Diamond Is Unbreakable
The cover art shows five male characters posing against an orange background; three of them are of high school age, and wearing blue school uniforms.
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure volume 36 cover, featuring Josuke (center), and (clockwise from top left) Okuyasu, Jotaro, Koichi, and Rohan
ダイヤモンドは砕けない
(Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai)
GenreAdventure, supernatural[1]
Manga
Written byHirohiko Araki
Published byShueisha
English publisher
ImprintJump Comics
MagazineWeekly Shōnen Jump
DemographicShōnen
Original runMay 4, 1992December 4, 1995
Volumes18
Other media
Chronology

Preceded by: Stardust Crusaders
Followed by: Golden Wind

Diamond Is Unbreakable (Japanese: ダイヤモンドは砕けない, Hepburn: Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai, sometimes translated as Diamond Is Not Crash[2]) is the fourth story arc of the Japanese manga series JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, written and illustrated by Hirohiko Araki. It was serialized in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump for a little more than 3+12 years, from May 4, 1992,[3] to December 4, 1995,[4] with the 174 chapters collected into eighteen tankōbon volumes. In its original publication, it was titled JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 4: Jōsuke Higashikata (ジョジョの奇妙な冒険 第4部 東方仗助, JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken Dai Yon Bu: Higashikata Jōsuke). It was preceded by Stardust Crusaders and followed by Golden Wind.

This part introduces the Stand Arrow, which causes anyone pierced by it to develop a Stand if they are mentally strong enough. The Arrow was retroactively revealed to be the source of Dio's stand as well as the Joestar family's stands. The arc was adapted into an anime television series by David Production, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable, that began in April 2016.[5] A live-action film adaptation by Toho and Warner Bros. titled JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable Chapter I was released on August 4, 2017. Viz Media released the manga in English in a nine-volume compiled format from 2019 to 2021.[6]

Plot

In 1999, Jotaro Kujo arrives to the town of Morioh (杜王町, Moriō-chō) in the M-Prefecture (M県, Emu-ken) after learning that his grandfather Joseph Joestar has an illegitimate son while compiling a list of beneficiaries. He bumps into a freshman named Koichi Hirose before the two encounter the youth Jotaro is looking for: A highschool student named Josuke Higashikata,[a] whose Stand Crazy Diamond allows him to manipulate matter in ways that include repairing and healing. Fighting Josuke after inadvertently insulting his pompadour, Jotaro explains the nature of Stands and that one is used by a death row inmate named Anjuro "Angelo" Katagiri escaped to Morioh. Josuke unknowingly makes an enemy of Angelo, who murders his grandfather before Josuke uses his power to fuse Angelo into a rock. But Angelo uses his final moments of consciousness to reveal someone hit him with an Arrow that gave him his Stand, Jotaro learning that an actual artifact was possessed by Dio's forces. Josuke and Koichi eventually come across the culprit, Keicho Nijimura, who inflicts Koichi with the Arrow while his younger brother Okuyasu holds Josuke off. Josuke defeats Okuyasu and heals Koichi with Crazy Diamond, with Koichi developing a Stand called Echoes. After Keicho is defeated with his reason of creating Stand users to create someone able to mercy kill his father, a mutated subordinate of Dio's, Keicho is killed by Stand Red Hot Chili Pepper, which takes the Bow and Arrow. Okuyasu then joins Josuke's group to avenge his brother, encountering several other Stand users Keicho created before they eventually find and defeat Akira Otoishi, Red Hot Chili Pepper's user, as Joseph arrives in Morioh. The Bow and Arrow are taken into Jotaro's custody and all seems to be over for the moment.

