Logan Paul’s $500K One Piece Manga Purchase Triggers IShowSpeed
Photo Credit: Ethan Miller/Getty Images Sport via Getty Images

Logan Paul’s $500K One Piece Manga Purchase Triggers IShowSpeed

Logan Paul and IShowSpeed‘s feud continues to intensify. It all started at WrestleMania 42 when the two were paired up. Paul snapped at Speed after they lost the match, leading to endless chaos. Recently, he also slammed him on his podcast, calling the 21-year-old a “liability.” Now, the young influencer is hitting back at Paul under his post about the One Piece manga.

Logan Paul’s recent manga purchase gets called out by IShowSpeed

IShowSpeed reacted to Logan Paul flaunting his collection of One Piece and Dragon Ball. The 31-year-old wrote on his X (formerly Twitter) post, “Proud owner of the greatest Mangas in the world (imo). One Piece Chapter One 9.0 (second highest grade in existence, pop 3). First canon appearance of Monkey D. Luffy. One Piece is the #1 selling Manga in the world at 600M+ copies sold.”

He further added, “Dragon Ball Chapter One 9.2 (highest grade in existence, pop 1) purchased for a record $550,000. First appearance of Goku & Bulma. The Manga journey has begun…”

However, IShowSpeed dropped a cheeky comment, “you don’t even know sh** about one piece.” Talking about Speed and Paul’s feud, it started during a six-man tag team match at WrestleMania 42. The duo teamed up against The Usos and LA Knight.

The match turned out to be a mess with Speed failing to keep pace in the setting. Following the loss, Paul lashed out at him, but things took an interesting turn with The Usos and LA Knight intervening to help Speed. Thus, Speed succeeded in turning the tables on the wrestler.

Following their argument, Paul called out the influencer on his Impaulsive podcast. “He used to be my guy…He put me through a table today,” Paul said. The father of one continued, “He turned the tables on my table…stabbed me in the back, which is crazy because I taught him everything he knows about.”

Paul also felt that Speed should have been an asset to the team, not a liability. Nevertheless, he admitted he went too far in the argument. “Now that we are talking about it, I think I am in the wrong here. I’ll take accountability,” Paul noted.

Originally reported by Ritika Singh on Mandatory.

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