Cornered by the Six Paths of Pain, Jiraiya pieces together his enemy's secret and spends his dying strength carving a final clue for Konoha, remembering the life and the pupil that made giving up impossible.
Struck by how one of the bodies mirrors Yahiko, Jiraiya puzzles over whether Pain is Yahiko or Nagato and why six Rinnegan share one purpose, but the enemy answers only that they are the Six Paths and press their attack. He snares the Animal Path in a toad-gourd barrier and drives a Rasengan into it, though the dying Path pierces his arm and chest first. Reaching the surface, Jiraiya studies each face, realizes he has crossed paths with all of them before, and deduces the truth. Before he can pass it on, the Paths crush his throat and run him through. Dying, he relives being turned down by Tsunade, his failure to save Orochimaru, and his tender memories of Minato and Kushina naming their son after the hero of his book. Refusing to quit as his student never would, he clings to life long enough to etch a coded message onto Fukasaku's back before sinking beneath the water.
Jiraiya identifies Pain and uses his Finger Carving Seal to record the clue on Fukasaku, who escapes as Jiraiya drowns. In his final thoughts he names Naruto the true Child of the Prophecy and imagines a sequel called The Tale of Naruto Uzumaki. Back in Konoha, Tsunade watches a river and notices a frog, while Naruto, running through the forest, halts as he feels a hand on his shoulder, a light shining down on him unnoticed.
Shippūden episode 133 covers chapters 380 through 383 within the Tale of Jiraiya the Gallant arc. It premiered in Japan on October 29, 2009, and in English on July 10, 2012, using Sign as its opening and It Was You as its ending. The title nods to the Japanese folktale Jiraiya Goketsu Monogatari, which Jiraiya references before he dies.

We ranked the six most popular women of Naruto from worst to first, and our number one is going to start a fight. The official poll got it wrong....

The transformation everyone knows, the follow-up question nobody would touch. Why we made a smooth R&B track about the golden glow Dragon Ball never talks about....
Jiraiya does not speak formal last words on screen; instead, his dying thoughts reflect on Tsunade turning him down, his failure to save Orochimaru, and warm memories of Minato and Kushina naming their son after the hero of his book. In his final thoughts he names Naruto the true Child of the Prophecy and imagines a sequel called "The Tale of Naruto Uzumaki."
Jiraiya is struck by how one of the Six Paths' bodies mirrors his former student Yahiko. Reaching the surface after trapping and destroying the Animal Path, he studies each remaining face, realizes he has crossed paths with all of them before, and deduces the truth.
After Jiraiya snares and destroys the Animal Path with a Rasengan, the dying Path pierces his arm and chest first. The remaining Six Paths of Pain then crush his throat and run him through as he tries to confirm what he has deduced.
With his final strength, Jiraiya uses his Finger Carving Seal to etch a coded message onto the back of the toad Fukasaku, who escapes with it as Jiraiya sinks beneath the water. This message carries his discovery about Pain's identity back to Konoha.
"The Tale of Jiraiya the Gallant" is Shippūden episode 133, covering manga chapters 380 through 383 within the Tale of Jiraiya the Gallant arc. It aired in Japan on October 29, 2009, and in English on July 10, 2012.
Looking for more on The Tale of Jiraiya the Gallant? The Naruto Wiki on Fandom has a dedicated page with community notes.
View on FandomThis content is original writing by Daddy Jim Headquarters based on the Naruto anime series, manga, and official materials. Episode and chapter references are cited where applicable.
Character and scene imagery on this site is original artwork by Daddy Jim Headquarters, not screenshots or licensed imagery. Official cover art is used on three types of pages for editorial commentary:
Official resources:
Daddy Jim Headquarters maintains this encyclopedia. If you spot an error, a translation issue, or something that doesn't look right, let us know.