Simply insane. Loki will destroy Elbaf and Luffy will save both of them. In today's video, I'm going to show you everything about all of this. So, go ahead and hit the like button. And without further ado, let's get into it. Loki was doomed before he even opened his eyes. A pair of serpentine irises was enough for his mother, Estrid, to consider him cursed. From light to the underworld, he was cast from the world of the sun directly into the icy depths of the atom tree Elbuff's abyss. This literal and symbolic fall was not just an act of maternal repulsion, but the materialization of a profound political move. The cursed prince, who survived his own mother's clutches, grew up without affection, isolated, rejected, and molded by stigma. And in that abandonment, fury was born. Loki was never just a villain. He is the personification of an orchestrated tragedy. In his search for approval and love, he turned a blind eye to the evil he suffered. But the wounded heart he hid still beat and beat strongly. Proof of this lies in his conversations with Kid, in his honest and raw relationship with Luffy and in his internal hesitations that little by little reveal a lost boy beneath the monster shell. He is the dragon that roars against the injustice of his existence. But is it really divine injustice or was it political manipulation? Everything points to an ancient conspiracy. The elders of Elbaf, beings who live at the top of the social hierarchy, even above the king, determined that the throne should be occupied by someone of pure blood, traditionalist, violent, and obedient. Therefore, they rejected Harold's marriage to Ida and imposed Estrid, a giantist of ancient lineage as the ideal queen. The intention was clear to produce the perfect heir forged by traditions molded to obedience. But when Estrid saw the serpent eyes in Loki, her instinct of disgust unraveled the plan. She cast him out and the elders surprised by the failure labeled him cursed. The rejection was no accident. It was the spark of a political error. Loki was then marked as the bearer of the curse. A symbol that fit perfectly into a narrative of isolation. Like the dragon Nidhog from Norse mythology, he began to gnaw at the roots of the world tree. Literally, he attacked the base of the atom tree just as Nidhog bites the roots of Ddrasil, foreshadowing Ragnarok. But what if the Ragnarok Loki represents isn't the definitive end? What if it's Ragnaroker, the twilight of the gods, an end that precedes the dawn? This is the big twist of the theory. The term Ragnarok has two readings. The best known represents the apocalyptic end of the gods. But the more poetic Ragnarok means twilight, the darkness before rebirth. And that's exactly what Loki embodies. He doesn't come to destroy the world absolutely, but to purify it through ruin. He is the shadow before the light. And the light of course is Luffy, the sun god, Na the liberator. Loki and Luffy then are not antagonists. They are poles of the same force. The first comes to destroy Elbuff's rotten system corrupted by an obsession with purity, strength, and obedience. The second comes to rebuild the world with joy, freedom, and acceptance. Loki's destruction prepares the fertile ground for the seed Luffy will plant. And this is more than a narrative coincidence. It's the synthesis of One Piece. Liberation comes after pain. The new world is only born when the old one is undone. Elbaf is the ideal battlefield for this. Divided into three layers: underworld hell, sunworld, Midgard, and celestial world Asgard, the island physically represents the world tree of Norse mythology. At the top live the elders, entities who assume the role of authoritarian, manipulative gods, shapers of the giant's destiny. In their eagerness for control, they manipulated marriages, inheritances, and even births. They rejected Loki's true mother, imposed the ideal queen, and when the plan failed, they turned the heir himself into a scapegoat. Harold, the diplomatic king, tried to resist. He had access to the book saved from O'Hara and possessed knowledge about the void century. He was not just a ruler, he was a reformer. He tried to guide Elbof to a more open, less belligerent path. And for that, he was fought by the elders and by the world government itself. Shanks's visit to Harold and Mary Yowwis before everything collapsed indicates that something much bigger was at stake. A secret plan, a warning, a strategy not revealed in time, and Emu reacted first. The blow was precise. They accused Loki of Patricside, a crime that would seal his definitive downfall, but the plan failed. Loki exploded in violence and destroyed the constructed narrative. He killed all who tried to manipulate him. The resulting chaos was the trigger for the collapse. However, more than a blind reaction, Loki's fury was the spark that destroyed Elbuff's millennial lie. He went from curse to vigilante, from plague to prophet. At this point, Luffy enters. The Straw Hat captain, as always, sees people for who they are, not for what others say about them. Even with Hyruen recounting Loki's entire past, Luffy doesn't judge him. He recognizes the same brilliance, the same pain he saw in other renegades like Niko, Robin, Trafalar, Law, Yamato. He senses the hidden kindness