Ooh, this is actually heating up right when I was expecting Egghead to start winding down and continue cutting off sources of tension. There was a point a year and a bit ago where the question might have been asked, ‘why this arc, on this island?’ If Oda is rushing to the finale, what does Egghead offer that Elbaf doesn’t, and what will it add to contribute to the macro-level plot? Up til now, aside from wrapping up stories for supporting cast members like Bonney and Kuma, it seemed that maybe the main thing here was getting the scientists in the party and setting up more Void Century teases to develop more later. Well I think now we’re getting the big thing that made Egghead unskippable.

But first we’ve got a Jump cover here, the latest in a long line of ‘Luffy is about to punch you’ covers, now in Gear Five form, and a very relaxed colour spread. Sure, why not give Uta another appearance in the manga. But what’s that going on between Reiju and Tashigi? But my favourite thing here is the dapper canines in the portraits in the background. Cute stuff.
Caribou’s scene feels like more of a recap than anything. I’m actually surprised to see him and the Blackbeard Pirates again so soon, I would have been satisfied if their time on Egghead wrapped up with the last chapter. Of course, there’s no chance they choose not to take him with them, even if Oda leaves it ambiguous.
Now, I’m not a firearms guy. I don’t live in one of those countries where you see them regularly. But is it just me or is Augur’s form with the rifle really bad here, with the stock all the way out the back. You’re meant to use that thing to brance for the recoil, right? So if he pulls the trigger this weird way he’s holding it, the whole thing just slips between his arms and goes flying backwards, wouldn’t it? I’ll accept corrections for anyone who does know guns on this point.

I love getting names for all the vice admirals here. It’s the details. Guillotine is still my favourite design of the batch.
The talk about taking back control of the Pacifistas by eliminating Bonney feels odd though. Is that how it works? So a person of equal rank in the hierarchy can’t override orders, but the death of the current top dog will let someone lower down cancel their standing orders? Pacifista control is a mess, and for all the ways Egghead has been a breath of fresh air post-Wano, it’s complicated contrivances like this that drag it down in the end-of-arc retrospective.
The giants’ meetup with Franky’s group has some interesting points. First: they don’t recognise Franky because his bounty picutre was changed to the Sunny’s figurehead. But that’s still weird. It can’t have been done just to set up this half-second misunderstanding. Franky’s ready to square up, making the at this point safe assumption they’ve come as enemies, which is great from him. We learn that Usopp’s been talking about his time with the giants to the crew since Franky joined. You have to assume that kind of offscreen bonding is happening, but it’s always nice getting the little confirmations of it.
Glad to see one of the weaponised sea beasts survived. And Bluegrass and Doll manage to look very cool riding it back to Egghead. I wonder if Doll’s connection to Saul is setting up a bigger arc or moment for her, or if it’s just an excuse to remind casual readers of his name.

Saturn is truly terrifying in his new form. That’s fantastic design. Even before Sanji points it out, you can see something is wrong with his eyes. That is one intense stare. And the fact that he doesn’t speak once in the whole chapter makes him feel all the more inhuman. What is this man now, if he’s still a man at all?
But where did Borsalino go after the last chapter’s standoff. Has there been a little offscreen clash with Luffy and Sanji he’s just retreated from? Was he forced to get out of the way as demon Saturn stampeded in? I’d rather have seen either of those things than releared what Caribou knows at the start of the chapter. It’s not a hard one to explain, but it still feels like a continuity glitch, which is frustrating. It came up during the ‘who fed Luffy’ discussions in the past week that Luffy’s position changes before and after the flashback, last seen in Franky’s hands going in, then lying a decent way away from the group with no apparent action taken by him or Franky after. If there was one thing you could absolutely say in the Onigashima battle’s favour, it’s that it was intricately and carefully mapped. We had the layout of the whole castle and knew where everyone was inside it. No one teleported from one side to another in a single page, they got at least a little bit of offscreen time to travel before popping up somewhere new. The attention to detail was a highlight there, which makes it all the more disappointing that this battle’s staging misses beats like this.
I can’t help feeling really bad for Vegapunk as he lays dying here. Not because I’m super personally invested in him, but just because it feels so wrong for the character design. He’s so goofy and cartoony with the apple head and forever-lolling tongue that he feels like he should be incompatible with blood. This guy should be giving me the tutorial of an edutainment game, not having his guts blasted out. Like a child, or a housepet, the apparent innocence makes it feel even crueller to attack him. (Apparent innocence only, we all know his morality is questionable at best given the horrors he enabled for the World Government.)

Borsalino getting to finish the job is a shock, and yeah, the monitor at the end does make me think the job is finished. Rough, and unexpected. I was better on Kuma’s death and Vegapunk’s rescue, but it looks like I got it the wrong way around. Luffy’s giant transformation is an awesome panel, with just the intensity you want for a moment like this. No notes. I also love the smaller panel of the page showing him from ground level, towering over the buildings. Would love a bigger and more detailed form of that next week please.
And then the stinger. Vegapunk seems to have set up a dead man switch with some big secrets. This is great. Perfect thing for the smartest man in the world to do, especially considering how long he’d been expecting an attempt on his life was coming. And it has the potential to be huge for the world. A turning point. Potentially the start of a war or several. I don’t think we’re getting the full Void Century here, of course, but it’s hard to imagine it playing out without at least one major reveal. And how will the Government respond? With the Buster Call running too slow, will Imu turn the Mother Flame on Egghead, triggering an escape sequence (and maybe cutting the exposition dump short because this is One Piece). The potential for this is huge. Huge.
I’m always happy to be getting three chapters in a row, but I’m so glad this one didn’t line up with a break. See you all next week when the bombs drop.

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