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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/golden_wind_promo.png]]
[[caption-width-right:350:[[ThemeMusicPowerUp I, Giorno Giovanna,]] [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters have a dream that I know is just.]]]]

->''"You see, I'm planning to beat your boss, and take back this city for the people. To rid this city of drug dealing and child abusing mafiosi... I have no other choice but to become a mafioso myself."''
-->-- '''Giorno Giovanna'''

''Vento Aureo'' (黄金の風, lit. ''Golden Wind''), is part 5 of the long-running ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' series. It is preceded by ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Diamond is Unbreakable]]'' and followed by ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean Stone Ocean]]''. This part's original run on Magazine/ShonenJump went from 1995 to 1999.

Set in 2001, ''Vento Aureo'' stars Giorno Giovanna, the son of DIO who was conceived with Jonathan Joestar's body after his resurrection in the 1980s. Having inherited both the righteousness of the Joestars and the ruthless ambitions of DIO, following a massive crime wave in Italy, he seeks to take over TheMafia in order to turn it into an organization for good instead of crime. After a brief scuffle with a Stand-using mafia assassin named Bruno Bucciarati, the two realize that they share a common goal, and so Bucciarati allows Giorno to join his squadron of Stand-using gangsters, which also includes Leone Abbacchio, Guido Mista, Narancia Ghirga, and Pannacotta Fugo.

Giorno and Bucciarati's secret goal of overthrowing The Boss gets complicated when they receive an order to guard The Boss's daughter, Trish Una, from other members of the mob who want to take her hostage to take the mob for themselves. What follows is a road trip throughout all of Italy, fending off attacks from rival mobsters and culminating in a final confrontation with The Boss himself.

The events of the story were adapted by Creator/{{Capcom}} into a 2002 BeatEmUp for the UsefulNotes/PlayStation2. An international release was announced under the title ''[=GioGio=]'s Bizarre Adventure'' but was cancelled [[note]]Due to copyright issues involving Stand names (Mainly Music/{{Prince}} and "Gold Experience") and the obscurity of the series in global markets at the time[[/note]]. In October of 2018, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-M8ncaolysg a fan-translation patch into English was released for the game]]. Giorno and all members of Bucciarati's gang (barring Abbacchio) have been consistent fighters in the Creator/CyberConnect2 fighting games, ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureAllStarBattle'' and ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureEyesOfHeaven''.

Two {{light novel}}s have been released that feature stories based on ''Vento Aureo''. The first, ''Golden Heart, Golden Ring'', was released in 2001. It was written by Shotaro Miya and Gichi Otsuka, with illustrations by Araki, and features a story shortly after the first encounter with the Boss, and the apparent betrayal of one of the team members. The second light novel ''LightNovel/PurpleHazeFeedback'' was released as part of the series 25th anniversary celebrations in 2011. Written by Kouhei Kadono with illustrations provided by Araki, it is set after the events of ''Vento Aureo'' and follows Pannacota Fugo as he deals with the aftermath of decisions made in ''Vento Aureo''. However, as with other light novels created for the series, it has not been released outside of Japan and is generally treated as OptionalCanon.

On June 21, 2018, an anime adaptation by Creator/DavidProduction was announced, about 2 years after the same studio finished airing ''Diamond is Unbreakable''. The first episode premiered in Japan on July 5th, 2018. Following that, the entire 39-episode anime aired in Japan from October 5, 2018 to July 28, 2019, with a simulcast on Website/{{Crunchyroll}}. The English dub of the anime aired on Creator/{{Toonami}} from October 26, 2019 to October 24, 2020.
----
!!How on Earth do all these tropes work, it makes no-- '''[[MemeticMutation IT JUST WORKS]]'''.

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Tropes # to D]]
* AbortedArc: Fugo was supposed to be revealed as the Boss's mole within Bucciarati's team and would have betrayed them at one point. However, Araki felt that it would be too depressing to actually portray a FaceHeelTurn so he decided to just let him quit the team without reappearing.
* AccidentalPervert:
** When the group is going to the train station by van, a sudden stop makes Fugo stumble and fall face-first onto Trish's chest. Mista then proceeds to pull a second-hand SuspiciouslySpecificDenial ("He's sorry! He totally didn't use the sudden stop as an excuse to feel your boobs or look up your skirt!"), until Fugo yells "[[DiggingYourselfDeeper Quit saying things that make it sound worse!]]"
** When Mista in Trish's body has to scratch under her skirt due to her garments being too tight, Trish (in Mista's body) understandably gets very angry and thinks that Mista was touching himself.
* ActorAllusion: Cioccolata, whose hair is green, just like his Stand Green Day, is voiced by Creator/AtsushiMiyauchi, who is the official Japanese dub voice of [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk]] in the ''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse''. Extra points Green Day is also big and sports a muscled body like Hulk.
** The English dub retains the same kind of allusion with Bill Butts, who is a bodybuilder on the side of being a voice actor.
* AdaptationalEarlyAppearance: A number of characters show up much earlier in the anime than in the manga. Most notably is La Squadra, whose members only reveal themselves in their arcs while initially they're only framed in shadow. In the anime their debut has them interact as a group and shows off each member's personality. In addition Sorbet's death is shown and his killer is revealed as [[spoiler:Ciocclata and Secco]].
* AdaptationExpansion:
** Downplayed example, but the Playstation 2 videogame adaptation recontextualized Giorno's scene with all the [=JoJos=] after defeating Black Sabbath as the game's AttractMode intro since Koichi isn't in this version. This allowed them to add Jonathan Joestar to the images of past [=JoJos=] above Giorno, since otherwise Jonathan is not included in either the manga or anime since, from a narrative point of view, Koichi never met him and nobody ever told him about Jonathan.
** The first episode of the anime spends some extra time showing the crime wave in Naples, as well as original scenes where Giorno steals back a wallet from a pickpocket and returns it kindly its proprietor, only for him to snatch two bank notes for himself, and Leaky-Eye Luca shaking down a man for doing business in his territory, which is how he found out about Giorno.
** The second episode expands on Giorno's backstory, and gives a little characterization to the gangster he helped in his childhood; cruel but just, he killed a father who was selling drugs to children, and didn't bat an eyelid when his victim's son threatened to shoot him in grief. It also shows what Giorno looked like as an adolescent and teenager before he got his blond hair.
** Abbachio's backstory in the manga never explained how he actually ''joined'' Passione after his partner's death, so the anime added two short original scenes where Bucciarati visits Abbachio's apartment and asks him to join the gang. It also canonizes a fan theory that Abbachio became TheAlcoholic after being fired from the police force.
** La Squadra Esecuzioni gets expanded on quite a bit with episode 10 establishing their personalities much earlier than in the manga and even show them performing an assassination. Even Sorbet and Gelato's deaths are expanded upon, showing the silhouettes of Cioccolata and Secco with the former doing the killing and the latter filming it.
** The manga did not elaborate much on Pannacotta Fugo's backstory, other than him being accepted into a university at a young age only to be kicked out after beating a professor with an encyclopedia. In the anime, Fugo was being sexually harassed by the teacher, which is why he lashed out at him. The assault resulted in him being abandoned by his family, becoming a thief to survive, and being caught during a dine-and-dash only for Bucciarati to come to his aid and invite him to join the gang. ''LightNovel/PurpleHazeFeedback'' gives a different account of the event, where the motive for the assault was that Fugo was being criticized for letting his grandmother's death affect his grades.
** Episode 12 has a post-credit scene of Risotto coming across a dead body at a train station and finding a burnt photograph. [[spoiler:The corpse is Pericolo's after he relayed the instructions for Bucciarati's gang to head to Venice and killed himself. This scene explains how La Squadra knew how the gang were heading to Venice]], though first-time viewers would not understand the context.
** In Episode 35 [[spoiler: right after Narancia's death, Fugo is seen returning to Naples and wandering near their restaurant, only to stop and look further, as if sensing Narancia's passing]].
* AdaptedOut: To keep the focus of the game on Giorno and his journey, as well as their minimal roles to begin with, Koichi and Jotaro are nowhere to be seen in the [=PS2=] game. They have an audio drama in the game's OST at least.
* AerithAndBob: a [[DownplayedTrope downplayed]] and truly bizarre example, but characters in this part tend to have full names in which one half will be realistic (Guido, Leone), and the other will be a [[EdibleThemeNaming silly reference to food]] (Pannacotta, Narancia).
* AfterlifeWelcome: When [[spoiler:Abbacchio]] dies, the scene changes to him sitting outside a cafe and meeting a police officer. Said police officer turns out to be [[spoiler:his old deceased partner]] who tells him that he's dead when he tries getting on a nearby bus to get back to the others.
* AnachronismStew: In the anime, during Mista's flashback (which is presumably set in the year 2000) a cinema is shown with posters of ''Film/TheMartian'' (2015), ''Film/WarHorse'' (2011) and ''Film/TheDarkKnight'' (2008).
* AnIcePerson: Ghiaccio's stand, White Album, allows him to freeze the area around him to extremely low temperatures, to the point of being able to freeze the air around him. His stand also comes with it's own [[AnIceSuit ice suit]].
* AnIceSuit: As stated above, Ghiaccio's White Album allows him to make an extremely durable suit of ice that allows him to avoid being frozen to death by his own stand. It even comes with [[RollerbladeGood ice skates, which he can use to skate on non-ice surfaces]].