Soon afterward, after Josuke tries spending time with Joseph as they find a baby with an invisibility stand, the group encounters other Stand users such as eccentric manga artist Rohan Kishibe, middle schooler Shigekiyo "Shigechi" Yangu, and a beautician named Aya Tsuji. Koichi and Rohan later meet the ghosts of Reimi Sugimoto and her dog Arnold after stumbling into the mysterious Ghost Alley, learning of a serial killer who has been lurking in Morioh for years. The murderer is a handsome office worker named Yoshikage Kira, who seeks to satisfy his murderous hand fetish obsession while living a peaceful, quiet life by using the destructive ability of his Stand Killer Queen to erase any evidence of his crimes. But his prompted murder of Shigechi ends up exposing him during a brief battle with Jotaro and Koichi that left him injured as Josuke and Okuyasu arrive. Kira escapes and forces Aya to use her Stand to swap identities with a man Kosaku Kawajiri, killing them both while assuming Kosaku's life. Kira's father Yoshihiro, a ghost who uses his Stand to live on in a photo, uses a Bow and Arrow he received years ago from Enya Geil to create an army of Stand users to protect his son, including a dying cat that reincarnated as a Stand-plant hybrid named Stray Cat which Kira took as a pet.

Kosaku's son Hayato Kawajiri begins to suspect his father's imposter and confronts Kira, only to get murdered with Kira panicking before receiving a new ability after pierced by Yoshihiro's Arrow a second time that allows him to revive Hayato. The following morning, Hayato learns Kira inflicted him with Killer Queen's new ability Bites the Dust, which destroys whoever Hayato reveals Kira's identity to while rewinding time back an hour with the victim's fate fixed. After Rohan died in one loop and Josuke's group the next, Hayato realizes he needs to force Kira into canceling Bites the Dust before the others are killed with their deaths made permanent. Hayato exploits the knowledge he gained from the time loop to wake Josuke up early and arrange for him to overhear Kira blowing his cover. Kira is forced to use Killer Queen to defend himself, which cancels Bites the Dust just in time to save Josuke and his allies.

Josuke engages Kira in a pitched battle, Okuyasu seemingly killed as Josuke and Hayato take refuge in a house when Kira combines his Stand's powers with Stray Cat to create invisible projectile bombs. Kira plants Yoshihiro's photo into Hayato's pocket to track Josuke, only to be tricked into destroying his father before Okuyasu appears in the nick of time to swipe Stray Cat and further disadvantage Kira. As Jotaro, Koichi, and Rohan arrive with emergency workers responding to the explosions, Kira attempts to activate Bites the Dust on a nearby paramedic in a last ditch attempt to avert his defeat. But he is stopped by Jotaro with assistance from Koichi, knocked into the path of an arriving ambulance that accidentally crushes his skull. Kira's ghost ends up in Ghost Alley and is confronted by Reimi, who gets him dragged off into an unknown fate by spectral hands. Her mission accomplished, Reimi gives the group her final farewells and moves on to the afterlife. The next day, Josuke bids farewell to Jotaro and Joseph, who leave Morioh as the summer of 1999 draws to a close.

Characters

See also: List of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure characters § Part 4: Diamond Is Unbreakable 2

Production

Diamond Is Unbreakable is set in the fictional town of Morioh located in S-City, M-Prefecture, which is modeled after a specific area in Hirohiko Araki's hometown of Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture.[7] The author said that the suspense and fear caused by the "unusual" and "mysterious" residents there were his inspiration.[8] Although he originally intended for JoJo's Bizarre Adventure to be a "mythical" manga with superpowers and such, he enjoyed drawing the "feeling of everyday life" in Diamond Is Unbreakable.[8] Because he wanted to create a "closed city," the Stands featured were not proactively attacking.[8]

During Diamond Is Unbreakable's serialization, Araki received feedback from readers who felt that enemies in the manga had gotten weak.[9] Although he usually does not respond to reader opinions, he had heard similar comments from the editorial team and so made an exception by stating that "the weaknesses inside the hearts of people" are a thematic element of Part 4. He explained that sometimes he has a character's inner weaknesses drive them into a desperate situation, while other times he turns the weakness into something "dreadful" and bases a Stand off of it. Araki wrote that constantly having stronger and stronger enemies appear in a manga eventually leads you to "trying to think of the farthest edges of the universe", but in the real world, "true strength is found in not doing bad things. An enemy who does bad things is a person with an inner weakness."[9]

