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The first opening theme is the song "JoJo (Sono Chi no Sadame)" (ジョジョ~その血の運命~, "JoJo ~That Blood's Destiny~") performed by Hiroaki "Tommy" Tominaga, vocalist of Japanese "brass rock" band Bluff, as the opening theme for the Part 1 episodes. The score for Part 1 was composed by Hayato Matsuo, and was released in two parts ...
"Hol Horse and Boingo, Part 1 / Hol Horse and Mondatta, Part 1" Transliteration: "Horu Hōsu to Boingo Sono 1" (Japanese: ホル・ホースとボインゴ その1) Masayoshi Nishida: Shunsuke Machitani: Yasuko Kobayashi: March 28, 2015 () May 13, 2018: 63: 37 "Hol Horse and Boingo, Part 2 / Hol Horse and Mondatta, Part 2"
The manga was originally serialized by Shueisha in Weekly Shōnen Jump under the title JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 1 Jonathan Joestar: His Youth (ジョジョの奇妙な冒険 第一部 ジョナサン·ジョースター ―その青春―, JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken Dai Ichi Bu Jonasan Jōsutā -Sono Seishun) and was collected in five ...
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is the largest ongoing manga series published by Shueisha by number of volumes, with its chapters collected in 136 tankōbon volumes as of December 2024. A 13-episode original video animation series adapting the manga's third part, Stardust Crusaders, was produced by A.P.P.P. and released from 1993
Dio, having stolen Jonathan's body at the end of Part 1, fathered a few sons bearing the Joestar bloodline while awakening use of Stands in Jonathan's descendants. In the alternate universe depicted in Parts 7 and 8, Johnny Joestar marries Rina Higashikata with the Higashikata Family becoming a distinct branch of the Joestar family.
Dio, Gone to Heaven (天国に到達したDIO, Tengoku ni Tōtatsu-shita Dio) is the main antagonist in the story mode of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Eyes of Heaven, being a version of Dio from an alternate universe where he killed the Joestar Group in the 1980s and executed his vision of "obtaining heaven" by sacrificing 36 evil souls and ...
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure (Japanese: ジョジョの奇妙な冒険, Hepburn: JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken) is an original video animation adaptation of Hirohiko Araki's manga series of the same name. Produced by A.P.P.P. (Another Push Pin Planning), it was adapted from the series' third part, Stardust Crusaders.
However, instead of starting with Part 1, they chose to only release Part 3: Stardust Crusaders, which is the most well-known. The first volume was released on November 8, 2005, [ 2 ] with the first twelve volumes summarized in an eight-page summary written and drawn by Araki himself, [ 3 ] and the last on December 7, 2010. [ 4 ]