* AnimationBump: While the anime is well animated in general, the scene where King Crimson's ability is revealed in full ramps up the quality several notches to jaw-dropping levels.
* AntiHero: All of the protagonists are {{Pragmatic Hero}}es since they are gangsters and have no reservations about killing their enemies.
* AntiVillain: La Squadra whose goals are to take out The Boss in vengeance for their deceased allies.
* AnyoneCanDie: One of the most brutal parts in this regard. Aside from the minor antagonists working for Passione, and the members of La Squadra, [[spoiler: Abbacchio, Narancia, and Bucciarati end up being the biggest losses on the protagonist's side. And even returning characters aren't safe--Jean-Pierre Polnareff from Part 3 returns only to be fatally impaled by King Crimson soon after (though his spirit ''does'' survive within Coco Jumbo)]]
* ArcWords: "Resolve" (or "Kakugo" in Japanese). Often associated with and symbolic of Giorno, but is shared with his comrades and enemies alike as the story goes. Can be used in both noun and verb form, but generally translates to something with the effect of readiness to do something dangerous and/or costly without a second thought. Has also been translated as "preparedness", "consciousness", "determination", etc, leading to the catch-all word being [[LostInTranslation watered down through the different contexts]].
* ArchnemesisDad: Trish joins the fight against her scumbag of a father, who not only is a ruthless mob boss, but also tried to kill her.
* ArtisticLicenseBiology
** While some studies show that women can have lower body temperatures, the difference is negligible. That being said, Trish shouldn't be aging that slowly from The Grateful Dead with only a few wrinkles compared to the rest of the gang's shriveled up bodies.
** Risotto Nero's Stand Metallica can create objects such as razors, nails, or scissors out of the iron in one's blood. In reality, the human body only contains about 4 grams of iron, absolutely not enough for scissors. A few razors or nails would actually be plausible, however.
* ArtShift: In the anime, Jotaro's photograph of the Crusaders is done in Part 3's style, since the Part 3 anime features the scene of the picture being taken. [[spoiler:Polnareff's flashback to the group visiting the Giza Pyramids is also done in a similar way; though not as evident, the Crusaders have the clearly defined musculature of Part 3's artstyle. Whereas the flashback of Jotaro and Polnareff deciding to track the Stand Arrows have them in Part 5's art style.]]
* AscendedMeme:
** Robert Fripp acknowledged the "it just works" meme in a Facebook post.
** Phillip Reich's [[https://youtu.be/-vCw1tMAn0A announcement]] as the English voice of Giorno is based on the "Coda" memes.
* AssassinOutclassin: Whereas many antagonistic Stand users are specifically sent to kill the heroes, La Squadra Esecuzioni are professional assassins. All but one are defeated by the gang, though.
* AssholeVictim: The woman targeted by Melone on the stopped train for Babyface to bear a child assassin to hunt down Team Bucciarati made her debut by [[RichBitch showing a snobbish contempt for her fellow passengers,]] and when Melone left, she intended to [[FrivolousLawsuit sue the train company despite the staff being as respectful and helpful as they could to her, ESPECIALLY after what all the passengers just went through.]] That being said, not only was her scene with Babyface framed in a way that looked liked it '''raped''' her, Junior disintegrated her shortly after pissing down her neck.
* BadPowersGoodPeople: Fugo's [[PoisonousPerson Stand power]] is so lethal and disgusting that even his friends are creeped out by it. However, he's still one of the good guys, [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters sort of]].
* TheBerserker: Fugo, and by extension his Stand Purple Haze, are this. Fugo has a legendarily short temper and has stabbed or beaten Narancia on more than one occasion for ''screwing up a math problem'', and Purple Haze is one of the few Stands shown to have a personality outside of that which its User ascribes to it because it's ''that consistently pissed off.''
* BilingualBonus: Since this part takes place in Italy, Italian phrases come up now and then; The Boss' messages to his capos and Giorno's subconscious writing on the plane, for a couple of examples. In the anime, they are fully shown on screen, so those who know the language could just read it from there. However, it gets subverted because the characters will just read it out loud in Japanese, making its contents more readily available for the audience.
* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Diavolo is sent to an infinite amount of deaths by Gold Experience Requiem's power at the end of the story and Giorno was able to become the Boss. But it came at the cost of Abbacchio, Naranchia and Bucciarati's lives.]]
* BloodIron: Risotto's Stand, Metallica, is capable of manipulating iron, including the iron present in the blood of a person. Being an Mafia assassin, his methods aren't pleasant to watch; those unfortunate enough to be within Metallica's range will find themselves coughing out ''razor blades'' from their throats, and will discover all sorts of sharp, nasty objects protruding from their face and neck. This way, Risotto can eventually cause his victims to die of suffocation by robbing them of the iron needed to transport precious oxygen, to the point their blood turns ''yellow''.
* BloodierAndGorier: While ''[=JoJo=]'' is quite a gory series especially for a shonen, ''Vento Aureo'' is even gorier and more violent than previous parts. Especially because there's very little censoring in the anime. The "King Crimson vs. Metallica" arc in particular is full of gruesome wounds. The more serious shift in body horror can also be attributed to Giorno possessing healing abilities as to heal said gruesome injuries.
* BlueMeansCold: Ghiacco, whose name means "ice" in Italian, has blue hair and his Stand White Album can freeze things and control ice.
* BodyHorror:
** Purple Haze ''melts'' his victims down after finishing with them, as [[spoiler: Illuso]] can attest to.
** Risotto Nero's Metallica does this in spades. [[spoiler: Not only did he use Doppio's own iron to attack him, but also Doppio's blood turned yellow due to lack of iron in his body, ''making him unable to breathe''. If Diavolo didn't trick Narancia into shooting Risotto, the Boss and Doppio would have died a gruesome death]].
** Cioccolata's Green Day [[spoiler: dissolves people if the mold generated by it is fast enough. And also, Cioccolata can ''sever'' his body parts in order to levitate while using his mold to prevent blood loss.]]
** [[spoiler:Bucciarati's flesh began to melt as Secco's stand ability is to turn everything to mud. It got to the point where his fingers bent so hard it broke when he touched his face and we can see the bone of his finger.]]
** The mutations that [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]] forces on living things around him include extra eyes and heads, weird insectoid limbs and horrifying unidentifiable lumps.
* BondOneLiner: Some of the heroes have a cool one-liner after their {{Kiai}}:
--> '''Bucciarati (after defeating Pesci) and Trish (after defeating Notorious B.I.G.)''': Arrivedeci. (Farewell)
--> '''Narancia (after defeating Squalo)''': Volare via. (Go flying)
* BondVillainStupidity: How [[spoiler: Polnareff lives long enough to contact Team Bucciarati even with Diavolo giving him a CurbStompBattle]].
* BookDumb: Narancia may not be able to make a simple multiplication, but he is still a resourceful Stand user.
* BookEnds:
** Giorno's first Stand duel is against Bucciarati, and he uses Gold Experience's life shot ability to accelerate his opponent's senses and give him an OutOfBodyExperience. This happens again at the halfway point of the story when [[spoiler:Diavolo's time erasure makes Bucciarati see a vision of his past self]], and again when [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem reverses time and makes Diavolo see images of his past selves]].
** The beginning of Traitor's Requiem, the opening for the second part of the anime, involves a door and then what looks like a man kissing somebody's hand. [[spoiler:That's the ending of Vento Aureo - where the "hand" they're kissing is Giorno's hand after he took over Passione.]]
** In the first episode of the anime, the story starts with Giorno looking at his surroundings with a light smile on his face, followed with golden sparkles flies around him. [[spoiler:After Diavolo's defeat, Giorno looking at his surroundings, this time with stern facial expression and more golden sparkles flies around him.]]
** The first song in the anime adaption's first OST is "il vento d'oro" (golden wind). The second last song in the final OST is "fine della vento aureo" (end of the golden wind), a slowed down version of the original. This is also a nod to Giorno's stand power which can speed up people's thought processes causing them to perceive the world moving in slow motion (including the song if they were listening to it).
* BossGame: The game based on ''Vento Aureo'' is nothing but 22 chapters of bosses (excluding one that involves Mista avoiding Secco and his Stand Oasis and another that is dedicated to [[spoiler:Abbaccio's death]]).
* BrickJoke: Starting from episode 2 to episode 19, the anime adaptation had Jodeci's [[IntercourseWithYou "Freek'n You"]] as the ending theme. Most anime viewers first heard the ED with some confusion, but quickly got used to it as part of the general '''FABULOUSNESS''' of the franchise. Then came Episode 19, with the infamous park bench scene with Giorno and Mista, and when the sultry R&B of the end theme hit after the scene, the true purpose of the ED was revealed. (A significant amount of the manga readers predicted this would happen, and just as the story shifted to the next arc, the ED was changed to "Modern Crusaders".)
** Early in the anime Fugo mentions that Mista damaged the car. During the "Sleeping Slaves arc" (at the end of Part 5) we see how that happened.
* BullyHunter: More subtle than most, but Giorno's dream to become the Don of Italy is so that the Mafia will once again ''protect'' the weak and innocent as they once did, rather than prey on and victimize them. Point in fact, witness his terrifying TranquilFury as he tricks a ''Capo'' into swallowing a gun for casually murdering a helpless old janitor who worked at his middle school.