With Part 4 of the series, Araki said that he moved away from "muscle men" as they fell out of popularity with his readers and he wanted to focus more on fashion. When designing his characters' outfits, Araki considers both everyday fashion and "cartoonish, bizarre clothing that would be impractical in real life." He also forgoes using specific color schemes for his characters and gives his readers different impressions through various color combinations.[10] Araki said that while he drew several characters in Parts 1 through 3 naked to evoke Greek or Roman gods, he stopped doing it so much with Part 4 to be a "bit closer to home."[11] Because he is the "friend next door" instead of being similar to a hero in a Greek myth like the protagonists of the previous parts, Araki cited Josuke Higashikata as his favorite character in Diamond Is Unbreakable.[8] He cited Shigekiyo Yangu's Harvest as his favorite Stand from Part 4, because, although he finds his "flaws and trashiness adorable," the character picks up stuff off of the ground which is "pretty scary."[8]

Despite the prevalent belief that the manga artist character Rohan Kishibe is believed to be Araki's self-insert, the author revealed that he did not model Rohan after himself, but is fascinated by him. He said that unlike Rohan, he values human life more than art.[8]

Chapters

In the original volumization, chapters 437–439 are collected in volume 47, listed on the Golden Wind page.

Original volumization

No. Title Japanese release date Japanese ISBN
29Enter Josuke Higashikata
Higashikata Jōsuke Tōjō Suru (東方仗助登場する)
November 4, 1992[12]978-4-08-851635-6
  • 266–268. "Jotaro Kujo! Meets Josuke Higashikata (1–3)" (空条承太郎!東方仗助に会う その①〜③, Kūjō Jōtarō! Higashikata Jōsuke ni Au Sono 1~3)
  • 269–273. "Josuke Higashikata! Meets Angelo (1–5)" (東方仗助!アンジェロに会う その①〜⑤, Higashikata Jōsuke! Anjero ni Au Sono 1~5)
  • 274. "The Nijimura Brothers (1)" (虹村兄弟 その①, Nijimura Kyōdai Sono 1)
30Okuyasu and Keicho Nijimura
Nijimura Okuyasu, Keichō (虹村億泰・形兆)
January 7, 1993[13]978-4-08-851636-3
  • 275–283. "The Nijimura Brothers (2–10)" (虹村兄弟 その②〜⑩, Nijimura Kyōdai Sono 2~10)
31Koichi Hirose (Echoes)
Hirose Kōichi (Ekōzu) (広瀬康一(エコーズ))
March 4, 1993[14]978-4-08-851637-0
  • 284–288. "Koichi Hirose (Echoes) (1–5)" (広瀬康一(エコーズ) その①〜⑤, Hirose Kōichi (Ekōzu) Sono 1~5)
  • 289–293. "Toshikazu Hazamada (Surface) (1–5)" (間田敏和(サーフィス) その①〜⑤, Hazamada Toshikazu (Sāfisu) Sono 1~5)
32Yukako Yamagishi Falls In Love
Yamagishi Yukako wa Koi o Suru (山岸由花子は恋をする)
