One Piece fans may wonder who kills Pica after his fall during the Dressrosa arc. The truth is that nobody kills him. Instead, One Piece shows Pica being defeated in battle and then captured by the Marines. He remains alive, adding a realistic touch to the story’s sense of justice and consequences.
In One Piece, Pica is part of the Donquixote Pirates and works under Doflamingo. He has the Stone-Stone Fruit, which lets him control and become a stone. This means that he can transform into stone and can control anything composed of it.
This includes transforming an entire palace into a golem, as well as forming an enormous golem around himself. This all makes him a scary opponent because he can use the entire landscape of Dressrosa as a weapon, where he can strike from any direction.

In the Dressrosa arc, Monkey D. Luffy and Roronoa Zoro were running at the rampart tower B-1 when they came upon Pic. Zoro decided to stay back to hold Pica off while Luffy and Viola kept running upstairs. The battle climaxes when Pica goes to attack King Riku on the Old King’s Plateau in an attempt to kill him.
Zoro uses a clever risk-taking strategy. He is thrown toward Pica by Orlumbus, coats his swords with Armament Haki, and lands a powerful Ichidai Sanzen Daisen Sekai slash. That attack does critical work, cutting Pica cleanly in half and scattering his giant stone form. After a few more cuts, Pica’s real body comes out. Zoro slashes him, and Elizabello delivers a King Punch that shatters what remains of Pica’s stone shell.
In another place in Dressrosa, Luffy defeats Doflamingo, and as such, the Donquixote Pirates are completely defeated. Marines and Dressrosa’s allies quickly move in and subdue the crew. They place Pica in handcuffs and haul him off to prison. This confirms that he was captured, not killed.
Some fans are misled by how dramatic the battle was. Pica’s final stand looked brutal and final. When Zoro cuts through the stone and Pica steps out, covered in Haki, many think he has died. But One Piece doesn’t let villains fall just for spectacle. The story wants to show that justice can be served, not through execution, but through lawful punishment. Pica’s survival is part of that message.
The Underlying Themes in One Piece
In One Piece, this moment matters for several reasons. First, it shows Zoro’s growth. He decisively finished Pica, a powerful enemy, which shows how far he has come. It was a chance to highlight the power of his Haki and sword skills. Second, it reinforces the Straw Hats’ respect for life and order. They don’t kill defeated enemies; they let the Marines handle them.
The confusion over who kills Pica comes from the way the scene plays out. He is cut apart, falls, disappears, and then reappears battered. But no, One Piece never shows him dying. They were instead restrained using Sea Prism handcuffs and captured.

Pica gets what is coming to him, as is the case with most villains in the context of One Piece. His captain, Doflamingo, gets caught and imprisoned in place of being killed despite ruling as a tyrant in Dressrosa. This follows the formula of the series. No matter how bad a person is, the world’s justice system will meet them. It also allows these characters to return later as threats or cautionary tales.
Conclusion
So when someone asks, “Who kills Pica?” the direct answer is nobody. Zoro defeats him, and the Marines take him into custody. That is the true end of Pica’s journey in the Dressrosa arc. His defeat is complete, but his life continues under Marine control—and that’s how One Piece chooses to finish this chapter of the story.