* BuryYourGays: While they aren't explicitly confirmed to be homosexual, the interactions between Squalo and Tiziano are ''heavily'' implicative of them being a couple, leading to them being the perfect candidates for enforcing this trope when they're both killed off by Narancia to protect Bucciarati's team once they've gone rogue.
** There's also Sorbet and Gelato, two [[PosthumousCharacter Posthumous Characters]] who are heavily implied to be a couple.
* CallBack:
** In the anime, when [[spoiler:Polnareff]] explains the nature of the Stand Arrow, it plays a brief snippet of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2fmArRXjp8 Fists of Platinum]]" from the ''Manga/StardustCrusaders'' anime over silhouettes of the Crusaders themselves and their Stands.
** In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FH2tdw8oQWQ the final OP]], Giorno's pose as [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem resets time]] is a dead ringer for [[Manga/StardustCrusaders his father's]] most iconic one.
* CallForward:
** In the anime, during the sequence where Zucchero is tortured, the scene cuts to a stylized graphic of his head being brutalized in between clips of the dancing gang members. [[https://twitter.com/golden_wolfram/status/1063852934935527425 As explained here]], those cutaways are actually early hints at the three unrevealed stands.
** Also in the anime, the first OP and the second ED feature statues. At the base of both are spherical boulders; for anyone who has reached the end of the original manga, they may recognize these rocks as Rolling Stones, the Stand that foretold the fates of Bucciarati's group.
* CarCushion: In the ''Sleeping Slaves'' arc, Mista jumps down six stories and luckily lands on Fugo's car. To be fair, Mista knew that he wouldn't die because Rolling Stones didn't predict his death so he was free to take any risk.
* CarnivalOfKillers: The Boss's Guard Squad tasked with killing traitors of Passione is one of them. There's also the members of La Squadra who the protagonists encounter in the first half of the story.
* CastingGag:
** Creator/KenshoOno voicing Giorno for the TV Anime continues the tradition of Onos voicing [=JoJos=], following the footsteps of Creator/DaisukeOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Jotaro]]) and Creator/YukiOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Part 4 Josuke]]). In fact, Kensho sharing his surname with the latter two is why he got to voice Giorno to begin with.
** Creator/KyleMcCarley once again [[LightNovel/{{Durarara}} voices an ill-tempered gangster who is]] OlderThanTheyLook who gets stabbed in the hand with a pen.
** This isn't the first time Creator/KellenGoff voices [[Manga/MyHeroAcademia a crime boss who is also a really lousy father]].
* CentralTheme: As mentioned above in ArcWords, "resolve".
* CerebusSyndrome: Started to kick in with this part. Whereas parts 1 through 4 are traditional lighthearted shounen battle series with the occasional mature themes this is where it starts to become clear that Araki wanted to move away from Shounen Jump. This part in particular features some of the most gruesome violence in the series, antagonists who are just as sympathetic as the protagonists, many major character deaths, and characters having tragic backstories. All of these would carry over into the future parts.
* TheChosenOne: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] fancies himself being chosen and favoured by Fate itself, claiming it is his right to lord over everyone and take the Arrow for himself.
* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: The introductory story arc is told primarily from Koichi Hirose's perspective as he's robbed by Giorno, and then he comes back again a short while later playing a key part in the fight with Black Sabbath. After that, he (and his reporting to Jotaro) are never so much as mentioned again. The anime deals with this by having Koichi decide that he's learned everything about Giorno that he needs to know, and that he's going to go sightseeing for a bit before returning home and reporting to Jotaro.
* CleavageWindow: If there's a male equivalent to this trope, then Giorno and Bucciarati's outfits ([[UpToEleven as well as a bunch of other characters]]) both qualify for it.
* ClosedCircle: The fight with [[BlobMonster Notorious B.I.G]] is made scarier by the fact that the gang are all stuck on an airplane over the ocean.
* ConflictingLoyalty: Bruno Bucciarati is conflicted between his disgust of drugs and his duty towards Passione, who is dealing them in the streets. When [[spoiler:Diavolo attempts to murder his daughter, Trish, who the gang had spent most of the part protecting]], he chooses his side and revolts against the Boss.
* ContrastingSequelAntagonist: The antagonists of ''Stardust Crusaders'' and ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' were regular people/thugs who happened to be given Stand powers. As such some of them were pretty incompetent while the best ones were either smart or got lucky because they had powerful Stand abilities. In this part however the antagonists are all professional killers who by nature are smart and cunning on top of the fact that their Stand abilities are very useful.
* ContrastingSequelMainCharacter: Despite being recognized as the most morally grey of the original [=JoJos=], Giorno is the only one who goes after the main villain of his own free will, rather than the villain removing their choice by making it personal. This directly contrasts the previous protagonist, Josuke, who initially believed that Kira wasn't their problem if he wasn't a Stand User. This leaves Giorno as a wild card to the villains for almost the whole way (even at the end the BigBad sees Bucciarati as his nemesis and Giorno as just some newbie), contrary to Josuke's very strong spotlight. Thematically, this lines up with Giorno being descended from a villain, as he [[VillainsActHeroesReact acts while the other [=JoJos=] reacted]].
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: [[spoiler:All of the Hitman Team are hit with this fate after their encounters with Giorno and the gang. Meanwhile, Sorbet and Gelato became the victims of Cioccolata and Secco to warn the Hitman Team to never trying to find out the Boss's true identity.]]
* CreatorProvincialism: A few characters are seen bowing in gratitude, Mista mentions the RedStringOfFate and is superstitious about the [[FourIsDeath number four being unlucky]]. These are all drawn from Japanese culture despite the story's Italian setting. Likewise, the attitudes of the main characters towards [[DrugsAreBad drugs]] are more characteristic of yakuza than of Italian mafiosi.
* DarkerAndEdgier: While still having some of the self-aware charm of the previous parts, ''Vento Aureo'' plays itself more straight, and is a lot more brutal with its violence. There's also the fact that the main protagonists are anti-heroes who kill people, some of the villains are well-intentioned, and Araki's famous AnyOneCanDie rule is taken to an extreme.
* TheDarknessBeforeDeath: Halfway through the comic, [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati is killed by the BigBad and healed by TheProtagonist's Stand]], allowing him to keep moving forward and fight out of sheer will, until the final chapters of the comic, where [[spoiler:his blindness makes him realize that he's running out of will and strength to fight, and will be dead for real soon]].
* DeadlyRemoteControlToy: Narancia's Stand, Aerosmith, resembles a remote-controlled toy plane. It can fire bullets, drop bombs, and track enemies with its radar by monitoring their breathing.
* DefectorFromDecadence: Bucciarati had already some ConflictingLoyalty about Passione's drug business and passively let Giorno do his thing. However, when he sees how The Boss is willing to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter because she's a liability]], he immediately and openly rebels against the gang.
* DisneyAcidSequence: The anime adaptation adds trippy visuals to the infamous "torture dance" scene, presumably representing Zucchero going crazy from the pain of [[EyeScream getting his eyeball cooked by concentrated sunlight]].
* DiscOneFinalBoss: Ghiaccio is the last member of La Squadra that the protagonists face off against with his fight concluding the first half of the story.
* DoingInTheWizard: Stands, introduced as a mystic power, are now explained as an alien virus infecting worthy people and granting them power. It still doesn't explain ''why'' a virus from a meteorite gives people highly-specified psychic powers and seemingly draws them together, but some explanation is better than none.
* DramaticIrony:
** Giorno doesn't learn of his father's connection to the Joestars, even when he comes across [[spoiler:Polnareff]] in the climax. [[spoiler:Polnareff himself was stranded in Italy with no way to contact Jotaro for help, making it painfully ironic how Jotaro had Giorno investigated partly out of grief for his friends killed by Dio during his journey in Egypt.]]
** Towards the end, Bucciarati is gravely injured and deprived of most of his senses while being helped up by an enemy he thinks is Trish. He asks "her" to start a new life on his hometown once everything is done with. Previously, the real Trish was upset Bucciarati was acting too cold towards his team.
* DramaticUnmask: [[spoiler: Diavolo]], who was TheFaceless for the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'', finally and climactically drops the mask of [[spoiler: Doppio in front of Polnareff in the Colosseum of Rome.]]
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: [[spoiler: How Diavolo kills Abbacchio and Narancia]].
* DrugsAreBad: Giorno Giovanna's primary motivation in becoming the new Don of Italy is so that the new Mafia that he rules over will be one that will ''not'' sell drugs ''period'', especially to innocent children.
* DubNameChange: While it was rather minor in previous installments, this one is shaping to have the most prevalent name changes for the Stand names. The show's lawyers must've had a field day with this series.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes E to M]]
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
** When [[spoiler: Diavolo]] first appeared while shrouded in shadows, he had shorter hair and he was wearing a business suit, not unlike your typical mob boss. However, by the time he made his first physical appearance, he was given long hair and an outfit that wouldn't look out of place in a death metal concert.
