Unfortunately, Mikitaka has absolutely no sense of subtlety, so when Rohan rolls nothing but Snake-Eyes and Josuke rolls nothing but Boxcars, he realizes something is up.
Rohan wins by taking Shizuka from an unsuspecting Joseph and using Heaven's Door to make her invisible and make Ken's winning hand into a losing one. Unlike the Darby brothers in Stardust Crusaders, however, Ken's stand doesn't grant him any inherent advantage or has rules against cheating. If Ken wins three rounds he gets Rohan's stand, but if he loses three rounds, then the stand returns to its user. Rohan's fight with Ken Oyanagi is a game of RockPaperScissors when Rohan loses a round, Boy II Man takes a third of his stand, which also allows Ken to weaken and control Rohan to make winning easier.Began publication in 1992, takes place in 1999. 20 Minutes into the Future: From here until Stone Ocean.It goes by incredibly fast, but due to the fact that he's coming right at the camera, it's hard to miss it. Shigechi turns into this briefly while using Harvest to flee from Josuke and Okuyasu in his introductory arc.Used for the buildings in the anime's ending credits, as well as the brief shot of Traffic (the boat that brings Joseph to Morioh).Jotaro stays in town to find the bow and arrow, believed to be the source of the Joestar family's Stands, while Josuke encounters multiple Stand users created as a result of the arrow, including classmates Koichi Hirose and Okuyasu Nijimura and local famous manga author Rohan Kishibe. After encountering this Stand user, Jotaro and Josuke learn that he obtained his Stand as the result of being struck with an ancient arrow fired from a bow used by a local high school student. Jotaro Kujo travels to the northeastern Japanese town of Morioh to track down Josuke in order to sort out his placement in the aging Joseph's will, as well as warn him of a dangerous Stand user Joseph foretold.
Set in 1999, this Part stars the friendly, confident high school student Josuke Higashikata, the product of an extramarital affair between Joseph Joestar and a Japanese college student. Hirohiko Araki still considers Diamond is Unbreakable his Magnum Opus today, even compared to all the parts of JoJo written both before and after it. It is preceded by Stardust Crusaders and followed by Golden Wind. Diamond is Unbreakable note also known as "Diamond is not Crash", a common mistranslation that appeared on Japanese merchandise until 2013 (ダイヤモンドは砕けない) is the fourth part of the long-running JoJo's Bizarre Adventure saga.