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But it seems that’s how it is in the story, so I guess that’s how it is…
I am skipping over it.
An infinite “spiral” is depicted, this is the “golden rotation.”
It’s the same as the Breath of Ripple.
Just as a special breath generates power, the golden rotation produces power—such is the world.
I somehow understand that I can spin the ball.
I don’t really understand how you can rotate everything else and all kinds of things, but it’s amazing!
A rotation that is not based on the golden ratio will inevitably have lines interfere somewhere, meaning it is a rotation where energy does not move toward the center, and thus it does not result in infinite rotation.
Arranging golden rectangles creates the trajectory of an infinite spiral. → I understand.
Natural objects have their own scale, so we use them as a model.
Do → Well, I understand.
Rotating an object along that trajectory → ????? The rotational motion of spinning a steel ball in hand and the spiral motion may not be compatible…?????
>>4
It’s something I naturally expect!
It’s awesome.
It seems that what you’re aiming for is not to rotate the iron ball, but to open a hole in spacetime.
We must not forget that it is a mysterious technology that rotates what it is touching in the first place.
The cork is already spinning.
Honestly, I don’t really understand the principle of the iron ball at all, and I’m feeling like “golden rotation? left half-body disorder?”
I like SBR because both Gyro and Wekapipo are cool.
>>10
I think left-sided disfunction is based on the symptoms of a stroke.
I stopped thinking about the settings after chapter 6.
I think that’s just how it is, so even if I notice that the settings have changed while reading, I won’t mind.
The iron ball is still good.
What kind of state is it to make a horse run in the shape of a golden rectangle!?
>>14
The trajectory of the golden rectangle and the golden spiral follows the laws of nature and is efficient, so I imagine moving my legs and shifting my center of gravity as if tracing that trajectory.
>>17
There’s also a story about the Sandman’s way of moving, and if I can feel that there’s something efficient about it, that would be great.
>>57
It’s just like that when the gyro smoothly runs along a nice route, allowing you to catch up to Diego as the ball spins.
I thought that an infinite spiral doesn’t lead to rotation.
But it’s interesting, so it’s all good!
It’s a technique to reach the stand, so it’s kind of like hypnosis.
Breathing is the same as swirling in a spiral.
There was a sense of understanding back during the ripple effect.
Even if I try to read it thinking that’s how it is from part 6, the sense of incongruity becomes too overwhelming.
I dropped out during JoJolion.
It’s said that the energy of the golden rectangle was half-hearted because the iron ball is elliptical, but Johnny’s nails aren’t round, right? I can’t help but think that…
>>19
Johnny has a miraculous correction for the corpse.
>>19
Johnny has a Stand.
The iron ball is a thing.
Ripples are easy to understand as they flow through metal with an electrical feeling, or stick and repel with a magnetic feeling.
Rotation often happens in ways that are difficult to understand, but the golden ratio rotation is simple and easy to understand, and it produces amazing power.
First, as a premise, there exists an unseen force similar to a stand.
I interpreted that by successfully capturing it while imagining the trajectory of the golden rotation, it is possible to give that energy to the iron ball.
I thought that getting really thin from a steel ball was probably not going to happen.
>>23
Is it possible to transfer explosive damage from the hands to the feet?
I was also curious, but if I stop and think at that level, it becomes like, what are breathing techniques and stands… so it feels like questioning it is too late, and I decided not to worry about it.
I guess the power to make people believe that is what JoJo is all about is something that the readers understand the best.
Prevent the enemy’s decompression attack by entering the soap bubble!!
The soap bubble is not a ball but actually a rapidly spinning string!!
This is about a battle with the same enemy, so I was really scared.
>>27
It’s not an exaggeration to say that it’s spinning at a speed comparable to a soap bubble…
It’s not about logic.
It’s explained in terms of reasoning, but that’s just how it is.
The golden rectangle that seems to exist in nature doesn’t look like a golden rectangle at all!
I really like that I’m full of bluster.
The golden ratio in nature just looks like it, but it’s not actually the golden ratio…
I understood the golden rectangle for now, but since there’s no natural example here, I can’t apply it…! It felt a bit off.
There are a lot of forced and retrofitted settings, but SBR is interesting enough to overturn that.