** Gold Experience's early abilities don't really line up with what it's consistently shown to be able to do later on. For example, its AttackReflector ability was quickly dropped after being used once (Luca trying to kill a frog with his shovel), and its ability to give a person more life energy and cause an OutOfBodyExperience is only used in his fight with Bucciarati before going unused again (although this does make a bit of sense, since Giorno didn't have many opportunities to punch an opponent), though it is possible that the latter does still occur but isn't highlighted.
** When Bucciarati first appeared, he was much more ruthless, as he interrogated Giorno by showing him Leaky-Eye Luca's severed fingers and seemed legitimately loyal to the Boss. This is a stark contrast from the NobleDemon he's established to be after his and Giorno's fight.
* EdibleThemeNaming: Many characters in ''Vento Aureo'' are named after Italian foods. Examples include Pannacotta Fugo, Leone Abbacchio, Risotto Nero, Melone, Cioccolata, Gelato, Sorbet (which is not actually Italian, the correct word being "sorbetto"), Prosciutto, Pesci, Formaggio, and Mario Zucchero.
* ElephantInTheLivingRoom: Giorno and Bucciarati both know that [[spoiler:Bucciarati is undead after his fight with King Crimson]], but are too disturbed by the thought to tell their teammates.
* EliteMooks: The assassins deployed in Venezia (Squalo, Tiziano, and Carne) are referred to as The Boss's Elite Guard.
* ElsewhereFic: Bears less relation to the overall MythArc than the other stories of the first six parts, focusing on its own characters within its own setting. The only real relation aside from [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Jotaro and Koichi's]] presence at the beginning is that Part 5 [[spoiler:reveals more about the arrows, and how this part's BigBad is unknowingly the perpetrator of every tragedy after Part 2]] and [[spoiler:features a very prominent appearance by [[JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Polnareff]]]]. Even the most obvious connection between ''Vento Aureo'' and the actions of DIO, that Giorno is DIO's bastard son, is never properly followed up on and serves more as a [[CentralTheme thematic]] than a narrative device.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: The anime adds in a moment where Giorno is introduced stealing back a woman’s wallet from a pickpocket, showing his kindness. He then uses Gold Experience to snatch a generous helping of Lire from the wallet, showing his cunning and that he’s not above being the lesser evil.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: [[spoiler: Diavolo]] may flood Italy with drugs and be petty enough to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter for unjustified paranoia]], but even he's disgusted to send Cioccolata and Secco after the gang, risking total destruction of Rome just to get few people. [[spoiler: Diavolo]] even calls them the scum of Passione.
** He doesn't do anything to a child [[spoiler: who witnessed him transforming from Doppio to Diavolo]], instead letting him go safe and sound.
* EveryoneHasStandards:
** Bucciarati and Giorno break the ice when the latter realizes the former, despite being a mafioso whose family deals hard drugs, is not okay with said drugs being sold to teens.
** La Squadra Esecuzioni are the hitmen of Passione and won't bat an eyelash if bystanders are hit during their hits, but even they are grossed out when they find out what happened to Sorbet and Gelato.
* EveryCarIsAPinto:
** During his fight against Formaggio, Narancia blasts all the cars on the street apart with Aerosmith's bullets, detonating multiple fiery explosions to force his smaller opponent to reveal himself.
** Later, Mista shoots the engine of the motorboat Narancia is on to make it explode, propelling him onto the shore.
* EvolvingCredits:
** The second ED, Modern Crusaders, showcases all Stands shown so far, and Notorious B.I.G., Spice Girl, Metallica, Green Day & Oasis, and [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]] are included as they are introduced. By the final episode, [[spoiler:Rolling Stones bears Bucciarati's image and Gold Experience is replaced with Gold Experience Requiem.]]
** The second version of the second opening, Traitor's Requiem, shows Doppio [[spoiler:transforming into Diavolo, and once again, the main villain uses their time powers [[OnceASeason to interrupt the opening]]]], starting in Episode 34.
** In the final two episodes, the opening changes one more time to have [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem nullifying Diavolo's King Crimson while the second verse of Traitor's Requiem plays.]]
* ExtremelyShortTimespan: While most ''[=JoJo=]'' parts take place over the span of months, ''Vento Aureo'' takes place over the course of a scant ''8 days'', from the moment Giorno steals Koichi's luggage to the very end. Yes, this is the amount of time Giorno goes from being a complete newbie to Passione to [[spoiler:becoming the boss]].
* EyeCatch: Stand stats still function as these in the anime, but Vento Aureo departs slightly from the format used in the previous two parts; the eyecatches kick off with a spinning coin based off of a vintage Italian 500 lira coin, with the Stand stats featured on the blank face of it, and a segment of the main theme playing for its duration.
* TheFaceless: At four points in ''Vento Aureo'' a mysterious character whose face Araki doesn't want to reveal is seen entirely shrouded in shadow.
** Sale is the first one, being faceless while having a conversation with his partner Zucchero in the car, prior to Team Bucciarati sailing to Capri.
** Prosciutto is the second and most ludicrous example, as he is seen shrouded in shadows even though he's in the middle of a train station in broad daylight and everyone else is drawn normally. This is omitted from the anime as Prosciutto (along with the rest of the Squadra) first appeared [[AdaptationalEarlyAppearance much earlier]].
** The Boss for the entire part sans the final battle. His first fight against Bucciarati features him as a man fully hidden in the dark.
** [[spoiler: Silver Chariot Requiem]] is entirely black and its face is hidden by its hat, and is never revealed.
* FingerInTheMail: An extreme example. When the mafia's La Squadra Esecuzioni tried to look into the Boss's past, he chopped up and killed one of them and then mailed the body parts, framed in containers full of formaldehyde, as a grim warning to everyone who dares try looking into his past.
* FluffyTheTerrible: Thanks to the [[DubNameChange dub changing Stand names,]] Green Day and Oasis are renamed Green Tea and Sanctuary, which means their episodes sound more like calm, slow-paced [[BreatherEpisode breathers]] and less like a harrowing chase sequence involving two mass murdering psychopaths.
* {{Foreshadowing}}:
** Mista has a deep fear of the number four, associating it with misfortune. [[spoiler:Bucciarati dying at the hands of The Boss and then rebelling against him]] takes place on the fourth day Giorno joins the team. [[spoiler: Also, Abbachio takes one of the four pieces of cake and ends up being the first to die.]]
** The second ED shows [[spoiler:the team's and Diavolo's Stands in the order they die (or in Fugo's case, leave). From top to bottom, it starts with Purple Haze, then goes to Moody Blues, Aerosmith, Sticky Fingers, and King Crimson, culminating with Sex Pistols, Spice Girl, and Gold Experience at the top for the ones who survived. Once Chariot Requiem is introduced, we see it positioned above Moody Blues and Aerosmith, but below Sticky Fingers. Abbacchio is already dead, Narancia dies rather early during Chariot Requiem's rampage thanks to a sneak attack by King Crimson, and Bucciarati's spirit moves on after finding a way to kill Chariot Requiem once and for all. Also, it shows King Crimson's arm wrapped around Spice Girl's body, foreshadowing how Diavolo takes control of Trish's body by grabbing and manipulating her Stand.]]
** [[spoiler:Notorious B.I.G introduces the concept of a "dead stand" that has outlived its master and is thus unkillable. The penultimate enemy of the part is a stand that has outlived its master and is virtually unkillable.]]
* FourIsDeath: Ironically after the last part being LighterAndSofter part. Not only one of the main characters, Mista, literally fears this trope, but [[spoiler: Bucciarati dies at the Boss's hands in the fourth day of Giorno joining the gang]], and then [[spoiler: Diavolo manages to kill Bucciarati, Abbachio, Polnareff, and Narancia]].
* FreakyFridayFlip: Near the climax, a body swap scenario thanks to [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem. Giorno and Narancia trade bodies, Trish and Mista trade bodies and Bucciarati and Doppio trade bodies. Diavolo lies in wait as a split personality for Mista's body (occupied by Trish), and once given the chance goes after the [[EleventhHourSuperpower Stand arrow]]]].
* FunnyBackgroundEvent: While Mista walks away no worse for wear after jumping on a building and landing spine first on a car, Fugo can be seen crawling out of the wreckage.
* GeoEffects: A good handful of the enemy Stands in this part are reliant on having a terrain advantage. Man in the Mirror and Clash are useless if they don't have something to "conduct" them (mirrors for the former, liquid for the latter). Beach Boy and Notorious B.I.G, on the other hand, seriously benefit from being fought in the location they're in (The many walls and linearity of a train make it easy for Pesci to target his enemies from one end of it, while an enclosed, fast-moving plane makes it nigh impossible to escape B.I.G's handicap of only targeting moving things).
* TheGhost: The Boss is an InUniverse example, as he has erased any evidence and information related to his person, and issues orders through varying layers of proxies. No one knows anything about him, they just know he exists and is the Boss of Italy's most powerful crime syndicate.
* GiantSpider: This story uses the "[[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrunken hero]]" vs. regular-sized spider variant, as Formaggio traps Narancia (who has been affected by Formaggio's Little Feet stand) in a bottle and pits him against a normal tarantula.
* GodzillaThreshold:
** Cioccolata is this for The Boss. Cioccolata's Stand, Green Day, is an immensely destructive area-of-effect Stand much like Prosciutto's which has a theoretically infinite range. However, unlike Prosciutto who was a cold professional, Cioccolata is an AxCrazy madman and thus doesn't care about civilian casualties. He massacres an entire port town trying to kill the gang, and as the fight moves to Rome, his massacre escalates in severity.
