One Piece Chapter 1162 delivers yet another bombshell in Oda’s ever-expanding lore, this time solidifying Rocks D. Xebec as not just a monstrous Haki user and charismatic pirate, but a swordsman of godlike caliber. The chapter pushes the myth of Rocks beyond leadership and ideology, cementing him as a man who stood on par with legends like Mihawk and Shanks long before the current age of piracy even began.
From the moment the chapter opens, One Piece Chapter 1162 wastes no time proving why Rocks was the most feared man of his era. While chaos reigns across God Valley, the chapter shows Rocks single-handedly dismantling the demonic remnants of the Davy Family, warriors who were transformed by Imu’s mysterious “Domain Reversy” power.

These opponents in One Piece Chapter 1162 weren’t ordinary foes; they were enhanced beings linked to divine or cursed energy, yet Rocks D. Xebec carves through them with terrifying precision. The narration implies that his strikes were so powerful that they bypassed regeneration abilities granted by Imu, something only the strongest Haki and blade users could ever accomplish.
This alone speaks volumes: to slice through demonic resilience without a named sword technique or Devil Fruit suggests his raw swordsmanship and Haki were intertwined at an incomprehensible level. His control of Conqueror’s Haki through his swordsmanship evokes imagery that fans usually reserve for the likes of Roger or Mihawk.
The God Valley clash: Rocks’ sword divides an island in One Piece Chapter 1162

Perhaps the most jaw-dropping revelation from One Piece Chapter 1162 is confirmation that Rocks once clashed blades with Harald of Elbaph, and their duel split an island in half. This fight, occurring years before the God Valley Incident, is retold in flashback segments throughout the chapter.
The brief recount paints a vivid picture: Rocks, during a chaotic Levely, finds himself face-to-face with King Harald, one of the most revered warriors among giants. Their confrontation is not just a brawl but a seismic event; their sword strikes create shockwaves spanning five kilometers, cutting through the Red Line’s very edge.
That feat alone places Rocks among the greatest swordsmen to ever live. Only characters like Mihawk, Shanks, and Roger have displayed the ability to shape the environment so dramatically through swordsmanship alone. The fact that this battle occurred decades before any of them reached their prime implies that Rocks was the prototype for all modern greats.
Even more fascinating is how Harald, despite being a proud warrior, later acknowledges Rocks’ strength as something beyond comprehension. For a giant king known for his raw power to respect a human swordsman’s might, that says everything.
Rocks’ fighting philosophy and haki mastery

What separates Rocks from other legendary swordsmen isn’t just his power, but his philosophy. As One Piece Chapter 1162 shows, Rocks never fought for glory, titles, or even recognition. His blade served as an extension of his will, his desire to tear down a corrupt world. Unlike Mihawk, who seeks the thrill of challenge, or Zoro, who aims for mastery, Rocks wielded his sword with rebellion in his veins.
He demonstrates the ability to fuse advanced Conqueror’s Haki into every strike, a feat that only the likes of Roger and Shanks have displayed. When Rocks’ sword clashed against Harald’s, the surrounding sea erupted, echoing the “splitting the heavens” phenomenon we later see between Yonko.
It’s poetic, really. The foundations of swordsmanship that modern greats like Shanks and Mihawk embody were perhaps inherited from Rocks’ forgotten era. He was a man who could match the best bladesmen and inspire the strongest pirates to follow him: Kaido, Whitebeard, Big Mom, and even Shiki.
One Piece Chapter 1162 doesn’t just expand the God Valley Incident; it redefines the hierarchy of power in the One Piece universe. Rocks D. Xebec was not merely a conqueror or revolutionary; he was a warrior whose blade rivaled the gods. His fight with Harald proves he possessed both technique and spirit on par with history’s greatest swordsmen.