>>35
It’s interesting, and perhaps because it has become a monthly publication, the illustrations are lively.
Johnny’s nail seems to have started rotating around his fingers in ACT3, and it doesn’t seem to be affected by its shape.
If you can’t accept it that way, you’ll first get caught on the existence of the stand…
>>37
Whether one can be convinced by the explanation of the setting is significant…
The rotational energy unleashed by the unity of man and horse surpasses even the inviolable wall, and it’s too beautiful for the theme of SBR; I love it so much.
Since the string and the bubble are mixed together, it was possible to swallow it as it can really appear that there are two types: the one with the bubble and the string that looks like a bubble.
Ultimately, I can understand that the bubbles in another dimension will also increase.
Even if the thread spins at high speed, it won’t make its existence disappear, will it?
>>42
The thread is spinning, which is typical of soap bubbles.
A soap bubble in which non-existent threads are spinning is invisible.
It feels like a bug that only allows the phenomenon of obtaining nothing and rotating to exist in that place.
I think it’s like a tip for using abilities.
I suppose the rain in the land will somehow develop, but is there any relationship between gravity and rain?
The rain is falling because it is pulled by gravity.
Snowflakes don’t form into rectangles, do they…
>>46
But there is something beautiful in the flow of the story.
They say it’s a rock organism, but if it has intelligence like a normal organism, isn’t that just like a chameleon or some wild creature with a slightly different ability?
>>47
I think it’s a silicon-based life form.
>>51
I first learned that silicon-based lifeforms were inspired by the similarities between carbon and silicon.
I didn’t get it because I haven’t read science fiction.
I thought that if the Weakapipo’s thing hit the left side, it would cause left half-body dysfunction, but it turns out it causes left half-body dysfunction no matter where it hits.
I noticed recently.
In the first place, the golden rectangle is the most beautiful when viewed from a human-centered aesthetic sense.
Even if people say “in nature! In physics too!”… I’ve never been able to get rid of that feeling.
>>52
It has mathematical beauty with self-similarity, so it is not anthropocentric.
The scale of ammonite shells or spirals in nature.
When the breathing method has the power of the sun, it just doesn’t make sense…
>>53
Just because the wavelength is the same doesn’t mean we’re getting something from the sun.
>>55
I don’t understand how high frequency comes from that kind of breathing…
It says that understanding takes precedence over everything, but I can’t achieve a sense of understanding.
Is it okay that my sister died so carelessly during the process of doing whatever it takes to save my mother?
>>56
It was introduced rather smoothly, but the final boss battle has already started, so…
I love the feeling of “something crazy came out!” when Ball Breaker and Act 4 appeared!
It’s cool when a golden rectangle falls from the sky.
I think it’s better to graduate from thinking that I’m cool for making comments on manga when I’m in middle school.
>>61
It’s not about me looking cool for making a witty retort; I wonder what that was all about. Is there some kind of reasonable explanation that’s easy to understand? We’re just having a fun conversation about it, that’s all.
It’s impressive!
It’s scarier to think that all the fantasy comics are written with strict logic.
Isn’t it strange that I can activate it after being kicked by a horse? Those kinds of things are trivial issues before that scene.
The concept of ripples was quite easy to understand.
I don’t know where Mamezukurai-san’s line of death is.
There’s that ridiculous term “world,” so it’s better to just accept that it’s how things are.
>>70
It’s scary because there’s no one else with such obviously ridiculous sentence endings in the JoJo world.
Isn’t it somewhat occult for perfect circles or perfect shapes to have meaning? Like in Kabbalah?
Infinite energy! That’s just how cool I thought it was!
Before understanding a certain element, something else that is difficult to grasp comes along, leaving no choice but to stop thinking.
I am a bearing person.
It’s the pressure festival! I was stuck between the mattress and the futon, with a chair placed on top.
Was there some kind of boom or something?
I stopped thinking about the little things while spreading my cape and accelerating in the 1st stage.
>>79
Manga doesn’t have impact unless it focuses on appearance.
Sometimes my Japanese gets a bit weird, but is it intentional when it comes to Dio?
>>81
Is it camouflage? Do you like lamps? It means that the light won’t turn on.
>>82
?
Do zombie horses heal wounds…?
Injuries that would be missing without a healer are a serious problem that I forcefully pushed through with a zombie horse.