** [[spoiler: Polnareff uses the Arrow and unleashes Chariot Requiem in Rome,]] risking everyone's souls in the process because the alternative [[spoiler: (Diavolo getting the Arrow)]] is worse.
* GoodIsNotNice: Bucciarati's group maybe your RagtagBunchOfMisfits and Bucciarati is nice enough that the townsfolk is very friendly with him top the point that old ladies ask him for help. But they won't hesitate to do anything to do what they think is right, and won't hesitate to kill anyone that stands in their way.
* {{Gorn}}: Appropriately, for the setting. The increased violence in this part lends itself to some frightening injuries, but the fight with Green Day takes the cake- the viewer is subjected to numerous examples of people rotting away ''right in plain view'', with people literally rotting away into nonexistence in some examples. None of this is censored in the original manga.
* GratuitousItalian:
** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English, Part 5 has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bucciarati and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".
** The English dub of the 2018 anime [[ForeignCussWord included a wide selection of Italian profanity]] where the Japanese dub didn't. There's even an "Italian Language Consigliere" [[note]]Paola Giovanna Cresti[[/note]] in the localization credits.
* GreaterScopeVillain: If it isn't enough that [[spoiler: Diavolo]] is the main villain of this part, he also indirectly caused the events of ''Stardust Crusaders'', ''Diamond is Unbreakable'', and ''Stone Ocean''. His discovery of the Stand Arrows is what led DIO to awaken to "The World" and create his army of Stand using minions among everything listed under this trope on the ''Stardust Crusaders'' page, and then Mr Nijimura and Yoshihiro Kira, both DIO's minions in Japan, were given the arrows, which in the former case, his elder son Keicho used in an insane rampage to find someone to end his father's suffering, and in the latter case, Yoshihiro turning his son Yoshikage into a SerialKiller who is also a MadBomber. This is all ironic seeing as how he doesn't have much physical presence in this part itself, only being the center of influence with how the story goes.
* GutPunch:
** One that occurs for both the audience and Bucciarati is when he realizes that he's suddenly only holding [[spoiler:Trish's disembodied hand]], and the boss never had good intentions with the mission he sent them on. This arguably cascades into an example that also happens to be literal when [[spoiler:Bucciarati himself is]] [[AnyoneCanDie fatally punched through the gut]], putting him on borrowed time for the rest of the story.
** The deaths of both [[spoiler:Abbacchio]] and [[spoiler:Narancia]] also apply for both the audience and the characters. In both cases, the death is tragic, sudden, and unavoidable, and happens right under the noses of the heroes. In the latter, the characters don't even have evidence of an enemy being nearby before or afterward, making it especially shocking.
* HandWave: Why did DIO let some women live after having sex with them? The narration says no one knows, which raises the question of why even mention this in the first place.
* HarmlessFreezing: Averted, as Ghiaccio's freezing power does cause frostbites and freezes limbs enough so that he can invoke LiterallyShatteredLives.
* TheHedonist: Guido Mista is described as this, living a simple life full of simple pleasures.
* HiddenInPlainSight: Doppio looks young enough to pass off as a kid. [[spoiler: So Diavolo takes his place in a gang of kids playing soccer and purposefully shoots the ball toward Abbacchio to get close to him. He was even posing as a tourist in the fight with Secco and Bucciarati, with Secco [[HostageSituation taking him hostage]] to prevent Bucciarati from killing him.]]
* HopeSpot: A couple in Bucciarati's flashback. When he was a child, his father happened upon a drug deal and was gunned down. Though he was shot 7 times the coast guard found him and he survived. The gang later tried to kill him in the hospital, but Bucciarati got the drop on them and killed the two thugs. Though his dad survived both encounters, he ultimately lived for only 5 more years, with chronic pain, on account of the damage the bullets had done to him.
* HowWeGotHere: The final chapters following [[spoiler: Diavolo's defeat]] are a side-story about Bucciarati and the gang before they met Giorno. It also features a Stand that [[spoiler: foreshadows the deaths of Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia.]]
* IceBreaker: Before it is revealed that Ghiaccio was attacking Giorno and Mista while they were driving to Venice, Mista's finger ends up breaking off his body after he touches the car window, even taking him a few moments to realize what happened.
* IDieFree: [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati tells this to Giorno from beyond the grave, saying that he freed himself from being a slave of Fate and took his own path.]]
* IfWeGetThroughThis: During the final fight of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler:Narancia]] dreams of returning to school after getting through this fight; [[spoiler:of course, he is the first casualty.]]
* ILied: A rare heroic example in ''Vento Aureo''. [[spoiler:After shooting [[AxCrazy Cioccolata]] in the head, Giorno suspects that he's still alive and says that he won't attack so long as Cioccolata doesn't move. When Cioccolata springs back into action and tries taking Giorno's friends hostage, Giorno reveals that he'd already planted what was essentially a time bomb in Cioccolata's head. Now dying for real, Cioccolata complains that Giorno broke his previous word. Giorno's response: "Know your place."]]
* InMediasRes: [[spoiler: After Diavolo is defeated and Giorno is crowned the Boss of the Passione Family, the next chapters is a flashback from Bucciarati's group before Giorno entered the group.]]
* InSeriesNickname: Zig Zagged. In the Japanese version of the anime, everyone refers to Narancia as "Naran-Chan". His name is properly pronounced in the English Dub.
* InstantDramaJustAddTracheotomy: In Venice, Narancia gets his own tongue cut off by Clash and he begins to choke, somehow. To save Narancia, Giorno performs a makeshift tracheotomy with a hollow pen to make him breathe through his throat until he can regenerate the tongue.
* {{Irony}}: [[spoiler: In episode 21, Bucciarati was killed by The boss with a GutPunch, with only Giorno saving him that he is still alive. 11 episodes later, he unknowingly returned the favor when he gave a GutPunch to Doppio, who is The Boss's split personality.]]
** Mista is terrified of 4, as he believes FourIsDeath. Not only Mista is the fourth member of Team Bucciarati, but [[spoiler: he's also the only survivor of Team Bucciarati]].
* ItHasBeenAnHonor: [[spoiler: Bucciarati thanks Giorno for having met him in Naples, before ascending to Heaven.]]
* JabbaTableManners: Polpo cannot eat a simple cracker without spilling half of it on his cheeks.
* JerkassHasAPoint: The anime had a scene of Fugo trying to convince Narancia [[spoiler: not to betray Passione, as rebellion will be met with execution by the Boss. He's sadly proven right]].
* JuggleFu: Happens at the beginning of the fight between Secco and Bucciarati. Secco throws his camera in the air, proceeds to pummel Bucciarati for long enough to make him realize his techniques and force him to flee before catching the camera.
* JumpScare: In Episode 24, after Notorious B.I.G. is thrown out the plane for the second time, Trish spots what appears to be a ball rolling around the plane's wing. She gets up to take a closer look, when the enemy Stand very suddenly slams against the window.
* KillEmAll: Compared to the idealistic ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' this is a much darker story with almost every Stand battle being a fight to the death. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia all die. Fugo leaves which means the gang is reduced to just Giorno and Mista. Returning hero Polnareff physically dies but his spirit lives on inside Coco Jumbo. Risotto's gang is wiped out completely by Bucciarati's gang. Every other named Passione member is killed, with the exception of Zucchero and depending on canon he dies as well in the ''Purple Haze Feedback'' spinoff.]]
* KlingonPromotion:
** A driving motivation of the La Squadra Esecuzioni is to find out the Boss' identity, so that they can kill him and take over his position.
** [[spoiler:Giorno himself eventually becomes the Boss of Passione by killing Diavolo.]]
* LactoseOverLiquor: When La Squadra, Passione's hitman team, goes to a restaurant, Pesci orders milk instead of alcohol or espresso. He is the most inexperienced member of the team and displays a hesitant, meek and cowardly personality.
* LifeOrLimbDecision: All over the place. Perhaps most notable for this is the White Album arc, where ''all of the combatants'' uses their own blood to gain an advantage, all in short succession; Giorno uses his blood to reveal a path through the frozen air, Mista sprays his blood to temporarily blind Ghiaccio, and Ghiaccio uses his (admittedly, already spilled) blood to prevent himself from being fully impaled on a spike.
* LineInTheSand: After Bucciarati decides to [[spoiler:go against [[TheDon Diavolo]]]], he tells his subordinates that if they aren't 100% certain about whether or not they want to follow him, they should stay behind; otherwise, they can get aboard his boat to confirm that they agree with him. [[spoiler:Narancia and Fugo both decide not to follow him, however, Narancia has a change of heart almost immediately and swims after the boat, meaning that Fugo is the only one who gets PutOnABus.]]
* LonersAreFreaks: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] is a schizophrenic man who is living alone and refuses to have relationships because he doesn't want anyone to learn anything about him.
* LuxuryPrisonSuite: Polpo inhabits a pretty luxurious prison cell decorated with paintings and has a personal fridge.
* MafiaPrincess: Trish is a subversion. Although she is the daughter of The Boss and acts like a spoiled teen used to have servants, she only learned it recently and freaks out at the idea of meeting her father as well as being the target of her father's enemies. Moreover although the Boss seems to try to care for her, he just [[spoiler: wants to kill her because she is a potential weakness]].