and it is this gaze that will save Loki. Luffy will be the only one capable of reaching out and making the cursed prince accept salvation. And in this act, the drums of liberation will sound for him too. Kid most likely Adah was always silently by Loki's side. Even rejected as queen, even politically sidelined, she kept the flame of empathy alive. Unlike Estrid, Ida never denied her humanity, never turned away from the weakest. And in the end, it will be this connection of wounded souls that will allow Loki to find redemption. Luffy, Ida, and Kid, the trio that will break the chains binding Loki to the past. Loki doesn't need to be loved to be forgiven. He just needs to be understood. One Piece shows us that the greatest revolutions begin with the rejected with those who even cast into darkness remain alive. Loki represents this. the dragon who fell from the sky to become king of hell and who now ascends not to reign but to destroy Elbuff's lies not as a villain but as a liberator in the end the theory proposes that Loki needs to destroy Elbuff so that Luffy can liberate it a cycle of end and beginning a dance between twilight and dawn the end of the world doesn't have to be the end just as the blue planet itself has gone through three apocalypses according to Harley's texts ruin can just be another turn for the light. Loki will come first. Luffy will come after. And together they will bring the new day. Because twilight comes before dawn. And this time, Elbuff will wake up. Loki's path to redemption won't be simple. And the true confrontation is yet to come. The destruction of Elbuff won't just be physical, it will be symbolic. What needs to fall is the social structure that supports the elders, a system built on blood purity, purposeless wars, and traditions corroded by pride. And that's precisely where Ida comes in as a central piece. Her story isn't just that of a rejected queen. It's that of a woman who was deprived of everything but never abandon her faith in a different future. Ida represents the elbuff that doesn't kneel to brute force. She is diplomacy, intelligence, and compassion. And now with time passing and the board shifting, she begins to reclaim her role beside Loki, not as a mentor, but as a soulmother kid. The figure who guided Loki's heart, even from afar, was always her. While Estra delivered her son to the underworld, Ida pulled him back with words, invisible presence, and unconditional love. And it is this connection that will prevent him from falling completely into darkness. The relationship between Loki and Ida is the inverted mirror of the elers's plan. While they created a system to mold violent and submissive kings, Ida saw value in a wounded prince. And her stance will be crucial in uniting the remaining forces in Elbaf. those who reject the oppressive dominion of the elders and the world government. After all, she knows the past, knows the pain of exclusion, and most importantly, she knows the truth about the elders original plan and Loki's birth. If the elders represent the gods from high above Elbuff, Loki's ascent will be the moment when an infernal, one who lived in the underworld, challenges the heavens. And it won't be out of pure revenge, but for justice. The silhouettes revealed in chapter 1153 show a council that presumes to decide even who can love whom that molds alliances based on lineage and that manipulates the birth of kings as if they were chess pieces. Their world needs to fall and Loki will be the fall. But he won't do it alone. Luffy the Liberator is directly linked to the outcome. The meeting between the two was not by chance. It was destiny. Luffy as always sees beyond the surface. He recognized in Loki a pain similar to that of so many others he welcomed into his crew. Niko Robin's anger, Trafalgar Law's despair, Jinbe's loneliness, Frankie's pride. All of them found unconditional acceptance in Luffy's eyes. And Loki for the first time found that too. However, the path to the union of these two will be turbulent. The elders are not dead. Although Yaru has fallen, there are still figures at the top of Elbuff with political, spiritual, and symbolic power. And this is where a new element of the theory comes in. The elders of the celestial world who haven't been directly shown yet could be local versions of the five elders, immortal beings linked to the world tree who influenced the destiny of the island and perhaps the entire world. And if Loki's devil fruit is truly the habuhabu nomi mythical Zoan Nidhog, then his mission is not to destroy out of hatred, but to fulfill the tree's own cycle of rebirth. This cycle of destruction and rebirth is part of One Piece's cosmology. Just as Joy Boy failed in the past and Luffy came to complete what was lost, Loki can be the herald of the necessary collapse for something new to emerge. And the something new is not just the liberation of Elbuff. It's the unification of the world, the definitive breaking of the division between humans, giants, fishmen, minks, and all other races. And it is in this scenario that the secret of O'Hara and the Forbidden Books re-enter the scene. The connection between Saul, the O'Hara books, and Harold is more than symbolic. Harold, who was apparently killed by Loki, was a diplomat and reformer. If