Just when I thought that, a meat spray appeared.
Scary Monster is too convenient.
When they say zombie horse, everyone probably thinks of that thing from part 2, right…?
It’s not strange for a president’s subordinate to talk about the world all the time.
JoJolion is Josuke’s bubble ability and
As a result of Kira’s explosive abilities clashing, an inconsistent fusion occurred.
I think a shattered form of a soap bubble has been created.
How did you put a steel ball in the canned food?
>>90
It’s a trade secret.
I think it was good in terms of persuasiveness regarding the setting of a power that transcends everything.
It’s good that there’s a restriction that you have to ride a horse to fully unleash its power rather than being able to use it as you please.
There are various strange parts, but overall, I might like SBR the most.
A steel ball on the train tracks…?
The healing effect of the zombie horse is entirely due to the thread itself, and the shape of the zombie horse was just for decoration, right?
It’s a good contrast that while the president has a stand that draws in all happiness and drives away danger, Absolute Kill Man is truly just a monster that specializes in completely erasing the existence of his opponent…
In the sixth part, the idea that the body becomes a snail was something I couldn’t help but read in a way that makes me abandon understanding and just accept it for the time being…
I feel like I have absorbed the golden rotation almost without thinking because I was trained through that area.
>>97
When I saw that, it reminded me of the setting of Yoshi’s Island.
It seems that Yoshi imagining transforming into a helicopter or a car.
The issue is just the age I called out; even now, if I remove the filter and read from part one with a suspicious eye, it feels strange, doesn’t it?
Let’s thicken that kind of filter more.
Starting from the middle, there were various representations that applied the golden rectangle scale.
Well, I couldn’t help but think that it only looks that way from that angle…?
>>99
It’s about finding something in natural objects, so that’s really what it is.
>>99
Is that so…?
When it comes to invisible soap bubbles from S&W, I can’t understand anymore.
If I breathe in a special way, will it be possible to emit energy with the wavelength of the sun and defeat vampires?
>>101
It’s fine since it’s a technology that Mr. Zeppeli discovered after a lifetime of searching for ways to counter vampires.
If the ripple effect doesn’t work, I would have continued to search for another method.
Well, I can understand how the perception might change between the muscular art style from parts 1 to 2, where absurd theories are presented, and the sleek art style that starts from part 7, where absurd theories also emerge.
It is thought to be something that is likely rotating in a spiral direction in four-dimensional space.
Everything that exists in nature follows the golden ratio.
If a horse is made to run in a perfect form without strain, it will naturally take the shape of a golden rectangle.
>>108
Simply put, it’s just about letting it run naturally.
The corpses from 300 years ago, Tarkus and Brando, becoming zombies and resurrecting is quite something.
Is there a part left to revive?
>>109
It depends on the condition of the preserved body.
There have been instances where bodies from before the Common Era were found in a state that was almost as if they were alive.
>>113
These guys are being executed for treason, you know.
When a bone needle stimulates the brain, it turns you into a vampire, but it might be a bit of a stretch now.
The expectations for the latent potential of the brain were quite high in the past, which created a sense of persuasion.
Now it turns out that the brain is doing fairly well in its normal state, and there’s no dream left.
When it comes to mysterious technology, the iron ball that starts spinning rapidly in the palm of your hand is much more mysterious.
The iron ball rotating at high speed in the palm of my hand is probably enhanced by something called life magnetism.
Are there scenes where it rotates even if it’s not made of iron?
Yeah
It’s bothersome that what the ancient Westerners arbitrarily claimed about the golden rectangle is treated like a law of nature.
>>116
That’s the opposite, right?
It’s just that what can be seen in nature is called the golden rectangle.
Fractal shapes are also found in nature.
I think zombie resurrection is recreated from souls that remain in the graveyard.
Even if it is physically broken down, some kind of information remains in the field.
Isn’t the theoretical part of the battle something that has been dismissed as “maybe” by some for a long time?
It was unclear how the teacher determined where to consider the long side and the short side of natural objects.
Isn’t it strange that the horse kicks Johnny and it results in a perfect spin?
It’s also the coolest scene in the work.
By convincing themselves of that, the characters in the story gain power, so whether it’s true or not isn’t important.
