Why did the author, Mr. Oda, make Zoro have no sense of direction?
Zoro always doesn’t know where he’s going.

You are persistently drawing.
Actually, Zoro is a character who relies on luck.

(Line: Leave it to luck)
When you get the sword in Logue Town, the entrance to the Grand Line, there is a famous scene where you say, “Let’s see which one is stronger with my luck.”


It’s no surprise that Zoro is a character trying his luck.
Zoro = Zoro eyes
Let’s take a look at Zoro’s family tree.

His father is Roronoa Arashi.
His grandfather was Roronoa Pinzoro.
Arashi is a game where you roll the dice, and the result of Chinchiro.
In short, it’s the same numbers.

Pinzoro means same numbers.
In Japanese, a double on a die is called a “Zorome”.
It can be said that Zorro’s name comes from gambling.

His grandmother, Furiko Shimotsuki, is also a pendulum, and his mother, Terra, is probably from Terra Sen (gambling entry fee).
By the way, in Thrillerburgh, the zombie with Zorro’s shadow in it, Gigoro, is also derived from Chinchiro’s Shigoro, so I’m sure it’s true.

In this way, Oda-sensei seems to have made the Pirate King’s right-hand man a gambler.
