Read One Piece Manga Manga Free Chapter 1162 On MangaRoyale, Catch the latest manga releases chapter with high-quality images. Online read NOW! One Piece Chapter 1,162, titled “G·V·B·R (God Valley Battle Royal),” is a whirlwind of action, emotion, and jaw-dropping reveals that cement Eiichiro Oda’s knack for weaving chaotic battlefields with deep character moments. This chapter dives headfirst into the legendary God Valley Incident, delivering a spectacle that feels both nostalgic and groundbreaking. As a longtime fan, I found myself glued to every panel, marveling at how Oda balances a sprawling cast, high-stakes drama, and tantalizing lore drops.The chapter opens with a brief but charming glimpse into Yamato’s ongoing journey in Wano, as seen in the cover story, Ogre Child Yamato's Golden Harvest Surrogate Pilgrimage. Seeing Yamato, Momonosuke, Kinemon, and Ulti strolling through the Flower Capital offers a wholesome breather before the chaos of God Valley unfolds. It’s a small touch, but it reminds us of the vibrant world beyond the flashback, grounding the stakes of the past in the presentGBack in God Valley, the narrative wastes no time plunging us into the thick of the battle. Rayleigh’s desperate escape with Shakky sets a tense tone, with Shiki’s intervention adding a layer of moral ambiguity to the pirate frenzy. The image of pirates scrambling for treasure while civilians lie dead in the background is haunting, and Garp’s shock at the carnage underscores his humanity in a way that hits hard. His call to Sengoku, questioning if the Marines knew about the slaughter, plants seeds of distrust that ripple through the story.The heart of the chapter lies with Rocks D. Xebec, who emerges as a tragic, multifaceted figure. His frantic escape with Eris and a young Teach is gripping, not just for the action but for the emotional weight. Eris’s resolve to protect Teach, even at the cost of her own life, is a gut-punch. Her declaration that she’d rather die than be captured, coupled with her faith in reuniting with Rocks in “Lulusia,” is a poignant moment that humanizes the Davy Clan’s doomed fate. Oda excels here, making us care about characters we’ve only just met
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That aside, just glad we got some insight.. all this SENGOKU is a liar nonsense, or Garp not caring, and every Marine is a liar, surely that puts that all to rest, but I am probably being stupidly optimistic. At least I can move on from that, I don't care what the others think, they can bask in their ignorance and try to maintain some idea Garp is evil just to cope.
ReplyDeleteOut of the way now, if there's anyone I have more concerns about in the Marine, someone who legitimately deserves backlash depending on the amount of information we have, it's Kong and Sengoku especially. Dude authorised and went ahead with:
Ohara - one of the greatest crimes against humanity outside of the Void Century.
Told Saul to follow orders regardless.
Sengoku saved Corazon and developed him into a great soldier looking to stop Pirates. The dude resigned after Marineford because the WG told him to keep the Impel Down escapees a secret - so we know he has morals.
I always thought he knew what happened in Ohara, and why... BUT.... I'm questioning.
Saul said he's the one going to be taking lives at Ohara, he wants proof from Sengoku they're evil. Sengoku simply said just shut up and obey, do you think the WG is wrong?
Can be taken in 2 ways:
Is Sengoku uncaring?
Or is he lied to and believes they were legitimately evil?
If anyone has to be on fraud-watch, it's Sengoku. He has shown morals, but the Ohara one is his biggest question mark. I might have to look up some more Sengoku dialogue regarding Ohara.
Is Sengoku a liar? no, but is he morally compromised? Heavily implied, but if anyone in the WG should be scrutinised, it's Sengoku. He has made some crazy decisions as a Fleet Admiral that makes me really question a lot about him. He definitely feels guilty for things he's done, but the action he's taken.
It also makes us really question just how much power an Admiral has. Kizaru killed his best friend. Sengoku has sanctioned genocide. How powerful are these guys when they feel so powerless when ordered to commit acts of evil?
That extra scene that shows garp is flipping out over what he has seen withotu knowing it does raise many questions. Lets see how the commncity of reviwers react to this when they see. But it also shows that even whenGarp disliked the CD, not even he knew the twisted slaughter party they had. This also makes my headcannon spin a little, moslty cause he contacged Sengoku and all. What I mean is...could this be...the beginning to form teh SWORD? I mean a lot of peopel have alreayd theorized this, but it still would be a nice a callback that Sengoku and Garp hearing and seeing the traumatic truth on Gods Valley would start a long term plan to create a force of Marines bound to peoples obligations and not the system of the World Nobles.
ReplyDeleteSo for 40 years, he just thinks his son was WILDLY overreacting and his bosses are merely assholes. At no point has Dragon ever asked his dad "Hey what the fuck?" nor at any point has Garp asked his son "Hey what the fuck?" No slavery or people hunting to see here, Garp's just a big ol dummy for half a century! I wonder if he's going to kill himself when he finds out what he's been complicit in for so long because I can't imagine living after that.
ReplyDeleteMassive character beats being dependent on impossible levels of ignorance is somehow more disrespectful to the reader than if Garp had known and had been ineffectively trying to "change things from the inside". It's like the worst superhero stories where any excuse possible is used to justify having action figures fight each other, even when the dialogue is like "hey can't we talk this out?!" and the other character is like "no grargh!"
Like are we going to be told next he also had no idea about the pregnant lady/baby murdering spree that preceded Ace? And when Roger asked him to look after Ace, he was just confused as to what the big deal was? Vice Admirals still have to participate in Buster Calls, what're we going to be told he doesn't know about that either? Garp has to be made ignorant to the point of being a vegetable to justify any of his career after God Valley.
Oh no, Garp didn't know about the Celestial Dragon's killing game! Now I have to go back to thinking he's a piece of shit for his awful handling of Ace (and Luffy) instead of that and the Celestial Dragon thing! Phew, thank goodness Oda included that bit so my opinion of Garp could stay exactly the same.
ReplyDeleteI think Garp assumed that all those casualties are caused by pirates. They (that mean Xebec and his crew) came before him after all. He probably didn't even knew that all Marines that were at God Valley weren't there to protect the place from pirats but to make sure no one escape the hunt. He probably didn't even knew about existence of this hunting game Celestial Dragons organize from time to time which could be Kongs fault. I guess he knew that if Garp would know about those manhunts he would not only disagree to work for WG but maybe even do something as "stupid" as what Dragon did by leaving Marines to start Revolutionary Army. I'm sure that at some point Garp learned about some nasty things WG pull off from time to time and that's why he refuse to be under direct control of Celestial Dragons. And yet he stayed to protect people. At this point I'm sure he's also member of Sword, just more secret. That's why Kuzan thought he can be used for Blackbeards plan. BUT and that very big but I just know if for some reason Garp could witness that manhunt commited by Celestial Dragons God Valley would be destroyed for completely different reason. Which probably could end with him ending in prison because Garp would kill many Celestial Dragons during his justice fueled lash out.
ReplyDeleteWatching God Valley, I can't stop thinking about one detail, Ace's execution. Ending Roger's lineage seemed much more important in the eyes of the Navy than in the eyes of the government.
ReplyDeleteWhen I see the resources deployed (Imu's intervention) to end Davy D. Jones' lineage, and Xebec's death. While the government didn't even participate in the war at the summit (no presence of the elders, the God knights, or even Cipher Pol, just the shichibukai).
Roger was only important in Garp's eyes, and an affront to the navy as a pirate, and the fact that he created the age of Piracy. But he was never bothered by the World Government, which shows how uninvolved he was in the politics of the One Piece world.
And that the Gol D. and Portgas D. clans must not have been dangerous in the eyes of Imu and the government.