May 10, 1993[15]978-4-08-851638-7
  • 294–302. "Yukako Yamagishi Falls In Love (1–9)" (山岸由花子は恋をする その①〜⑨, Yamagishi Yukako wa Koi o Suru Sono 1~9)
33Let's Go Eat Some Italian Food
Itaria Ryōri o Tabe ni Ikō (イタリア料理を食べに行こう)
July 2, 1993[16]978-4-08-851639-4
  • 303–306. "Let's Go Eat Some Italian Food (1–4)" (イタリア料理を食べに行こう その①〜④, Itaria Ryōri o Tabe ni Ikō Sono 1~4)
  • 307–312. "Red Hot Chili Pepper (1–6)" (レッド・ホット・チリ・ペッパー その①〜⑥, Reddo Hotto Chiri Peppā Sono 1~6)
34Let's Go to the Manga Artist's House
Mangaka no Uchi e Asobi ni Ikō (漫画家のうちへ遊びに行こう)
September 3, 1993[17]978-4-08-851640-0
  • 313–314. "Red Hot Chili Pepper (7–8)" (レッド・ホット・チリ・ペッパー その⑦〜⑧, Reddo Hotto Chiri Peppā Sono 7~8)
  • 315–317. "We Picked Up Something Crazy! (1–3)" (やばいものを拾ったっス! その①〜③, Yabaimono o Hirottassu! Sono 1~3)
  • 318–321. "Let's Go to the Manga Artist's House (1–4)" (漫画家のうちへ遊びに行こう その①〜④, Mangaka no Uchi e Asobi ni Ikō Sono 1~4)
35Rohan Kishibe's Adventure
Kishibe Rohan no Bōken (岸辺露伴の冒険)
November 4, 1993[18]978-4-08-851405-5
  • 322–324. "Let's Go to the Manga Artist's House (5–7)" (漫画家のうちへ遊びに行こう その⑤〜⑦, Mangaka no Uchi e Asobi ni Ikō Sono 5~7)
  • 325–329. "Let's Go Hunting! (1–5)" (狩りハンティング」に行こう! その①〜⑤, "Hantingu" ni Ikō! Sono 1~5)
  • 330–331. "Rohan Kishibe's Adventure (1–2)" (岸辺露伴の冒険 その①〜②, Kishibe Rohan no Bōken Sono 1~2)
36Shigechi's Harvest
"Shigechī" no Hāvesuto (「重ちー」の収穫ハーヴェスト)
February 4, 1994[19]978-4-08-851406-2
  • 332–334. "Rohan Kishibe's Adventure (3–5)" (岸辺露伴の冒険 その③〜⑤, Kishibe Rohan no Bōken Sono 3~5)
  • 335–341. "Shigechi's Harvest (1–7)" (「重ちー」の収穫ハーヴェスト その①〜⑦, "Shigechī" no Hāvesuto Sono 1~7)
37Yoshikage Kira Wants to Live Quietly
Kira Yoshikage wa Shizuka ni Kurashitai (吉良吉影は静かに暮らしたい)
May 2, 1994[20]978-4-08-851407-9
  • 342–346. "Yoshikage Kira Wants to Live Quietly (1–5)" (吉良吉影は静かに暮らしたい その①〜⑤, Kira Yoshikage wa Shizuka ni Kurashitai Sono 1~5)
  • 347. "The People of Morioh" (杜王町の人々, Moriohchō no Hitobito)
  • 348–350. "Yukako Yamagishi Dreams of Cinderella (1–3)" (山岸由花子はシンデレラに憧れる その①〜③, Yamagishi Yukako wa Shinderera ni Akogareru Sono 1~3)
38Sheer Heart Attack
Shiā Hāto Atakku (シアーハートアタック)
August 4, 1994[21]978-4-08-851408-6
  • 351–353. "Yukako Yamagishi Dreams of Cinderella (4–6)" (山岸由花子はシンデレラに憧れる その④〜⑥, Yamagishi Yukako wa Shinderera ni Akogareru Sono 4–6)
  • 354–359. "Sheer Heart Attack (1–6)" (シアーハートアタック その①〜⑥, Shiā Hāto Atakku Sono 1–6)
39Father's Tears
Chichi no Namida (父の涙)
November 4, 1994[22]978-4-08-851409-3
