Compare ONE PIECE: World Seeker Steam key prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by GANBARION Co., Ltd.. Published by BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment. Released on 3/14/2019. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure.

If you bleed Straw Hat colors, this open-world Luffy adventure has just enough charm to carry you through. Everyone else will bounce off the repetitive combat inside the first hour.

My first thought booting up ONE PIECE: World Seeker was genuine excitement - a cel-shaded open world where you play as Monkey D. Luffy, swinging across Prison Island using rubbery Gum-Gum grapple arms, signature attacks morphing your fists into wrecking balls. That visual hook is real, and it lasts longer than you might expect. The animations are genuinely impressive, the lighting is lush, and for about the first two hours it does something rare: it makes the anime feel like a playground. Then the cracks show, and they are wide. Combat is built around a single melee button at the start, gated behind a Haki-flavored skill tree that takes serious grinding to open up. Even unlocked, the combat stays shallow - enemies split into two basic types (small and quick, big and slow), the AI puts up almost no resistance, and most encounters end with the same three-hit combo you started with. Stealth takedowns are present and mildly useful early on, but they are about as deep as the rest of the system. The open world itself mirrors this hollowness: Prison Island looks gorgeous from a clifftop but feel lifeless at street level, with NPCs rooted to their spots and side content that rarely rises above fetch quests or "go punch the people in this area." The karma system, which rewards side missions with items and unlocks, sounds interesting on paper but the rewards are too thin to justify the repetitive work. Where the game earns real goodwill is in its original story. The narrative was shaped with involvement from series creator Eiichiro Oda, and it follows the familiar One Piece formula faithfully - a new island, a new ally, a villain with layered motives, the Marines lurking around every corner. If you watch the show for its characters and tone rather than just its fights, this storyline functions as a solid filler arc made playable. The full Straw Hat crew appears throughout, and the cutscenes in particular are a highlight - well-animated and loaded with the kind of over-the-top energy the property is built on. Traversal also deserves credit: launching Luffy across the map with Gum-Gum Rocket or swinging between trees using stretched arms is tactile and fun in a way the combat never quite achieves. The honest summary is this: World Seeker is a game split down the middle between a competent anime love letter and a generic open-world checklist. Critics landed around a 57 on Metacritic, Steam sits at 77 percent positive from fans - and that gap tells you everything. Invested One Piece fans tolerate the rough edges because the licensed content delivers. Anyone approaching this as a pure open-world action game will find the content thin and the mechanics dated even by 2019 standards. There is no new game plus, fast travel gets disabled late in the story in a way that drags the runtime, and the DLC characters add playtime without addressing the core repetition. Go in as a fan at a discount, keep your expectations pegged at "extended interactive episode" rather than "landmark game," and you will probably have a decent time. Alex, Scout Team

ONE PIECE: World Seeker Steam key
ActionAdventure

ONE PIECE: World Seeker Steam key

Mar 14, 2019GANBARION Co., Ltd.BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment
GamerScout Says

If you bleed Straw Hat colors, this open-world Luffy adventure has just enough charm to carry you through. Everyone else will bounce off the repetitive combat inside the first hour.

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About ONE PIECE: World Seeker Steam key

My first thought booting up ONE PIECE: World Seeker was genuine excitement - a cel-shaded open world where you play as Monkey D. Luffy, swinging across Prison Island using rubbery Gum-Gum grapple arms, signature attacks morphing your fists into wrecking balls. That visual hook is real, and it lasts longer than you might expect. The animations are genuinely impressive, the lighting is lush, and for about the first two hours it does something rare: it makes the anime feel like a playground. Then the cracks show, and they are wide. Combat is built around a single melee button at the start, gated behind a Haki-flavored skill tree that takes serious grinding to open up. Even unlocked, the combat stays shallow - enemies split into two basic types (small and quick, big and slow), the AI puts up almost no resistance, and most encounters end with the same three-hit combo you started with. Stealth takedowns are present and mildly useful early on, but they are about as deep as the rest of the system. The open world itself mirrors this hollowness: Prison Island looks gorgeous from a clifftop but feel lifeless at street level, with NPCs rooted to their spots and side content that rarely rises above fetch quests or "go punch the people in this area." The karma system, which rewards side missions with items and unlocks, sounds interesting on paper but the rewards are too thin to justify the repetitive work. Where the game earns real goodwill is in its original story. The narrative was shaped with involvement from series creator Eiichiro Oda, and it follows the familiar One Piece formula faithfully - a new island, a new ally, a villain with layered motives, the Marines lurking around every corner. If you watch the show for its characters and tone rather than just its fights, this storyline functions as a solid filler arc made playable. The full Straw Hat crew appears throughout, and the cutscenes in particular are a highlight - well-animated and loaded with the kind of over-the-top energy the property is built on. Traversal also deserves credit: launching Luffy across the map with Gum-Gum Rocket or swinging between trees using stretched arms is tactile and fun in a way the combat never quite achieves. The honest summary is this: World Seeker is a game split down the middle between a competent anime love letter and a generic open-world checklist. Critics landed around a 57 on Metacritic, Steam sits at 77 percent positive from fans - and that gap tells you everything. Invested One Piece fans tolerate the rough edges because the licensed content delivers. Anyone approaching this as a pure open-world action game will find the content thin and the mechanics dated even by 2019 standards. There is no new game plus, fast travel gets disabled late in the story in a way that drags the runtime, and the DLC characters add playtime without addressing the core repetition. Go in as a fan at a discount, keep your expectations pegged at "extended interactive episode" rather than "landmark game," and you will probably have a decent time. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamAnime LicensedSingle-Player StoryGrapple TraversalSkill TreeKarma SystemCel-ShadedStealth TakedownsOriginal Storyline

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
77%(6,185)

Game Info

Developer
GANBARION Co., Ltd.
Publisher
BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment
Release Date
Mar 14, 2019

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