands, it lands well.

The Underworld feels hostile and ancient. But chunks of the back-and-forth between Loki and Luffy lean more toward information delivery than actual conversation, and that’s where the drag creeps in. It’s not fatal, but after One Piece Episode 1160 nailed the balance between buildup and payoff, the step down in pacing is noticeable.

Visually, One Piece Episode 1161 keeps up the strong standard the Elbaph arc has maintained throughout. The Underworld environments, the scale of the beasts, the Gear Fourth sequence, and even the smaller facial animations on Loki and his followers all look sharp. The art direction reinforces the idea that this is a place built for creatures far larger and far older than anything the Straw Hats have encountered before.

One Piece Episode 1161 isn’t a knockout, but it’s a setup episode that knows what it’s building toward. The exposition can drag, but the pieces Elbaph is putting on the board are starting to feel dangerous.

One Piece Episode 1161 is available now on Crunchyroll.

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One Piece Episode 1161

7.5/10

TL;DR

One Piece Episode 1161 isn’t a knockout, but it’s a setup episode that knows what it’s building toward. The exposition can drag, but the pieces Elbaph is putting on the board are starting to feel dangerous.

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