  • 360–364. "Sheer Heart Attack (7–11)" (シアーハートアタック その⑦〜⑪, Shiā Hāto Atakku Sono 7–11)
  • 365–369. "Atom Heart Father (1–5)" (アトム・ハート・ファーザー その①〜⑤, Atomu Hāto Fāzā Sono 1–5)
40Rock-Paper-Scissors Kid Is Coming
Janken Kozō ga Yatte Kuru (ジャンケン小僧がやって来る!)
January 11, 1995[23]978-4-08-851410-9
  • 370. "Yoshikage Kira's New Life (1)" (吉良吉影の新しい事情 その①, Kira Yoshikage no Atarashii Jijō Sono 1)
  • 371–376. "Rosham Boy Is Here! (1–6)" (ジャンケン小僧がやって来る! その①〜⑥, Janken Kozō ga Yatte Kuru! Sono 1–6, lit. "Rock-Paper-Scissors Kid Is Coming! (1–6)")
  • 377. "Yoshikage Kira's New Life (2)" (吉良吉影の新しい事情 その②, Kira Yoshikage no Atarashii Jijō Sono 2)
  • 378–379. "I Am An Alien (1–2)" (ぼくは宇宙人 その①〜②, Boku wa Uchūjin Sono 1–2)
41Highway Star
Haiwei Sutā (ハイウェイ・スター)
March 3, 1995[24]978-4-08-851891-6
  • 380–383. "I Am An Alien (3–6)" (ぼくは宇宙人 その③〜⑥, Boku wa Uchūjin Sono 3–6)
  • 384–389. "Highway Star (1–6)" (ハイウェイ・スター その①〜⑥, Haiwei Sutā Sono 1–6)
42Cats Love Yoshikage Kira
Neko wa Kira Yoshikage ga Suki (猫は吉良吉影が好き)
May 11, 1995[25]978-4-08-851892-3
  • 390–391. "Highway Star (7–8)" (ハイウェイ・スター その⑦〜⑧, Haiwei Sutā Sono 7–8)
  • 392–397. "Cats Love Yoshikage Kira (1–6)" (猫は吉良吉影が好き その①〜⑥, Neko wa Kira Yoshikage ga Suki Sono 1–6)
  • 398. "Let's Live on a Transmission Tower (1)" (鉄塔に住もう その①, Tettō ni Sumō Sono 1)
43Enigma Is an Enigma!
Eniguma wa Nazo da! (エニグマは謎だ!)
August 4, 1995[26]978-4-08-851893-0
  • 399–403. "Let's Live on a Transmission Tower (2–6)" (鉄塔に住もう その②〜⑥, Tettō ni Sumō Sono 2–6)
  • 404–407. "Enigma (1–4)" (エニグマの少年 その①〜④, Eniguma no Shōnen Sono 1–4, lit. "Enigma Boy (1–4)")
44My Dad Is Not My Dad
Boku no Papa wa Papa ja Nai (ぼくのパパはパパじゃない)
October 4, 1995[27]978-4-08-851894-7
  • 408–409. "Enigma (5–6)" (エニグマの少年 その⑤〜⑥, Eniguma no Shōnen Sono 5–6, lit. "Enigma Boy (5–6)")
  • 410–411. "My Dad Is Not My Dad (1–2)" (ぼくのパパはパパじゃない その①〜②, Boku no Papa wa Papa ja Nai Sono 1–2)
  • 412–417. "Cheap Trick (1–6)" (チープ・トリック その①〜⑥, Chīpu Torikku Sono 1–6)
45Another One Bites the Dust
Anazāwan Baitsa Dasuto (アナザーワン バイツァ・ダスト)
January 10, 1996[28]978-4-08-851895-4
  • 418–427. "Bites the Dust (1–10)" (アナザーワン バイツァ・ダスト その①〜⑩, Anazāwan Baitsa Dasuto Sono 1–10, lit. "Another One Bites the Dust (1–10)")
46Crazy Diamond Is Unbreakable
Kureijī Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai (クレイジー・Dダイヤモンドは砕けない)
March 4, 1996[29]978-4-08-851896-1
  • 428–436. "Crazy Diamond Is Unbreakable (1–9)" (クレイジー・Dダイヤモンドは砕けない その①〜⑨, Kureijī Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai Sono 1–9)[aq]

