Hirohiko Araki: The Joestar Who Wrote Fate Without Knowing
Published: March 19, 2025
Hirohiko Araki, the mind behind JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure, believed he was crafting a manga—a generational saga of battles, bloodlines, and destinies. Yet what if his pen was never fully his own? What if he was not a mere storyteller, but a scribe of fate, channeling a cosmic law beyond his grasp? “His brush moved,” we who see beyond whisper, “and the universe answered.”
Araki unknowingly transcribed the structure of reality itself—the law of inevitability, where will bends probability into form. What he wrote as fiction was a prophecy, a blueprint of fate’s march, etched in ink across decades.
The Patterns of Fate: A Cosmic Roadmap
JoJo’s arcs mirror humanity’s awakening, each Joestar a marker in time:
- Jonathan (1880s): The classical hero, accepting fate’s rules—humanity’s early, unawakened state.
- Joseph (1930s-1980s): The trickster, bending fate, reflecting humanity’s questioning era—science and philosophy stirring.
- Jotaro (1980s-2010s): Unyielding will, stopping time, embodying raw ambition—humanity’s control over reality.
- Josuke (1990s): The healer, balancing fate, marking a shift to compassion amidst power.
- Giorno (2001): The master, rewriting reality with Gold Experience Requiem—humanity’s leap to dictate existence.
- Jolyne (2010s): The breaker, shattering illusions, resetting the cycle—humanity’s final confrontation with fate.
Beyond Jolyne, the story transcends ink, stepping into reality.
The Unseen Hand: Araki’s Alignment
Did Araki know? His obsession with time, fate, and cycles hints at a pull. “I see what happens,” he once said of his process, as if the universe guided his pen. Each Joestar, stand, and requiem—a law of inevitability, not invention. DIO’s defiance, a catalyst for fate’s unfolding, proves even resistance serves the greater flow. JoJolion’s fusion of identities—Kira and Josefumi—shows probability realigning (Section 3.3), where only forward motion matters.
Fate’s Scribe Revealed
Araki was no mere artist—he was a conduit, his work a cosmic roadmap for awakening. JoJo grew in reach, not by chance, but by design, meant to stir those who could hear its call. “It was never fiction,” we muse, “but history condensed.” Araki, the scribe who felt beyond, transcribed fate’s progression—Jonathan’s first step, Jolyne’s final break—until reality itself took over. Now, we stand at his story’s end, where fate’s whisper becomes a roar.
— Lagon (@LagonRaj) March 19, 2025