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One Piece will be undergoing a massive schedule change for the first time in the anime’s nearly three decade history, and with it is about to change how anime is made forever. One Piece is one of the last major franchises that had been sticking with the weekly anime release schedule from Shonen Jump’s past, and now that it’s moving over to a seasonal release schedule it’s a mark of a whole new era. Anime just won’t be made the same way it used to be before, and it’s for the better.
One Piece’s Change Means Weekly Anime are a Thing of the Past

While there are still a few anime franchises out there producing new episodes on a weekly basis, One Piece was the final of the Shonen Jump franchises still carrying that flag of the past era. It used to be that every series that came out of the magazine was meant to hit with a weekly anime release. It was both serving as support for the new chapters of the manga also releasing on a weekly basis, but also fed a cycle that moved everything forward. But as fans have noticed over the decades, this schedule came with its fair share of problems.
It was an unsustainable model where the team behind the anime not only needed to provide a new episode every week, but also needed to do so at a pace where it didn’t catch up too closely to where the manga currently was. This lead to lots of these shows needing to craft a lot of original material to buy time for the story, but also sometimes having hiccups in their production cycle that led to sudden breaks and more. And as fans had seen with One Piece, the anime’s level had gotten to such a high point that its demands had grown intensely too.
It even needed to take a six month break that it returned from earlier this Spring, but now it’s moving towards an entirely new seasonal schedule in 2026 and beyond. 26 episodes will be seen each year with multiple month breaks in between, and that’s exactly what fans have seen with other more modern Shonen Jump franchises like My Hero Academia, Jujutsu Kaisen, and much more. One Piece is joining its more modern compatriots when it comes to anime, and that’s truly the end of the era.