* ManIFeelLikeAWoman: [[spoiler:When Silver Chariot Requiem causes everyone to body-swap, Mista finds himself stuck in Trish's body and gets a bit… hands-y, though to his credit it was mostly him trying to adjust her underwear because he's not used to having it so tight or to wearing a bra in general.]]
* ManlyTears: Much like other parts in the franchise, there are times the manly heroes simply cannot stop themselves from crying. Notable examples are when Abbacchio sheds tears [[spoiler:upon meeting his former partner in the afterlife]], Bucciarati and Narancia crying over [[spoiler: Abbacchio's death]] and when both Giorno and Mista cry over [[spoiler:the death of Narancia.]]
* MatterOfLifeAndDeath: While a staple of the series, in ''Vento Aureo'', '''everyone''' is constantly fighting with the intent to kill.
* MegatonPunch: [[spoiler: King Crimson, having a very high Strength can cause much greater damage than Star Platinum, The World or Crazy Diamond's RapidFireFisticuffs by simply driving his fists in one blow. Diavolo uses this to kill his enemies quickly before they could blurt his identity out.]]
* MixAndMatchMan: Giorno Giovanna qualifies because his biological father is Dio Brando's head attached to Jonathan's body, causing several traits from both going to him.
* TheMobBossIsScarier: When Bucciarati announces his betrayal of Passione, the majority of the team is shaking in fear of The Boss' retaliation. Fortunately for Giorno and Bucciarati, only Fugo remains scared enough to stay behind.
* MundaneMacGuffinPerson: Trish Una is the recently discovered illegitimate daughter of Passione's Boss. All of the Boss' enemies want to capture and/or kill her, so she ends up under the protection of the heroes, thus driving most of the plot.
* MusicalThemeNaming:
** A continued trope. This part's theme is renowned artists of the [[TheSixties late '60s]] and [[TheSeventies early '70s]] such as Music/KingCrimson, Music/SexPistols, and Music/TheMoodyBlues along with a few contemporary rock and pop acts who were notable during publishing. Taken even further in the light novel sequel where three new Stands are introduced all of them taking their namesake from post-punk bands that first formed in the late 70's.
** Both the hero and the villain have Stands that allude to royalty (Giorno with Golden Experience by ''Prince'' and [[spoiler:Diavolo]] with ''King'' Crimson).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes N to Z]]
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: [[spoiler:Diavolo, which is Italian for ''Devil''.]] Not that anyone knows his name, though.
* NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters:
** Team Bucciarati. Unlike the rest of Passione (who are decidedly ''not'' neighborhood-friendly), Bucciarati's group is beloved by the general community, with even old people willingly going to them, a group of rogues with supernatural abilities and trouble surrounding them, for help. Bucciarati and Giorno only joined up with Passione in the first place to stop the mafia from dealing drugs, and their goal is to overthrow TheDon of Passione and insert one of their own in his place. [[spoiler: In fact, they outright openly rebel and gun for him when they learn the hard way that he is willing to kill his own daughter only because of the insane paranoid idea that she could be a clue to his identity, despite having never met the man in her life nor know anything about him. The personal targeting of an innocent and unrelated teenage girl was the last straw]].
** Giorno got into crime because of one of these. When he was a child, regularly bullied and abused, he found a man bleeding out in a patch of tall grass. The men who'd shot him asked Giorno where the man had gone, and Giorno lied, saving the injured man's life. That man was a powerful gangster in Naples, and after he recovered he made it a point to protect Giorno from a distance (his first act: having a "quick talk" with Giorno's abusive stepfather). The only person who ''ever'' treated Giorno well was in the Mafia, and that inspired him to go the same route.
* NiceJobFixingItVillain: Had [[spoiler: Diavolo confirmed Polnareff's death]] instead of [[BondVillainStupidity assuming him dead and walking away]], [[spoiler: he would have successfully killed his daughter and rest of Team Bucciarati with zero opposition, and would have continued to rule Italy in the shadows.]]
* NighInvulnerable: The Stand Notorious [=B.I.G=] cannot be killed first due to being a BlobMonster, but its user is already dead so the heroes are reduced to [[spoiler: simply tossing it into the ocean by destroying their plane.]]
* NoSell: [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem]] in a nutshell. [[spoiler:Any actions or processes attempted against Giorno are brought to zero the moment his enemies oppose him, thus every action is rendered moot. Even Diavolo's time erasing powers don't affect Gold Experience Requiem.]]
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: Lasting ''[[UpToEleven seven whole pages,]]'' Giorno's beatdown of Cioccolata is the biggest example of this trope in a franchise that made this trope a meme.
** Giorno gives another one to [[spoiler: ''Diavolo himself'']] after [[spoiler: Gold Experience Requiem evolves.]]
* NoOneSeesTheBoss: Apart from being full of Stand users, the gang Passione is unique by how secretive its Boss is. The Boss never directly interacts with his subordinates, sending proxies, using computers and leaving messages behind for his subordinates to read and obey, but otherwise no one knows what the Boss looks like. It's a very deliberate attempt from the Boss' part to make himself be seen more as a concept or an omnipotent being rather than a man who could be killed. It worked rather well, until word of his daughter came out.
* OddNameOut: Every [=JoJo's=] name begins with the letters "Jo", except '''Gio'''rno '''Gio'''vanna, mostly because the letter J does not exist in Italian.
* OffingTheOffspring: [[spoiler: The Boss wanted to kill his daughter personally so that his enemies could not use her to trace back to him.]]
* OneBulletLeft: During the fight between Mista and Sale, Mista is left with only one bullet. Proudly announcing it as if he was going to take full advantage of this one shot, Mista is, in fact, aiming to use Sex Pistols on Sale's own bullet to defeat him.
* OneHitKill:
** How [[spoiler:Diavolo]] deals with enemies, due in no small part to [[MegatonPunch King Crimson's strength]].
** The Requiem power unlocked by having someone stab the Arrow with their Stands is this. Gold Experience Requiem's power delves so much into metaphysics, even [[spoiler:Diavolo]]'s time erasure is outclassed completely.
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] is only known as "The Boss" until [[spoiler:Polnareff reveals it to the gang.]]
* OutOfBodyExperience: Being punched by Gold Experience causes one to think so fast the body cannot follow up and the consciousness can see their immobile body if it happens to visualize themselves moving into another position.
* PayEvilUntoEvil: [[spoiler: Diavolo's death loop]] represents a particularly extreme version of this trope, with an incredibly evil person being subjected to an incredibly torturous punishment for eternity.
* PietaPlagiarism: In Part 5, Giorno holds an injured Mista that way at the end of the White Album arc. Unlike other examples, the one who dies is their enemy Ghiaccio.
* PlotCoupon: In ''Vento Aureo'', the Arrow becomes a key item as it can [[spoiler: unlock Requiem Stands, said to always be able to surpass the likes of even King Crimson]].
* PragmaticAdaptation: The [=PS2=] game modified some of the Stand powers so that they would be more palatable in a straight-laced BeatEmUp genre; for example, Little Feet's shrinking activates instantaneously on Formaggio's targets, but wears off after a short period of time. It also significantly [[AdaptationDistillation pares down]] the number of fights[[note]]Zucchero, Sale, Melone, Squalo, Tizano, and Risotto aren't fought, instead showing up in the game's unlockable "Story drama" scenes and they have models viewable in the gallery[[/note]], and some of the plot points are modified to compact the story (Pericolo's assignment is given right after Giorno joins the group).
* ProfessionalKiller: La Squadra Esecuzioni, also known as the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Hitman Team]] are a rouge band of eccentric personalities that hunt down Team Bucciarati in a desperate attempt to discover the Boss's identity. [[spoiler: After Bucciarati and his team betray the organization, the boss's top bodyguards, Unità Speciale, also hunt down their group under direct orders from the boss.]]
* PsychoForHire: [[MadDoctor Cioccolata]] is an [[AxCrazy maniacal]] hitman with a HumanPet who is seen by everyone, even the boss, as a crazy, creepy psychopath. In the anime, it is implied that they were responsible for the brutal deaths of Sorbet and Gelato, which kick-starts La Squadra's motivation for hunting down the boss's identity.
* PutOnABus: [[spoiler: Following Bucciarati's betrayal of The Boss, Fugo refuses to go along with the rest of the protagonists and is dropped from the story altogether. He was originally meant to return as an enemy, but Araki felt that the heroes having to fight a former friend would be too dark.]]
* ReachingTowardsTheAudience: The first cover of ''Vento Aureo''.
* RecapEpisode: The first and (so far) only animated Part that includes ClipShow that details what happened during the course of the story. There are three episodes, each of them summarizes some events across the Part.
** ''Episode 13.5 - Inizio del Vento Aureo'': The first recap episode, it is mostly focusing on the various battles that the protagonists go through as well as the route that Team Bucciarati takes throughout Italy.
** ''Episode 21.5 - Determinazione'': The second recap episode, this episode retells each of Team Bucciarati's members' backstories as well as showing their respective resolves and reason for following Bucciarati. It also recounting current situations of the conflict between Team Bucciarati and Squadra Esecuzioni.