If it’s a golden rectangle, it can rotate infinitely!
Well then, shall we give it a try?
It’s about that kind of feeling.
What is a rock person…?
>>123
If you can accept the Pillar Man, then you’re fine.
What do you mean by recovering with packed plankton!?
>>124
Plankton is only sealing the wound; healing ultimately depends on your own healing ability… OK?
>>124
If you say that, it’s basically impossible for a mass of plankton to maintain a human shape and walk.
I think the ability of the Foo Fighters is to freely transform a mass of plankton into another object and back.
So you can create a mass of flesh to seal the wounds, but you probably can’t create a body that functions as perfectly as Gold Experience.
The theoretical framework in the work is generally understandable, but there are definitely parts that feel like the settings or abilities were changed midway, which bothers me.
Specifically, it’s about who from D4C shot Johnny.
The theory in the story came to me quite smoothly, though.
I just can’t accept Part 6’s Puchhi; it makes me feel like DIO would never make a friend.
>>128
Because I need a reliable friend to go to heaven…
>>128
When Dio has time to spare, he creates superficial friends (making them think they are close, while conveniently using them as pawns).
Deep down, I definitely look down on them like crazy.
I stopped thinking about part 6 around Dragon’s Dream.
>>130
Isn’t Dragons Dream relatively easy to understand?
Personally, I had a lot of questions in my head about Jumpin’ Jack Flash before that.
Is the person with dry skin in section 9 related to the rock people?
When DIO is relaxed, he acts like a big shot and increases his supporters, just like he did in Part 3…
I think the priest’s experience is completely different from what DIO envisions as paradise.
>>134
If I think about it, just because I remembered how to get there, I can’t say for certain that DIO was also aiming for that heaven.
In Chapter 6, I still can’t come to terms with the method of breaking through the jailhouse rock and the snail.
Dragons Dream understands feng shui itself, but the part about entering the dragon remains unclear.
By the way, Japanese business cards are shaped similarly to a golden rectangle.
When you are attacked by an assassin, it’s good to use your business card to throw a iron ball.
>>139
Pushing it in a similar way feels like JoJo.
First of all, I understand that DIO’s heaven is completely different from the Father and Over Heaven…
The theory that determination leads to happiness is nothing more than the priest’s unique worldview.
>>141
It’s an original game!
The main theme of DIO’s heaven is that only Pucci, the one who dug his own grave, can freely change fate however he wants.
Around the middle of the fifth part, there have been more and more endings that leave me feeling unsettled…
>>145
Were there two ships…?
Even though I had the scale with me, I can’t operate it without the real thing. Did you not read that after doing it so many times?
DIO isn’t that important and has a somewhat mundane side, which is why I think he can make friends when he chooses to.
It’s not that I’m strong enough to maintain my solitude.
It seems that although they call each other friends, there doesn’t seem to be a sense of respect, but I think their trust in Pucci is genuine.
But the scene where I thought “This is good as it is now!” really got my adrenaline pumping!
Even if DIO says to unleash the Stand, he has vampire powers, so he can manage without the Stand… that’s how it goes.
It’s really embodying the idea that anything is fine as long as it’s interesting.
Well, it’s better than actually being uninteresting…
When I think about it myself, it makes sense but isn’t interesting… it tends to be like that.
I think SBR was focused on being cool in the past.
JoJo is pushing through quite forcefully at a certain point in the story.
If you can’t understand the golden rotation! Then you really understood the setting of JoJo up until now…
>>154
Understanding and agreement are not the same.
>>155
It seems to be explaining the golden ratio in a way that makes sense.
It’s fine as long as you can understand it somehow.
Even within the series, the intensity just couldn’t be fully accepted.
>>158
The will of pitch black is stronger in its instinctual and animalistic aspects than the courage of the golden spirit, so it’s understandable that it’s hard to accept it as a sense of duty up to now…
Respect the rotation.
Well, judges are often transferred here too.
Rotation is definitely power.
Rotational energy produces some amazing power ← I get it.
Transfer body damage using rotational energy ← ???
If you move the horse’s legs like a golden rotation, the horse won’t be able to touch the ground with its feet halfway through.
Requiem and Made in Heaven.
I don’t really understand where the laws of the JoJo world end and where the Stand abilities begin.