he had access to the truth, he knew about the void century. And perhaps knowing that his downfall was inevitable, he planted seeds for change in his renegade son. Loki may carry, in addition to the dragon stigma, the inheritance of true knowledge, and this would make him a threat to both the elders and the world government. Shanks's role in this game also deserves attention. The mysterious visit to Harold and Mary Joe never explained now gains new weight. Red-haired Shanks knew something. Perhaps he tried to warn Harold or even collaborate with him. Shanks always acted in the shadows, and perhaps this was his final attempt to prevent the escalation of an all-out war, but it was too late. Emu acted first, and now with the world government's plan collapsing at Loki's hands, the true war is about to begin. The next step in the plot may involve Loki's rise as a revolutionary symbol. No longer the monster, the cursed one, but the herald of a new era, and alongside Luffy, his journey will be one of reconstruction. The two together can represent the two sides of freedom. Loki, the god of destruction, Luffy, the god of liberation. One breaks the chains, the other shows the way to walk without them. The destruction of Elbaf doesn't mean the annihilation of the island or its people. It means the end of the lie, the fall of false gods, the collapse of the ancient aristocracy, the liberation of the giants from the weight of the past. Elbuff, the land that worshiped strength above all else, will see that its greatest strength has always been in the hearts of its outcasts. And Loki will be the first king who won't rule with hatred but with compassion because that's what was denied to him and that's what he will learn from Luffy. Loki's narrative at its core is the story of everyone who has ever been sidelined for being different, for not meeting expectations, for not fitting in. And it is also the final message of One Piece. It doesn't matter how you were born. What matters is what you choose to be. And when the world tree burns, new life sprouts from the fire. Loki, by assuming the role of Nidhog, ceases to be merely a tragic character. He becomes the herald of the end of an era, not by his own will, but out of necessity. The destruction he will bring, symbolically represented by his bite at the roots of the atom tree, is the collapse of everything Elbaf believed to be sacred. It's no coincidence that the tree links to Idrasil from Norse mythology, nor that Nidhog is the one who gnaws at its foundations. Loki as a cursed being was the victim. But now he will be the agent of collapse. Behind all this, what is being built is an ideological clash. Old Elba versus new Elbof. On one side, the elders who for centuries have kept alive the tradition of pure blood, brutal force, and loyalty to a rotten past. On the other, a renegade prince who, even marked by hatred and violence, still carries a heart seeking justice. And by his side, the man who dances with freedom, Luffy. They are not just allies. They are complimentary. One deconstructs, the other reconstructs. The mythology used to support this theory is not just an aesthetic reference. The use of the two variations of the term Ragnarok, the traditional Ragnarok and Ragnarok is not casual. If Oda is basing himself on the second interpretation, as the video suggests, Elbuff's apocalypse will not be instantaneous. It will be a process, a slow darkening of the firmament before the new sun rises. And that new sun has a name, monkey d Luffy. Therefore, the moment Loki states he will destroy the world should not be read as a literal threat. He wants to destroy the world as it is a world that rejected him that pushed him into darkness. But ironically, the one who will reach out to him will be the same world he hates in the form of Luffy. The great paradox of One Piece. The worst enemies can be the best allies if there is understanding. It's also important to understand the role of Elbaf's three planes. The underworld hell, the world of the sun, the surface, and the celestial world heavens. Oda constructed this geography with a clear purpose. Loki's journey is vertical. He leaves the underworld, climbs the roots, and reaches the heavens. It is literally the opposite of the gods fall. He ascends while those above fall. It is the rebirth of the world from darkness. And more than that, Elbof's underworld is a metaphor for everything the world government and the elders wanted to hide. Loki was buried with the secrets with the beasts with oblivion. But he returned, and he didn't return empty-handed. If his devil fruit is indeed the Habuhabunomi Nidhog model, he carries the memory of the ancient world in his body. He is the living memory of what the heavens tried to erase, and that is a powerful symbol. The presence of Elbaf's celestial gods has not yet been fully revealed, but the clues are clear. Just as the world nobles reign in Mary Yoaz, there are entities at the top of the tree who have controlled Elbof's destiny for centuries. They are reflections of the five elders, perhaps even directly related. And if Oda follows the narrative mirror, Luffy and Loki together will need to ascend there to face the true rulers, not of Elba, but of global manipulation. And in this scenario, the figure of