2004 release

No. Title Japanese release date Japanese ISBN
18Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 1
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 1 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 1)
February 18, 2004[30]4-08-618167-3
  • Chapters 266–279
19Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 2
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 2 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 2)
February 18, 2004[31]4-08-618168-1
  • Chapters 280–293
20Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 3
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 3 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 3)
April 16, 2004[32]4-08-618169-X
  • Chapters 294–308
21Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 4
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 4 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 4)
April 16, 2004[33]4-08-618170-3
  • Chapters 309–322
22Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 5
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 5 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 5)
May 18, 2004[34]4-08-618171-1
  • Chapters 323–337
23Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 6
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 6 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 6)
May 18, 2004[35]4-08-618172-X
  • Chapters 338–352
24Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 7
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 7 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 7)
June 18, 2004[36]4-08-618173-8
  • Chapters 353–367
25Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 8
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 8 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 8)
June 18, 2004[37]4-08-618174-6
  • Chapters 368–382
26Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 9
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 9 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 9)
July 16, 2004[38]4-08-618175-4
  • Chapters 383–397
27Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 10
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 10 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 10)
July 16, 2004[39]4-08-618176-2
  • Chapters 398–411
28Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 11
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 11 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 11)
August 10, 2004[40]4-08-618177-0
  • Chapters 412–425
29Part 4: Diamond Is Not Crash 12
Part 4 Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai 12 (Part4 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 12)
August 10, 2004[41]4-08-618178-9
  • Chapters 426–439

2016 release

No. Title Japanese release date Japanese ISBN
1 (9)Part 4: Diamond Is Unbreakable Sōshūhen Vol. 1
Dai Yon Bu Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai Sōshūhen Vol. 1 (第4部 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 総集編 Vol. 1)
March 4, 2016[42]978-4-08-111142-8
2 (10)Part 4: Diamond Is Unbreakable Sōshūhen Vol. 2
Dai Yon Bu Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai Sōshūhen Vol. 2 (第4部 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 総集編 Vol. 2)
April 1, 2016[43]978-4-08-111143-5
3 (11)Part 4: Diamond Is Unbreakable Sōshūhen Vol. 3
Dai Yon Bu Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai Sōshūhen Vol. 3 (第4部 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 総集編 Vol. 3)
May 6, 2016[44]978-4-08-111144-2
4 (12)Part 4: Diamond Is Unbreakable Sōshūhen Vol. 4
Dai Yon Bu Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai Sōshūhen Vol. 4 (第4部 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 総集編 Vol. 4)
June 3, 2016[45]978-4-08-111145-9
5 (13)Part 4: Diamond Is Unbreakable Sōshūhen Vol. 5
Dai Yon Bu Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai Sōshūhen Vol. 5 (第4部 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 総集編 Vol. 5)
July 1, 2016[46]978-4-08-111146-6
6 (14)Part 4: Diamond Is Unbreakable Sōshūhen Vol. 6
Dai Yon Bu Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai Sōshūhen Vol. 6 (第4部 ダイヤモンドは砕けない 総集編 Vol. 6)
August 5, 2016[47]978-4-08-111147-3

English release

No. English release date English ISBN
1 (18)[ar] May 7, 2019[48]978-1-9747-0652-5
  • Chapters 1–18
2 (19) August 6, 2019[49]978-1-9747-0808-6
  • Chapters 19–37
3 (20) November 5, 2019[50]978-1-9747-0809-3
  • Chapters 38–56
4 (21) February 4, 2020[51]978-1-9747-0810-9
  • Chapters 57–76
5 (22) May 5, 2020[52]978-1-9747-0811-6
  • Chapters 77–94
6 (23) August 4, 2020[53]978-1-9747-0812-3
  • Chapters 95–114
7 (24) November 3, 2020[54]978-1-9747-0813-0
  • Chapters 115–133
8 (25) February 2, 2021[55]978-1-9747-0814-7
  • Chapters 134–152
9 (26) May 4, 2021[56]978-1-9747-0815-4
  • Chapters 153–174

Related media

See also: Thus Spoke Kishibe Rohan, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable, and JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable Chapter I

In 2000, it was announced that Otsuichi would be writing a novel based on Part 4. The novel proved difficult to complete; in Kono Mystery ga Sugoi 2004, Otsuichi claimed to have written over 2000 pages, but thrown them all out.[57] Intent on writing a novel that lived up to the manga, it took him until 2007 before The Book: JoJo's Bizarre Adventure 4th Another Day was finally released on November 26.[58] It is set after the events in the manga, and includes illustrations by Araki.

