I genuinely don’t understand why ZoLu isn’t the dominant M/M ship in the OP fandom.
My entry point into One Piece was the live action, and that led me straight into the manga (I’m around chapter 600 right now). So yes, I’m aware there’s still a lot I haven’t seen—but even with that caveat, the core dynamic between Zoro and Luffy feels incredibly clear, consistent, and narratively intentional.
Zoro is not just “loyal.” That word undersells it. His entire identity as a character gets reoriented the moment he decides to follow Luffy. This is a man whose dream is absolute—becoming the greatest swordsman in the world—and yet he willingly subordinates that dream to Luffy’s. Not abandons it, but ties it to Luffy’s success. If Luffy cannot become Pirate King, then Zoro’s own ambition becomes meaningless. That is not normal crew loyalty; that is devotion structured around another person’s existence.
And the story reinforces this again and again:
– Mihawk explicitly questions Zoro’s resolve, and Zoro answers not by reaffirming his own dream, but by asserting Luffy’s worth.
– Thriller Bark is the most obvious example: Zoro taking Luffy’s pain and choosing silence about it. Not for glory, not for recognition, but because protecting Luffy’s path matters more than being seen.
– Post–time skip, Zoro’s entire demeanor sharpens around Luffy’s role. He becomes stricter, less tolerant of failure—not out of ego, but because Luffy has to succeed.
Zoro does not orbit Luffy casually. He calibrates himself around him.
And that’s why the fandom tendency to default Zoro into a dynamic with Sanji feels… strange to me.
Because Zoro and Sanji are built on rivalry, contrast, and comedic antagonism. Their interactions are loud, reactive, and symmetrical. They push against each other. That’s fun, but it’s fundamentally different from what Zoro has with Luffy, which is quiet, unilateral, and deeply rooted in choice.
Also—being honest—Sanji as a character is consistently framed around a very specific, exaggerated heterosexuality. It’s not subtle, and it’s not incidental. Interpreting him as someone who would plausibly be in a romantic dynamic with Zoro requires overlooking a significant part of his established characterization.
Meanwhile, Zoro’s emotional axis is already occupied.
If One Piece were ever to introduce romance among the crew (which it almost certainly won’t), the relationship that feels most structurally supported—on Zoro’s side, at least—is with Luffy. Not because of isolated “moments,” but because of how Zoro’s motivations, sacrifices, and sense of purpose are written.
It’s not about chemistry in the usual fandom sense. It’s about narrative gravity.
Zoro doesn’t just believe in Luffy.
He chooses him, over and over, at the level of identity.