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Dio is canonically bisexual in both the anime and manga. In the 2007 Eureka interview with Araki (the author of the franchise), when asked about Dio's sexuality, Araki responded: "...Dio's sort of a composed character that could go either way. He could go with a man or a woman." [89] Dio's sexuality is incidental to his villainy. Japan Reiner Braun
After being mortally wounded in battle with Talpa, the Ancient One turns himself into the Warriors' bridge to Talpa's castle. After his death, Anubis and Kayura inherit his role as protector and he aids the Warriors in spirit form by destroying the Nether Spirits and sending the Warriors on quests to unlock their Armors' true power.
Dio Another cyborg created by D.A.M.D. to finish what Geegus started, but went rogue and is now on a worldwide killing spree. He is the final boss of World Heroes 2 and later reappears in World Heroes Perfect , also as the final boss, with the name Neo Dio .
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 ...
Ronin Warriors, known in Japan by its original title Armor Legend Samurai Troopers (鎧伝サムライトルーパー, Yoroiden Samurai Torūpā), is a Japanese anime series created by Hajime Yatate and animated by Sunrise.
Both Polygon and Anime Feminist agreed that Jotaro had become a typical poor father figure to Jolyne, a common trend that anime and manga explore though the former enjoyed how during the series, father and daughter have to work together to defeat the villain showing in the process a more caring side to his persona.
The Warriors series, known in Japan as the Musō (無双, lit. "Unrivaled") series, is an action game series created by Omega Force and published by Koei Tecmo. The meta-series contains various series, such as the Dynasty Warriors games, the One Piece: Pirate Warriors games, the Warriors Orochi games, the Samurai Warriors games, and various spin-offs.
[32] Michael Toole of Anime News Network had similar views, writing that the show's good writing, art direction, and pacing were "sometimes obscured by grade-Z animation." [33] Several critics have credited the success of the anime adaptation for bringing about a surge of popularity for the JoJo's Bizarre Adventure franchise amongst Western ...