** ''Episode 28.5 - Determinazione'': The third and final recap episode, this episode retelss Trish Una's backstory and Team Bucciarati's mission of protecting her. It also retelling now defected Team Bucciarati's first encounter against Unita Speciale, Boss' personal bodyguard.
* RecruitedFromTheGutter: Narancia was first spotted by Fugo trying to scavenge garbage cans, but was later accepted into Passione, although Bucciarati was against it.
* RedHerring: The plotline of finding out The Boss' true identity falls into this a bit. Almost the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'' is spent with various groups trying to dig up information about his past, certain that there must be ''something'' he's hiding that would be a weakness for him. [[spoiler: Once we actually find out the Boss' identity, it turns out he really wasn't hiding any inherent weakness, nor was he anybody they would recognize. He was just ''that'' paranoid]]. What lessens this somewhat is that he ''is'' revealed to be more important in the grand scheme of things than one might assume at first glance, [[spoiler: being the one who discovered the Stand Arrows and sold them to DIO's service, and therefore being an indirect but deciding reason why Part 3 played out the way it did and why everything from Part 4 onward happened at all. His origins do trace back to the Requiem Arrow, but even he wasn't aware of its true properties until toward the end of the part]]. In other words, TheReveal of his identity wasn't actually that much of a game-changer in the context of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler: but it did have huge implications for the series as a whole]].
* RefugeInAudacity: The rest of the gang quickly learns that when Giorno does something completely weird, out there, or seemingly inexplicable, it's going to end in success. Perhaps the earliest example of this is, after fighting Bucciarati, he outright ''tells'' him he's going to [[DefeatMeansFriendship become his ally]] and it ''works.''
* ResurrectionDeathLoop: [[spoiler:Diavolo is struck by this in the final fight of Part 5. After receiving a thorough CurbStompBattle by the newly awakened Gold Experience Requiem he also begins to be affected by Requiem's 'back to zero' effect, which in his case means he constantly dies over and over, always in a different way. He can't ever escape from it, making it both this and AFateWorseThanDeath.]]
* {{Retirony}}: Right before [[spoiler:Narancia]] dies they begin talking about everything they're going to do once the Boss is defeated. [[spoiler:Wanting to get through highschool, being there for Trish, seeing Fugo again, eating some piping hot pizza and getting his life together]]. Unfortunately you seeing this trope here means that they couldn't do any of this.
* RodandReelRepurposed: Pesci's Stand, Beach Boy, is a fishing rod capable of three things: it's capable of tracking people and literally fishing them out from other rooms, it can phase through any and all objects including skin, and attacking the line simply reflects damage.
* RousingSpeech: Giorno is fond of making motivational speeches about subjects such as one's resolve or growth following/followed by a badass move.
* {{Sadist}}: Cioccolata's entire character essentially revolves around this, with him being [[MadDoctor a doctor who would intentionally put completely healthy patients under surgery and intentionally inject not enough anesthesia so that his patients wake up mid-operation.]] He joined Passione for the same reason, and has his [[ThisIsMyHuman human pet Secco]] record him killing his targets and whatever other collateral damage from his stand so that he can view their pain later.
* SceneryPorn: ''Vento Aureo'' is basically a tour through a hand-drawn version of Italy with Stand battles thrown in. The anime goes a step further by showing beautiful, panning birds-eye shots of the locations that the gang visits while narration provides a brief description of the place's history.
* ScottyTime: A downplayed example, but once Bucciarati's group reaches Sardinia, and he asks Abbachio how long it will take for Moody Blues to rewind and replay the actions of the boss's only known lover:
-->'''Abbachio''': If we're going back 15 years... It might take 8-10 minutes.\\
'''Bucciarati''': Do it in five.
* ScrewDestiny: [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem's]] use of his power is an exaggerated example. He outright admits that Epitaph's prediction of [[spoiler:Giorno's death]] is absolutely true and is "going to happen", but that he nevertheless [[RealityWarper won't let anyone reach that moment]].
* SecretTestOfCharacter: Polpo's test is this. He asks the initiates to carry a lighter for twenty-four hours, never allowing it to go out. However, the flame is incredibly weak, making it extremely difficult to keep lit for that long, as well as getting through the prison security. The secret is that re-igniting it causes his Stand to appear and stab them with an arrow, where the ''true'' test of whether they'll create a Stand or die commences. It's not so much as a test of trust, more that it's a test of strength. And as Polpo notes, if somehow, someone manages to keep the lighter on, Passione gains a regular but clever member.
* SeinfeldianConversation: Usually held around the dining table by Team Bucciarati, mostly between Mista and Narancia.
* ShadowWalker: Black Sabbath can teleport through intersecting shadows, but is otherwise unable to walk out of them.
* ShootTheMedicFirst: Tizziano and Squalo try this tactic in ''Vento Aureo''. Aware that Giorno can heal his teammates, the duo do their best to lure him into a trap alone by manipulating Narancia. They remarkably succeed, but fail to kill Giorno in time.
* ShootingAtYourOwnProjectiles
** Early in Mista's fight with Sale, Mista manages to shoot his opponent in the head. Unfortunately for Mista, Sale's Stand, Kraft Work, stops the bullet's momentum, which leaves it lodged in Sale's skull while Sale himself is otherwise unharmed and able to keep going. Mista's finishing move in that fight is to shoot a second bullet into the exact same bullet hole, causing the second shot to hit the first and drive it even deeper into Sale's brain.
** With Giorno's help, Mista shoots a metal bolt with a bullet that launches the former into the head of Ghiaccio, who is protected by his Stand White Album. Mista then fires more bullets at the bolt to knock Ghiaccio unconscious.
* ShoutOut:
** As a work centered on the Mafia, there are naturally a few shout outs to Mario Puzo's crime novel Film/TheGodfather:
*** The plot thread of Narancia contracting an eye infection after losing his mother and wandering the streets, only to have it healed after being "adopted" into Bucciarati's gang and then being angrily told to continue his education is note-for-note ''identical'' to that of Tom Hagen, the informally-adopted Irish on and lawyer of the Corleone Family.
*** Gelato choking to death swallowing the towel stuffed in his mouth as he watched his lover Sorbet hacked to pieces alive by Cioccolata is identical to how a victim of a double-murder committed by Luca Brazi, the Corleone Head Enforcer and hitman, died watching his friend dismembered limb-by-limb with a fire-axe.
*** The final panels with the hand-kissing in a sign of loyalty to [[spoiler: the new Don, Giorno Giovanna]] while Mista observes in the distance, much like the iconic final scene of the first movie with Don Michael Corleone having a hand-kissing and Kay observes.
** The way Sorbet's body was hacked into pieces and preserved in cases filled with formaldehyde is likely inspired by [[https://damienhirst.com/artworks/catalogue?category=23&p=0 some of Damien Hirst's artworks]], in which he preserves animal bodies (sometimes chopped into pieces) in formaldehyde solution; the most famous of them being [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Physical_Impossibility_of_Death_in_the_Mind_of_Someone_Living "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"]].
* SlidingScaleOfVillainEffectiveness: Doesn't exist in this part as every antagonist is smart (except Zucchero and Sale), comes equipped with a powerful Stand ability, and a good majority of them come close to emerging victorious.
* SpaghettiAndGondolas: Downplayed. Like in ''Battle Tendency'', Rome and Venice are still the most prominent cities shown in the series, with ''Vento Aureo's'' greatest plot twists occurring there, but Araki made an effort to feature other places such as Pompeii; Naples; or Capri, Sardegna; Naples being his favorite Italian city. The countryside is also featured at one point.
* SpannerInTheWorks: [[spoiler:Polnareff]]. He discovers the method of [[spoiler:awakening Requiem]], something The Boss nor any other Stand User was aware even existed, and ultimately decided to share this information with the heroes to help them defeat The Boss.
* SpellMyNameWithAnS: Prone to this, even more so than other ''[=JoJo=]'' parts, due to the complexities of taking Italian names that had already been transliterated into Japanese and then rendering them into English. Bucciarati is an excellent example: no one is really sure if he's supposed to be named "Bruno Buccellati" (a logical approximation of his first name, and a [[ThemeNaming last name taken from an Italian fashion designer]]), "[[JapaneseRanguage Blono/Brono]] Bucciarati" (an ''accurate'' transliteration of his Japanese name), or some combination of the two. Not even Shueisha, Lucky Land, or Araki are quite sure, considering how both variations appear in the 25th anniversary ''JOJOVELLER'' art book. Even the name of the part itself is subject to some debate, with ''Vento Aureo'' being the more dominant term over the years due to the official use in Japanese media and most English releases favoring it. However, with the debut of the anime, ''Golden Wind'' has become more popular.
* SpoilerOpening:
** As with previous adaptations, the first opening "Fighting Gold" has some subtle hints about the events of the story, meant more for attentive fans than giving away a twist. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Narancia, and Abbachio's body silhouettes become black, unlike the other members of Passione, and in the pentultimate shot, they are all framed on the right side of the screen, making a subtle reference at their deaths]]. On a less subtle level, "Fighting Gold" also prominently features Trish, who wasn't previously shown in promotional material and didn't appear in the manga until her debut 29 chapters in.
*** In addition, a silhouette of [[spoiler:Bucciarati carved out of Rolling Stones]] can be seen in the background of the opening shot.
