Super_Boom said:
I actually preferred Naruto/Sakura for a while, but realized early on where it was going on. I liked Hinata at first, but lost interest after the author shot her to near irrelevance for the majority of the story. Heck, even her own backstory arc shifted to make her cousin look more sympathetic than she was. The final straw for me was when Neji was killed off for no apparent reason other than to make her look good. After completely ignoring her for most of the story, throwing away another character just to build her up just felt awkward, clumsy, and objectively terrible writing. Not that Sakura was much better of course. Pretty sure the author just didn't care about his female characters in general, based on Sakura's horrible conclusion, and how every female character ended up as a freaking housewife. Seems like I wasn't alone at least...apparently at some Jump festival, Chie Nakamura (Sakura's seiyuu) flat out told the author to "shut up" after he mentioned how much he loved Sakura's character. As much as I like shipping, I wish authors of these long running battle manga would stop trying to shoehorn romance into the story where it isn't really needed. It can be fine within limits, but Naruto and Bleach are prime examples of how it doesn't work if the author doesn't care to expand on the theme. We won't have to worry about that with One Piece at least. |
Oh, I'm not claiming that any part of Kishimoto's relationships were well-written. I'm just saying that the direction that the wind blowing was very obvious to me throughout the series. Though, I will admit that Sakura ending up with Sasuke did mildly surprise me. I thought she had outgrown his bullshit at that point.
Super_Boom said:
As I recall, a fan asked Oda one time if Luffy would marry Nami or Hancock, to which Oda responded with "If you want romance, go read a shoujo." I'm sure it's possible that he might hook them up after a time-skip...but any romance in the story proper is just going to be one-sided gags. Which is fine to me...if Oda doesn't want to do romance, he certainly doesn't need to. |
Oda is the hero that shonen needs.