Saul in the O'Hara books returned with force. The attack on O'Hara was not just a massacre. It was a desperate effort to keep the past buried. But Saul, by preserving the books and taking them to Elbuff, planted the seed of the world government's destruction. Harold had access to these books. He knew he tried to resist with diplomacy and failed. Loki, on the other hand, will not be a diplomat. He will be fire. The fire that will consume the foundations of the gods. More than that, if the Aara books with all the truth about the void century, the pornoglyphs and the D are in Elbuff, the center of the world may have shifted without Emu realizing it. The final war will not begin in Mary Joe, but in the giant's kingdom, and this makes narrative sense. Elbaf has always been presented as the land of absolute strength, but its true strength is not in its armies. It's in the truth buried in its branches, in its roots. And in this context, Luffy's role becomes even more crucial. He will be the intermediary between the two eras. While carrying Joy Boy's will and the laughter that breaks chains, he has the sensitivity to see something in Loki that the entire world decided to ignore. It's not the first time Luffy has freed someone from their own darkness. He did it with Nikico Robin, with Trafalgar Law, with Bentham, Mr. 2 Bon Clay, with Yamato, and now it will be with the destroyer himself. What makes this theory so strong is that it respects One Piece's DNA. Oda has always treated monsters with humanity. Whenever someone was cast aside, it was because they carried what the world feared most, freedom, and Loki represents that. He is the cry that went unheard. And now with Luffy by his side, that cry will be amplified to the canopy of the world tree. The big turning point will be when the people of Elbuff begin to perceive the truth. when the giants themselves realize they were manipulated by an elite that preferred to sacrifice a baby rather than challenge the imposed order. And at that moment, Elbuff will crumble, but not in flames. It will crumble in consciousness. The gods will fall because no one will believe in them anymore. And finally, we return to the most beautiful metaphor of this entire theory. Twilight Ragnarok is not total destruction. It is the last shadow before the first ray of sunshine. And if Loki is Nidhog, the one who brings darkness, Luffy is the son that rises right after. Together, they will not only save Elbof, they will transform it. Luffy isn't just the protagonist of One Piece. He is the catalyst for change, the breaking point the entire world needs. And in Elbof, more than ever, his presence will not just be an adventure or another island on the map. It will be the definitive collision between past and future. Loki's tragedy, the elders's corruption, the secrets buried in the treere's roots. Everything will find redemption in the hands of the one who carries Joy Boy's smile, the man who laughs in the midst of chaos, Monkey D. Luffy. Luffy has always had the gift of seeing beyond appearances. From the beginning, he never let himself be swayed by reputations, stories, or legends. He saw value in Nikico Robin when the whole world called her a demon. He trusted Trafalgar law even though he was a pirate of the worst generation. And now facing a cursed prince, accused of patraside, hated by the giants, imprisoned for 6 years, he saw something pure. And that changes everything. The relationship between Luffy and Loki is not accidental. It's built from the first glance. Luffy didn't hesitate to treat Loki as an equal. He didn't fear him, nor did he judge him. On the contrary, he found him interesting. And that simple gesture is everything Loki never had. For the first time, someone looked at him without fear, without repulsion, without condemnation. This is one piece. It's about the freedom to be oneself without being crushed by traditions, expectations, or judgments. Therefore, Loki's salvation will not be achieved by force. It will not be a fight against him. It will be a fight alongside him. Luffy is not the hero who defeats the villain. He is the hero who transforms the villain into an ally, who shows a new path, who tears off the blindfolds Loki placed over his own eyes. Because just as Na danced and smiled to free the enslaved, Luffy dances with chaos to free even those who were made to destroy. And when Loki is about to sink everything, to reduce Elbof to ashes, to bite the roots of the tree one last time, it will be Luffy who stops him. Not with a blow, but with a word, a gesture, a hug. Like he did with Nico Robin when she said, "I want to live." Like he did with Yamato when he said, "Be whatever you want to be." Like he did with Port Casty Ace when he yelled, "I came to save you." He will do that with Loki. And there in the darkest moment, the first ray of the new sun will emerge. Elbaf's liberation, therefore, will not come from force. It will come from consciousness. Luffy with his insane charisma and his ability to inspire even the most hardened will break the elders lies. He will not destroy Elbuff. He will reveal it. He will show the people that the true monsters were at the top of the tree. That the cursed prince was just a rejected child that the world needs to change. Oda has always used