In 1997, Araki published the Weekly Shōnen Jump one-shot Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe ~Episode 16.. Confessional~, starring Rohan after the events of Part 4. In 1999 he wrote the three-chapter story Dead Man's Questions[as] in Allman magazine. Dead Man's Questions stars Yoshikage Kira, the main antagonist of Part 4. Both Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe and Dead Man's Questions were later compiled in Araki's one-shot collection, Under Jailbreak, Under Execution, in 1999. The former launched a series starring Rohan, Thus Spoke Kishibe Rohan.

The issue of Jump Square for December 11, 2007, featured a second entry into the Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe collection, entitled Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe ~Mutsukabezaka~, set seven years after the events of Part IV.

In 2009, Araki wrote the full-color story Rohan au Louvre.[at] The short story was displayed at the Musée du Louvre as part of their 2009 Le Louvre invite la bande dessinée exhibit.[59] The story was later republished in Ultra Jump in 2010. In 2012, Rohan au Louvre was released in English by NBM Publishing under the translated title Rohan at the Louvre.

In 2011, Araki collaborated with the renowned Italian fashion brand Gucci for the short story Rohan Kishibe Goes to Gucci[au] in the women's fashion magazine Spur.[60]

In 2012, Araki wrote a third Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe one-shot for Weekly Shōnen Jump. Entitled Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe ~Episode 5: Millionaire Village~ it was released in the October 6, 2012 issue of the magazine.[61]

In October 2015, Warner Bros. announced that Part 4 would receive an anime television adaptation that serves as a continuation of David Production's series adaptation.[62] The series aired in 2016.[5]

Toho and Warner Bros. partnered to produce a live-action film based on the fourth arc of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure that was released on August 4, 2017. Takashi Miike directed the film that stars Kento Yamazaki as Josuke. Both studios planned for worldwide distribution and, with a title of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable Chapter I, hoped to create sequels.[63][64] However, the film under-performed at the box office, leaving the possibility of future sequels in doubt.[65]

JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Crazy Diamond's Demonic Heartbreak, a spin-off manga set in Morioh, began serialization in the December 2021 issue of Shueisha's seinen manga magazine Ultra Jump on December 18, 2021. It is written by Kouhei Kadono and illustrated by Tasuku Karasuma.[66]

The Cheap Trick story arc was adapted into the episode From Behind of the Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe TV series released on December 28, 2021. The Janken Boy Is Coming! story arc was adapted into the episode Rock-Paper-Scissors Boy released on December 27, 2022.

Reception

In a 2018 survey of 17,000 JoJo's Bizarre Adventure fans, Diamond Is Unbreakable was chosen as the second favorite story arc with 17.5% of the vote.[67]

Anime News Network had both Rebecca Silverman and Faye Hopper review the first volume of Diamond Is Unbreakable. Silverman called the beginning slower and not as instantly engrossing as the previous parts, but felt this allowed Josuke, whom she and Hopper both described as kinder than the previous protagonists, to develop as a character. Hopper stated that Diamond Is Unbreakable is sometimes criticized for a "lack of a strong narrative throughline" in comparison to other parts, but argued that this is one of its greatest strengths as it allows the main characters to "simply be, lending them an amiable humanity that none of the over-the-top archetypes in the first 3 Parts ever had."[68]

