Final Fantasy 14: Dawntrail Is Like Playing a Great One Piece Game
Over ten years and four expansions Square Enix explored the story of two warring gods, Hydaelyn and Zodiark, and the fractured worlds created through that, coming to a climactic finish in Endwalker. How do you follow up a decade of storytelling that’s garnered tens of millions of fans in the process?
Final Fantasy 14’s answer is to do something drastically different with its newest expansion, Dawntrail, adopting a much lighter, more adventurous tone, tremendous visual changes, and introduces a new cast of characters. It’s still a Final Fantasy game through and through, but fascinatingly it feels like Dawntrail has drawn inspiration from another seminal, perpetually never-ending series: One Piece.
When Dawntrail was first announced director Naoki Yoshida described it as a “Summer Vacation” for the Warrior of Light, that is to say, your player character. And it spawned a running joke within the community that this was going to be the “beach arc” — a light-hearted “break” that takes the characters away from the main drama for a couple of episodes like you see in many anime. But it turns out those comparisons may not have been completely off-base as the further you dig into Dawntrail’s layers the more it starts to feel like a shonen anime like Dragon Ball, Naruto, and most importantly for our comparison, One Piece.
No other anime has captured the feeling of adventure quite like One Piece, and Eichiro Oda’s pirate epic has already been inspiring others for well over a decade. With that in mind, it feels like a natural line to draw for Dawntrail, an expansion that wants to move past the large world-hopping story of the last decade, and create something more grounded.
Dawntrail, at its core, is a story about its ensemble cast rather than you the player. In fact, your Warrior of Light isn’t even the protagonist in the latest expansion. That honor goes to a newcomer named Wuk Lamat who serves as the Luffy of this story. And the two share more than a few commonalities.
Wuk Lamat is a young starry-eyed hero who wants to make the world a better place and achieve her dream of becoming the ruler of the country of Tural, Dawntrail’s new setting. She’s inherently inexperienced and naive, but has a heart of gold, and most of Dawntrail’s story is about her learning to become a leader, while gathering a party of diverse allies in that process.
Both Wuk Lamat and Luffy have that happy-go-lucky attitude that makes them initially seem aloof, but the deeper layer underneath shows they’re willing to do absolutely anything for their friends. It’s fascinating to see Wuk Lamat’s growth mimic Luffy’s, transforming from an unpredictable wild card to a genuinely charismatic and compelling captain.
There are plenty of other parallels you can draw between the Scions and the Straw Hat crew, right down to the player filling the same role as Roronoa Zoro; the world-renowned legendary warrior who acts as a best friend and sidekick. But beyond just drawing those parallels, Dawntrail ensures that its peppy shonen story still feels deliberately Final Fantasy-esque.
While Dawntrail’s entire narrative structure is nearly exactly the same as those first few arcs in One Piece — travel to new lands, learn the local culture, and inevitably solve their problems, all while on the hunt for a legendary treasure — but the connective tissue is the themes at the heart of Dawnrail, which speak to what the game has done for years but on a larger scale.