Here, we're looking at a Bandai set known as the 'Fifteenth Naval Battle' of the Onepi No Mi series, and you probably have to be a pretty dedicated follower, or Japanese, to understand that, but it's the one set you're most likely to encounter going forwards, in Western 'head' shops (which, these days, seem to be very expensive gift shops with no smoking or drugs paraphernalia at all!), or mixed lots/rummage trays at shows, as it has been prolific since it's teased-launch in 2021, this set being issued in January 2024, shortly before Adrian was popping them out of the bottom of . . .
Created by Bandai specifically for the Gashapon machines, and based on a Manga series, just called One Piece (following the adventures of Monkey D. Luffy and his crew, the Straw Hat Pirates, as they seek the legendary One Piece treasure), from 1997, the capsule toy title, like 'Gashapon' itself, is hard to directly translate, as it's part title, part verbal pun, and all pictogram in the original, but sort of breaks down as One Piece [of my Devil]-Fruit!
Which isn't enough is it, but Google Translate can't, Google AI is struggling as much as me, and the websites assume prior depth-of-knowledge. And it's in part due to the design of the capsules, which we'll get on to in a minute!
Through the 40-plus issues (around four a year, plus specials - 200+ items, and still counting) a set of typical Japanese 'popular-culture' themes show themselves, being, part Steampunk, part pirate, part recent/current popular culture and part pre-pubescent schoolgirl fetishism, which touches most of the standard Manga/Anime bases, just missing giant robots and fast motorcycles!
The capsules look like any others on first sight, but the Japanese are the masters of exquisite design, folding furniture, sliding doors, miniaturisation and such like, and their skills have resulted in capsules which can be assembled to resemble a fruit (the devil fruit), or can be stacked as an ever-growing display case, or - it looks like - used as Christmas tree-baubles!
Which is how the Gashapon series ends up being called Onepi No Mi, "Onepi" for 'One Piece', "No" is a possessive - 'Akuma' or 'Gomu Gomu no mi', the Devil's Fruit, or Fruit of the Devil (the capsule design), and is further tied-in to a battle-cry in the Manga strips!
Here, you work it out if you need to! It's killing my brain-cells, trying to get my head round it! I think maybe if you say it quickly; "Onepinomi", it makes sense, if you speak Japanese!?
I've ended-up with a definite pirate type, and an electric bagpipe player (?), who in the first instance I think is called Shiryu (and an enemy of the Monkey D.?), while the other should be Helmeppo, who I see being played by one of the less salubrious personae of Bill Nighy!
It's all very . . . Japanese!