Notes

  1. ^ Josuke Higashikata (東方 仗助, Higashikata Jōsuke, the kanji suke can also be read as jo)
  2. ^ Josuke Higashikata (東方 仗助, Higashikata Jōsuke)
  3. ^ Crazy Diamond (クレイジー・ダイヤモンド, Kureijī Daiyamondo, "Shining Diamond" in English versions)
  4. ^ Koichi Hirose (広瀬 康一, Hirose Kōichi)
  5. ^ Echoes (エコーズ, Ekōzu, "Reverb" in English versions)
  6. ^ Okuyasu Nijimura (虹村 億泰, Nijimura Okuyasu)
  7. ^ The Hand (ザ・ハンド, Za Hando)
  8. ^ Jotaro Kujo (空条 承太郎, Kūjō Jōtaro)
  9. ^ Star Platinum (星の白金スタープラチナ, Sutā Purachina)
  10. ^ Star Platinum: The World (スタープラチナ ザ・ワールド, Sutā Purachina Za Wārudo)
  11. ^ Joseph Joestar (ジョセフ・ジョースター, Josefu Jōsutā)
  12. ^ Hermit Purple (隠者の紫ハーミットパープル, Hāmitto Pāpuru)
  13. ^ Rohan Kishibe (岸辺 露伴, Kishibe Rohan)
  14. ^ Heaven's Door (ヘブンズ・ドアー, Hebunzu Doā)
  15. ^ Keicho Nijimura (虹村 形兆, Nijimura Keichō)
  16. ^ Bad Company (バッド・カンパニー, Baddo Kanpanī, "Worse Company" in English versions)
  17. ^ Anjuro Katagiri (片桐 安十郎, Katagiri Anjūrō)
  18. ^ Angelo (アンジェロ, Anjero)
  19. ^ Aqua Necklace (アクア・ネックレス, Akua Nekkuresu)
  20. ^ Angelo Rock (アンジェロ岩, Anjero Iwa)
  21. ^ Yukako Yamagishi (山岸 由花子, Yamagishi Yukako)
  22. ^ Love Deluxe (ラブ・デラックス, Rabu Derakkusu)
  23. ^ Aya Tsuji (辻 彩, Tsuji Aya)
  24. ^ Cinderella (シンデレラ, Shinderera)
  25. ^ Akira Otoishi (音石 明, Otoishi Akira)
  26. ^ Red Hot Chili Pepper (レッド・ホット・チリ・ペッパー, Reddo Hotto Chiri Peppā, "Chili Pepper" in English versions)
  27. ^ Yoshikage Kira (吉良 吉影, Kira Yoshikage)
  28. ^ Killer Queen (キラークイーン, Kirā Kuīn, "Deadly Queen" in English versions)
  29. ^ Sheer Heart Attack (シアーハートアタック, Shiā Hāto Atakku)
  30. ^ Bites the Dust (負けて死ねバイツァ・ダスト, Baitsa Dasuto)
  31. ^ Yoshihiro Kira (吉良 吉廣, Kira Yoshihiro) / 
  32. ^ Atom Heart Father (アトム・ハート・ファーザー, Atomu Hāto Fāzā)
  33. ^ Mikitaka Hazekura (支倉 未起隆, Hazekura Mikitaka)
  34. ^ Earth Wind and Fire (アース・ウインド・アンド・ファイヤー, Āsu Uindo Ando Faiyā, "Terra Ventus" in English versions)
  35. ^ Yuya Fungami (噴上裕也, Fungami Yuya)
  36. ^ Highway Star (ハイウェイ・スター, Haiwei Sutā)
  37. ^ Tama (タマ, Tama)
  38. ^ Stray Cat (猫草ストレイ・キャット, Sutorei Kyatto)
  39. ^ Reimi Sugimoto (杉本 鈴美, Sugimoto Reimi)
  40. ^ Hayato Kawajiri (川尻 早人, Kawajiri Hayato)
  41. ^ Tonio Trussardi (トニオ・トラサルディー, Tonio Torasarudī)
  42. ^ Pearl Jam (パール・ジャム, Pāru Jamu)
  43. ^ Chapters 437–439 were also included in this volume in some versions outside Japan.
  44. ^ Continuing from the English JoJonium releases of Parts 1-3.
  45. ^ Dead Man's Questions (デッドマンズQ, Deddo Manzu Q)
  46. ^ Rohan au Louvre (岸辺露伴 ルーヴルへ行く, Kishibe Rohan Rūvuru e iku)
  47. ^ Rohan Kishibe Goes to Gucci (岸辺露伴 グッチへ行く, Kishibe Rohan Gutchi e Iku)

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