Stone Ocean was bold, experimental, and often devastating. Jolyne Cujoh stood out immediately as one of the most compelling JoJos, her rebelliousness and vulnerability grounding the story in a way that felt refreshing. Watching her grow into her role, not just as a fighter but as someone who inherited her family’s legacy, was moving and deeply earned. The Florida prison setting gave the part a claustrophobic tension, with enemies lurking at every corner and Stand battles becoming increasingly psychological and surreal.
What makes Part 6 remarkable is its ending. It is both crushing and beautiful, redefining what closure in a long-running series could look like. While the pacing and sheer strangeness of some fights can feel overwhelming, its ambition cannot be understated. Part 6 is about fate, inevitability, and the resilience of the human spirit even when the universe itself seems to turn against you. It may not be the most polished of the parts, but it left me with a lasting impression that few stories ever manage to achieve.