Overview

LEGO One Piece launched in August 2025, timed to the global success of Netflix's live-action adaptation of Eiichiro Oda's legendary manga series. The first wave of five sets covered the East Blue saga — the opening arc of the One Piece story — and introduced the complete Straw Hat Pirates crew as minifigures for the first time: Luffy, Zoro, Nami, Usopp, and Sanji, alongside key early antagonists including Arlong, Buggy the Clown, and Dracule Mihawk. The wave was completed by two BrickHeadz releases and the flagship Baratie Floating Restaurant — a premium 18+ set housing ten minifigures and designed explicitly for adult collector display. A second wave launches in August 2026, covering the Baroque Works arc and Drum Island storylines from Season 2 of the Netflix series. It introduces Tony Tony Chopper as a new character — in a custom intermediate-scale figure body developed specifically for the character — alongside Nefertari Vivi, Smoker, Miss All Sunday, and other new cast members. At the time of writing, the One Piece theme is one of the most actively expanding in the LEGO licensed catalogue. The source material gives this theme an exceptional foundation. One Piece is the best-selling manga series in history, with a global fanbase spanning decades and a Netflix adaptation that has introduced the property to millions of new viewers. The LEGO partnership is the first major LEGO anime collaboration of its kind.

Characters15
Minifigures25
Sets12
First Release2025
Theme StatusActive

Key Characters in the One Piece Theme

The One Piece roster to date covers the complete Straw Hat Pirates crew — Luffy, Zoro, Nami, Usopp, Sanji — plus Shanks, Mihawk, Arlong, Buggy the Clown, Garp, and a growing supporting cast from Season 2 including Chopper, Vivi, Smoker, and Miss All Sunday. It’s worth noting that even though this theme is in its early years, characters like Monkey D Luffy already have multiple variants. It’s worth considering this when gauging current and future minifigure values.

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Largest Sets by Piece Count in the One Piece Theme

LEGO One Piece launched in August 2025 with five sets covering the East Blue saga, anchored by the premium 3,402-piece 75640 - The Baratie Floating Restaurant. A second wave of seven sets covering Season 2 — Baroque Works and Drum Island arcs — launched in August 2026. The price range spans from entry-level village sets like 75636 - Windmill Village Hut to the adult-targeted 75640 - The Baratie Floating Restaurant at £259.99 RRP.

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Notable Minifigures

The secondary market for One Piece figures is too new to produce a settled price picture — but the structural collector opportunities are already identifiable. OP017 - Dracule Mihawk, exclusive to the premium Baratie set, carries both single-set distribution and the premium-set supply constraint that historically produces strong post-retirement appreciation. OP023 - Zeff also falls into this bucket for the same reason and as such, these are the two figures most worth tracking as the theme matures.

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Collectability & Investment Insights

One Piece is too new for a meaningful secondary market picture — the first wave has been live for less than a year and the second wave hasn't launched yet. Collector intelligence here is necessarily forward-looking: the conditions for future appreciation are visible, but the data to confirm them isn't yet. The most important structural observation is the connection between LEGO One Piece and the Netflix live-action series rather than the source anime. That distinction matters. The LEGO sets are adapting the Netflix show's visual language, which means character selection and costume designs track the series' production schedule rather than the 1,000+ chapters of the manga. Characters who don't appear in the Netflix adaptation won't appear in LEGO form under the current licence, which creates natural scarcity for characters the show eventually reaches but covers in a single short arc. Luffy variant inflation is the primary risk to monitor. He appears in every set across both waves and accumulates costume variants rapidly — four distinct versions appear in the 2026 wave alone. That trajectory will progressively suppress his Character Exclusivity score and may eventually depress secondary market prices for common Luffy variants. The collector opportunity sits with supporting and villain characters distributed across single sets: Shanks, available exclusively in the small entry-level Windmill Village Hut; Mihawk, exclusive to the premium Baratie; the 2026 villain figures distributed across individual sets within the new wave. These are the figures where single-set distribution and strong character significance from the source material converge — and they're the positions most worth tracking as the theme matures.

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