Why Does Sanji Have a Drawing Instead of a Photo on His First Wanted Poster?

The story behind the clumsy sketch on Sanji's first Wanted Poster: the Marine's kicked camera, the Vinsmoke escape, and the Whole Cake revelation.

Quick Answer

On his first Wanted Poster (77 million Berries), Sanji is depicted as a rough sketch rather than a photograph. The reason is simple: the Marine sent to photograph him had his camera smashed by one of Sanji’s kicks at the moment of the shot. Without a clear photo, the Marines published the poster with an approximate sketch drawn from memory — a clumsily drawn face bearing no resemblance to Sanji. This became one of the most iconic running gags in the series, until his Vinsmoke family ties were revealed at Whole Cake Island and his real photo was finally used.

Article written by the Wanted Store team — sources: One Piece manga vols. 1-110+ by Eiichiro Oda, Toei Animation anime, official SBS. Chapters 432–435, 802+, official SBS. Updated on April 26, 2026.

The Sanji sketch incident: what happened?

The incident takes place between the Enies Lobby and Thriller Bark arcs (chapters 432–435, vol. 45). After CP9’s defeat, the Marines issue updated bounties for the Straw Hats:

  • Luffy: 100M → 300M Berries
  • Zoro: 60M → 120M Berries
  • Robin: 79M → 80M Berries
  • Sanji: first bounty ever77M Berries… with a sketch

When the crew spots the poster in the newspaper, they are stunned: Sanji is depicted as a cartoonish scrawl that looks more like a tattooed frog than him. The reason revealed later: the Marine photographer had his camera destroyed by Sanji’s kick before the shutter clicked, and the Marines had to produce the poster from an approximate sketch drawn from memory.

The clumsy sketch in detail

The official sketch shows:

  • A flat and asymmetrical face
  • Bulging eyes with none of Sanji’s characteristic spiral eyebrow
  • A lopsided cigarette
  • A fictitious moustache added by the Marines’ artist
  • No resemblance whatsoever to the real Sanji

This sketch became a recurring gag throughout the series. Several characters (notably Boa Hancock at Sabaody) fail to recognise Sanji because of this poster when they later encounter him.

Why did Sanji “refuse” to be photographed?

Several interpretations coexist in the One Piece community:

Theory 1 — Protecting his family (the real reason)

Sanji is in fact Vinsmoke Sanji, son of Vinsmoke Judge, ruler of Germa 66. He fled his family at age 8 to become a free cook. An official photo would have allowed his family to track him down — so he deliberately sabotaged the shot. This theory is confirmed by the Whole Cake and Wano arcs.

Theory 2 — Guilt over being born a noble

Sanji rejects his aristocratic past. A photograph would make him identifiable as a “Vinsmoke”, destroying the cook’s identity he had built for himself. The sabotage is a declaration of rupture from his bloodline.

Theory 3 — Oda’s pure gag (also the real reason)

Eiichiro Oda confirmed in the SBS of vol. 46 that the primary reading is comedy. Sanji’s “unconscious refusal” to be photographed reflects his temperament: he prefers spontaneous flair over discipline. This is consistent with his character.

In reality, both reasons coexist: Oda planted a visual gag that turned out to be narratively justified 10 years later with the Vinsmoke revelation.

The Germa 66 context: the revelation 10 years later

In the Whole Cake Island arc (chapter 802+, vol. 81+), we learn that:

  • Sanji is the 3rd son of Vinsmoke Judge, king of Germa 66 (a militarised kingdom)
  • He has 4 brothers and 1 sister: Ichiji, Niji, Yonji and Reiju
  • His mother Sora sacrificed her life so he would keep his humanity (while his brothers are emotionless genetic modifications)
  • He fled Vinsmoke Castle at age 8 after a childhood of torment at the hands of his brothers
  • The forced marriage with Pudding (Charlotte family) is Judge’s opportunity to reclaim his son

The famous missing photo then makes complete sense: Sanji knew his family could locate him through the bounty, and he consciously or unconsciously sabotaged the identification.

The evolution of Sanji’s Wanted Posters

Arc Volume Bounty Image
Enies Lobby 45 77,000,000 Berry Clumsy sketch
Marineford 59 77,000,000 Berry Clumsy sketch (“Dead or Alive”)
Dressrosa 78 177,000,000 Berry Clumsy sketch
Whole Cake (before escape) 81 330,000,000 Berry Real photo — “Alive Only”
Wano 105 1,032,000,000 Berry Real photo

The appearance of the real photo at 330M Berries on the “Alive Only” poster (the “Dead or Alive” designation replaced by “Alive Only”) was forced by the Vinsmoke family, who wanted their son returned intact for the wedding. The “no photo” era lasted a whole decade of publication.

The cultural impact of the sketch

Sanji’s clumsy sketch has become:

  • A recurring meme in the One Piece community
  • A reference on several official merchandise items (T-shirts, mugs)
  • Paradoxically, one of the most recognisable posters in the series — precisely because of how wrong it is
  • The subject of several in-manga jokes (Hancock confusing Sanji with someone else, Crocodile commenting on it)

The official Sanji poster at Wanted Store features his current version (1.032 billion, real photo post-Wano), but collector versions of the clumsy sketch are available on request as personalised orders.

Why does this anecdote fascinate fans so much?

  1. It showcases Oda’s signature humour — a visual gag that becomes narratively profound
  2. It illuminates Sanji’s psychology — his identity crisis and rejection of nobility
  3. It reveals the sophistication of One Piece’s writing — an apparently trivial detail that makes sense 10 years later
  4. It is memorable — cited in every fandom guide without exception

FAQ — Sanji’s missing photo

Why is there a drawing instead of a photo on Sanji’s first Wanted Poster?

Because the Marine sent to photograph him had his camera destroyed by one of Sanji’s kicks before the shutter clicked. Without a clear photo, the Marines produced the poster from an approximate sketch drawn from memory.

Did Sanji deliberately sabotage his photo?

Implied but likely. His escape from the Vinsmoke family and his desire to remain anonymous make the sabotage fully consistent with his character. Oda confirmed it is both a gag and an intentional act.

When does Sanji’s real photo appear for the first time?

In the Whole Cake Island arc (chapter 812, vol. 81), with the 330-million Berry bounty and the “Alive Only” designation. It was imposed by his Vinsmoke family, who wanted him returned intact for the forced wedding.

Who is Sanji’s real family?

Sanji is Vinsmoke Sanji, 3rd son of Vinsmoke Judge, ruler of Germa 66. He has 3 genetically modified brothers (Ichiji, Niji, Yonji) and a sister (Reiju). His mother Sora died so he could keep his humanity.

Why did Sanji flee his family?

Because of the cruelty of Judge and his brothers. Genetically modified, he was supposed to become an emotionless soldier like his brothers, but his mother sabotaged the operation so he would retain his humanity. Abused by his brothers, he fled at age 8 to become a cook.

Does the clumsy sketch poster exist as a collector’s item?

Not in the standard official range, but Wanted Store can reproduce it as a personalised poster on request. It is a collector’s piece for hardcore fans.

Have other characters had “failed” posters too?

Yes, several cases:

  • Usopp‘s first poster is issued under the alias “Sogeking” with a mask, preventing his father Yasopp from recognising him
  • Chopper has a ridiculously low bounty of 1,000 Berries because the Marines see him as a pet animal
  • Robin as a child had a 79M bounty at age 8 — an absolute paradox

Further reading

Partagez cet article