Production quality wise, it is at the level of high school drama club. It seems like they spend more budget on the marketing and not on the production.[...] OPOI is a fail because they're 'moving' the acts on the manga (or anime) directly to the ice with minimum techs and limited acting skills (naturally, since these are skaters and not actors).
Sadly, yes.
For a high school drama club or for an amateur cosplay defile it would have been "cheers, good job" and everybody having fun because there is nothing more to expect. But for a professional show, it was below par.
Manga fans, especially, are so difficult to please. They have a certain image in mind when reading, and it sets an expectation on the other medium. Ice show is one, but it also happens a lot in manga-based animes. OTOH, for skating fans there might be too little skating for their taste? Yuzu (IMHO) has a more succesful approach on this adaptation. His programs are skating programs, influenced by elements from the game/anime he uses. Most of the praises I saw from the fans of the original works (Undertale, Final Fantasy, Persona, Steinsgate) are saying that Yuzu is obviously a fan of the works and has much respect to the original works. But then, his Ice Story and OPOI fell under different categories.
I agree that the excerpts made an impression that there was nothing interesting to see from pure skating perspective. But I didn't watch the full show, so I'd also agree on putting there a question mark

The hard-to-please manga fans actually paid some appreciation to OPOI - at least the fans of Sanji character (as it was noted above by
@KiraraChin ) However, here is a difference from Yuzuru's case. Yuzuru meant to show a tribute. Which he did in a best way possible for him and was recognized for doing so. OPOI on its part meant to adapt to ice a story. Which they ended up doing
very far from the best way possible. And it means that, as a manga fan, I am still not pleased
I wonder if OPOI will have more success if they use PIW's approach, when they are making individual programs inspired by the one theme: One Piece.
I don't like variety shows so I hope they won't do it

However, if this would be an alternative to a bad adaptation of an already bad adaptation of a story (which was Desert Princess the movie), then I vote "yes".
Can I just interject here to say that, even if this is true at international level, the situation is a lot more nuanced in Japan, especially at character level.
Yes, please, do interject! We urgently need someone who has actually seen the show!
There is absolutely no doubt that Koshiro Shimada's popularity exploded after he played Sanji, and the Sanji fandom (which is not exactly small) not only adopted him, but many started following FS because of him. Something similar happened to Kazuki Tomono, but in the opposite direction: his character (Koza), who is fairly minor in the OP universe, got a lot of attention and new fans because he was the one playing it - the producers said they expanded his participation in the finale in the second year because of this. I even saw some funny situations in the second year, such as 'came to see the rumoured Sanji, but fell for Koza'

It's not surprising that these two skaters were subsequently invited to perform in Hyoen, and consolidated their reputation as 'storytellers' on the ice. Hell, even I paid for the stream in the second year because they increased Kazuki's participation lol
This is really good news

We have not heard about mutually beneficial interference between show skating and competitive skating for... Shall I say, for decades? Even if it's limited to Japan, I can't view it otherwise than the development to the right direction.
What I felt personally is that the skaters in general did a good job and it was pretty cool to see the character's mannerisms, which are not exactly realistic, translated on the ice.
Exactly!

One of the reasons why manga translates well to anime but not to live action (i.e. I can't swallow the Netflix series, at least not yet

) is that manga characters have those larger-than-life mannerisms and faster-than-life moves that are not exactly realistic. And guess what, these qualities translate to ice
incredibly, unbelievably well!
What a shame that OPOI fell flat in storytelling and production. It could have been sensational.
I also felt that there was a 'kabuki-esque' quality that probably doesn't translate well internationally.
From my experience, Kabuki theater needs no translation. It's rather how you feel about it. If you like it, you just like it. It may be a matter of taste though. For me, Kabuki is definitely my cup of tea

and so is One Piece because I can see the influence of Kabuki imagery, or rather the influence of classical Japanese drawings of Kabuki characters, in Eiichiro Oda's drawing style. I can especially feel it in how the villains are depicted. But other figure skating fans might prefer more romanticized idea of beautiful, I don't know (maybe we should discuss it in Hyoen 2017 thread?...

)
So while I'm not completely disagreeing that they could have done more with OPOI, I also think it was not all doom and gloom.
Be it OPOI or something else, I'm praying for more manga on ice

I believe that both skating world and the world of popular culture needs it. Just... in better production quality next time