the contrast between light and darkness. But Luffy isn't just the light. He is the one who invades the darkness, laughs, and transforms it. Loki with his Nidhog symbolism is the night. But even the night must end, and Luffy's laughter will be the sound that announces that end. The drums of liberation, which have already echoed in Enie's lobby, Dress Rosa, and now in Egghhead, will resound in Elbuff and will shake even the highest branches of the world tree. And it won't just be Loki who is saved. It will be an entire people. The giants of Elbof, trapped for centuries by their archaic traditions, will see in that small pirate something that not even the gods could give them freedom. They will see the difference between power and inspiration, between fear and respect, between control and joy. Luffy will not take the throne, but he will make it so no one needs a throne anymore. Usopp, the liar who always dreamed of being a warrior of Elbaf, will also find his truth there. He will see that he doesn't need to become like the ancient giants. He just needs to continue by the side of the one who changes everything he touches. And along with him, Nami, Rorinoa, Zoro, Vinsmoke, Sanji, and all the straw hats will be part of this change. Each tearing down an invisible wall, prejudice, tradition, fear, resentment. The final salvation of Elbof will be a new kind of conquest, not based on violence, but on truth. And when the O'Hara books are finally revealed to everyone, it will be Luffy, the one who has never read anything in his life, who will understand them best because he feels he acts from the heart. And this heart inflamed by the desire for freedom is what will make Elbof the first great kingdom to break free from the chains of the world government. The end of this arc will be epic, but also human. Loki with eyes free will see the sun for the first time without having to hide. He will see that destroying the world is not the only way to heal pain. Sometimes it's enough to start over. And it will be Luffy, the man who brings the dawn, who will give him that chance. Because in One Piece, the world doesn't end in destruction. It restarts in laughter, in parties, in companionship, in freedom. And this freedom, which the elders feared so much, will come to Elbuff. Not as an army, but as a kid in a straw hat, a smile on his face, and the strongest heart in the world. And then, at the height of chaos, when the roots of the atom tree tremble under the roar of Loki's fury, it will be Luffy who extends his hand, not with fear, nor with judgment, but with that simple, pure gaze that has saved so many before. He will see beyond the rage, beyond the curse, beyond the stigma. And in that moment, Loki, who spent a lifetime trying to be seen, will finally be seen. Not as a monster, not as a rejected prince, but as someone worthy of being saved. This scene will not just be symbolic. It will be the landmark of the new world. One where children are not defined by blood and kings do not rule by force. Loki's reconciliation with his origin, with his past, with the people who cursed him, will happen with the support of Luffy and the Straw Hats. The island of Elbuff will not be destroyed. It will be recreated. The Ragnarok that Loki carries, the twilight of the gods, will only be the end of the old world to make way for the new day. In the end, it will be as Joy Boy wished. Loki and Luffy's story will be another melody in the drums of liberation. one that will echo beyond Elbuff, reaching the sky of Skypia, the seas of the new world, the ruins of O'Hara, and even the empty throne in Mary Joas. Because Luffy's message that everyone has the right to be free, to change, to forgive themselves will be the spark of the greatest fire the world has ever seen, the revolution of hope. And so when the sun rises over Elbof once again, it won't just be the day beginning. It will be a new era. An era where Loki, once called cursed, will walk alongside the man who carries the smile of freedom. And on this journey, the whole world will begin to break free from the chains that have bound it for 800 years. Because Luffy doesn't just save people, he saves futures. And that is precisely why the encounter between Loki and Luffy is not just an interaction between two characters. It is the encounter between shadow and light, between the weight of the past and the promise of tomorrow. While Loki represents everything that has been distorted by centuries of tradition and pain, Luffy represents the breaking of those chains. By saving Loki, Luffy breaks the curse Elbaf imposed on itself, revealing that even the most feared can find redemption when someone believes in them. In the end, it will be Luffy's unwavering faith. His ability to change hearts with a smile and a meaningful punch that will make Elbuff's rebirth possible. And when the drums of liberation play once more, they will not sound only for the fall of an enemy, but for the birth of a new ally. Loki will be more than a redeemed prince. He will be the symbol that no one is born condemned, and that the sun can always shine for those who had the courage to survive the night. But comment what you thought about all of this, and don't forget to like the video. Thank you all so much for your support and until next