## One Piece Chapter 769, pages 0-5: The Pirate Bellamy - Chapter: 769 - Pages: 0-5 - Characters: Jinbe, underwater culprit, Franky, Nami, Usopp, Roronoa Zoro, Donquixote Rosinante, Ope Ope no Mi, Trafalgar Law, Donquixote Doflamingo, Trebol ### Summary Page 0: The title page reads "CHAPTER 769: 'THE PIRATE BELLAMY'" under the One Piece logo and Eiichiro Oda's name. The cover-story caption says, "SOLO VOYAGE OF JINBE, FIRST SON OF THE SEA, VOL. 16: 'A SHADOW DISAPPEARED TOWARDS THE OCEAN FLOOR! THE CULPRIT IS UNDERWATER!'" Jinbe is seen underwater or near the sea floor as a small culprit-like figure darts away through bubbles and debris. A top promotional line says One Piece stickers and decorational mail are on sale in the Docomo mail store. Scanner-host footer text is present and ignored. The page sets the chapter title and continues Jinbe's cover serial mystery. Page 2: A full-color fan-art collage shows several Straw Hat Pirates in separate angled panels: Franky, Nami, Usopp, and Zoro are visible, with One Piece branding and a DeviantArt-style watermark near the lower right. This is related One Piece character art, not chapter narrative. Page 3: A full-color fan-art style image shows Donquixote Rosinante grinning and holding the heart-shaped Ope Ope no Mi while flashing a peace sign. It is related One Piece character art, not chapter narrative. Page 4: Law strikes back at Doflamingo inside the Room, the side note saying, "Law strikes back!" Law stands with his sword drawn while Doflamingo staggers in front of Trebol. Usopp yells, "Doffy!" from below, and Law's allies watch in tense silence. Then part of the rampart tower is suddenly sent flying toward them with a "FWOOOM" sound effect. The page opens on the aftermath of Law's counterattack and immediately shifts into a new danger from the collapsing battlefield. Page 5: Doflamingo flicks a finger, and the falling rampart tower flies toward Law and the others. Law reacts, while Trebol says, "Whoa! Heeey! Rampart tower is... flying towards us!" Doflamingo catches the huge debris in a net of strings and calls the technique "Spider's Web!" The web stretches across the broken tower and holds it in place. Trebol looks up with a small "Hm?" while Doflamingo clenches and holds the mass steady. The page shows Doflamingo effortlessly converting a collapsing tower into another string technique.