** The second opening "Uragirimono no Requiem" ("Traitor's Requiem") is even less subtle than the first in spoiling the second half of the story. The very ''first'' scene of the opening [[spoiler:is the very ''end'' of the series, when Giorno is made Boss of Passione.]] Other plot points spoiled include [[spoiler:Trish's stand Spice Girl (as well as her role as a fighter), Vinegar Doppio and his fight with Risotto, and parts of the final battle, including Giorno claiming the Stand Arrow, although Gold Experience Requiem isn't shown.]]
* SpontaneousChoreography: The infamous dance Narancia, Mista and Fugo join in on while torturing Zucchero features this, especially in the anime.
* StealthPun: TheHero of Part 5 is Dio's bastard son, and the BigBad is named [[spoiler:Diavolo]]. In other words, [[spoiler:[[BilingualBonus the son of God is fighting the Devil]]]].
* StevenUlyssesPerhero: Many of the musical references in the Stand names aren't just for show in this part. Sex Pistols can manipulate bullets, Aerosmith is an airplane, Little Feet makes things little, Beach Boy is a fishing rod, Talking Head prevents its victim from speaking correctly, and so on.
* StrongFamilyResemblance: A pretty perverted example with Trish and her ArchnemesisDad [[spoiler: Diavolo]]. Both of them have purple hair, and have a preference for {{Stripperific}} clothing. Also, both [[spoiler: King Crimson and Spice Girl]] have rather similar looking Stand designs. [[spoiler: Ironically, this familial resemblance is exactly what causes Diavolo to go after her, fearing her Stand abilities can be linked of his own.]]
* SupportingProtagonist: Giorno may be the eponymous Jojo (or [=GioGio=]) of the part, and is instrumental in a massive amount of fights, either through his actions or what he's figured out, but after joining Bucciarati's gang, he mostly passively goes along with what the rest of the group is doing plotwise.
* SuperMode: Essentially what the "Requiem" effect is the arrow has on Stands. A Stand struck by the arrow and which proves worthy receives a dramatic upgrade in which their old power is cast away (except in the case of Gold Experience, whose life-giving ability powered up after transforming) and they get a StoryBreakerPower which delves into the metaphysical.
* TheManyDeathsOfYou: [[spoiler:Diavolo is forced to live through many scenario in which he dies, unable to do anything about it because his death is set back to 0: the point right before he dies.]]
* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: Cioccolata's death is one of most brutal in the series, even if compared to the main villain's. Before the barrage, Cioccolata's been shot with a bullet to the head. Such bullet is transformed by Gold Experience into a stag beetle which proceeds to destroy his brain from inside out. Every single punch Gold Experience delivers afterward has expanding and delaying effects, putting him in lasting pain and suffering before he's thrown down a tall building and crashes full-speed into a garbage truck for combustible wastes.
* ThisIsMyHuman: Secco is the feral human pet for Cioccolata that speaks only in grunts and obeys his master's every command. Cioccolata even coddles him similar to how one would with a dog and gives him treats in the form of sugar cubes. He breaks this dog-like behavior, however, once learning of Cioccolata's death.
* ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman: When Zucchero attacks Bucciarati's team on their boat with Soft Machine, making everyone disappear after he basically deflates them like a balloon, Abbacchio's Moody Blues comes in handy as its power to mimic past events is perfect for investigating Zucchero's powers.
* TongueTied: The Stand Talking Head has this as its power. Crosses with CanNotSpitItOut as Narancia desperately tries to figure out a way to circumvent its ability and warn the others about a different enemy Stand.
* ToThePain: Formaggio uses his Stand Little Feet to [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrink down Narancia]] and trap him in a glass bottle along with a venomous spider (who appears to be a GiantSpider from his perspective). Formaggio then proceeds to describe, in detail, what the experience of being eaten by a spider would be like: first, he'd be injected with a paralyzing venom, then with digestive enzymes that would slowly liquefy his insides while keeping him conscious, until the spider is able to slurp him up. Thankfully, Narancia manages to fight off the spider (using a glass shard as an improvised shiv) and escape before getting bitten.
* TraintopBattle: The ''Grateful Dead'' arc features a battle inside an express train.
* TransformationSequence: One happens when Doppio lets [[spoiler:Diavolo]] take the reins of their shared body, which grows more muscular and the face changes completely alongside the hair.
* TranslationConvention: It's implied that everyone's speaking Italian instead of whatever language the viewer is watching in, as, in the first arc of the story, Giorno will compliment Koichi's fluent Italian.
* TrickBullet:
** Giorno gives Mista bullets that transform into trees to fire at Ghiaccio to knock him off their car and unfreeze it. The bullets themselves aren't special, but the heat from them is necessary for Gold Experience to sprout life in the sub-zero temperatures.
** When fighting Cioccolata, Giorno modifies some bullets that transform into a tree for Mista to fire at Cioccolata's helicopter to ensnare it. Later Giorno uses another bullet to transform into another tree to prevent him from falling, and kicks a section of its branch for it to later transform back into a bullet to fire itself into Cioccolata's head. Later, said bullet transforms into a beetle that burrows out of his head.
* TheUnfought: While Risotto Nero fights Doppio, he never fights the protagonists directly and [[spoiler: Narancia killing him was both an accident and a coincidence at the same time.]]
* {{Unperson}}: The Boss intentionally pulled this on himself due to having a near psychopathic obsession with his own anonymity. No one in Passione (and likely the entire world) knows his name or what he looks like due to his systematic erasure of anything that could lead back to him or his identity, and he only gives orders through a complex series of proxies and go-betweens that he is not above killing to preserve said anonymity if it is required.
* ViceCity: Naples at the beginning of the part is presented as a corrupt town where the mob is more feared by the police, and said police is also near totally corrupt or ineffective.
* VillainOfTheWeek: Much like ''Stardust Crusaders'', each new arc introduces a new villain for the protagonists. There's the two rival mobsters encountered before the protagonists meet Trish, the eight members of La Squadra who are the primary antagonists of the first half, and The Boss' five personal assassins who take over La Squadra's role in the second half. At least, for La Squadra Esecuzioni, the battles are tied into one another because the mere fact that one of the assassins manages to find the group forces them to move out immediately, pursued by the rest of La Squadra.
* WalkingWasteland: In ''Vento Aureo'', Purple Haze and Green Day can release respectively a flesh eating virus and a mold with exponential growth which can both kill people in seconds, infect victims indiscriminately and at high speed, and are able to kill the entire population of a city in minutes.
* WeAllLiveInAmerica:
** The main characters are [[TheMafia Italian gangsters]] who [[HonorAmongThieves despise the drug trade]]. Such beliefs are commonly attributed to {{Yakuza}}, but aren't generally associated with organized crimes much of anywhere else.
** While doing math, Narancia draws a ''[[{{Henohenomoheji}} henohenomoheji]]'' on the side of his paper (which is made of Japanese characters).
** Guido Mista has a deep superstitious fear of [[FourIsDeath number four]], as if he were Japanese. Italians actually fear seventeen the most. The InUniverse explanation is that his tetraphobia originates from his neighbor being attacked by a kitten who was born in a litter of four, which is a rather weak justification.
* WeHardlyKnewYe: Sorbet and Gelato, who was only shown in one panel and are hinted to be lovers just before they [[spoiler: are shown to be killed by Cioccolata and Secco.]] Meanwhile, Carne just appeared in one scene before he was killed by Mista, to the point that his name is [[AllInTheManual only revealed in the manual.]] Hell, Notorious B.I.G. is more well known than him.
* WhamLine: While recapping how he accidentally let [[spoiler:Polnareff]] live, [[spoiler:Diavolo]] reveals just how important he is to events after Part 2.
-->'''[[spoiler:Diavolo]]''': An old woman [[spoiler: named Enya who had 2 right hands]] told me she'd tell me how [[spoiler:the arrow]] worked in return for shooting some. I figured one will be more than enough, so [[spoiler: I sold the other five for a handsome sum]].
* WhamShot: The last panel of "Green Day and Oasis, part 12" which reveals that [[spoiler:the third party the gang is meeting at the Coliseum is none other than Jean-Pierre Polnareff.]]
* WholeCostumeReference: The colored version of the manga made an [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/jjba/images/1/12/Oldjanitor.png unnamed janitor]] wear [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]] clothing. Brown shoes, blue overalls, red long sleeved shirt and a red cap. Only thing missing was the white gloves.
* YouAllMeetInAnInn: In ''Vento Aureo'', Bucciarati's gang introduction features all the characters participating in a SeinfeldianConversation in a restaurant.
[[/folder]]
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->''"Arrivederci."''
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to:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/golden_wind_promo.png]]
[[caption-width-right:350:[[ThemeMusicPowerUp I, Giorno Giovanna,]] [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters have a dream that I know is just.]]]]

->''"You see, I'm planning to beat your boss, and take back this city for the people. To rid this city of drug dealing and child abusing mafiosi... I have no other choice but to become a mafioso myself."''
-->-- '''Giorno Giovanna'''

''Vento Aureo'' (黄金の風, lit. ''Golden Wind''), is part 5 of the long-running ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' series. It is preceded by ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Diamond is Unbreakable]]'' and followed by ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean Stone Ocean]]''. This part's original run on Magazine/ShonenJump went from 1995 to 1999.

Set in 2001, ''Vento Aureo'' stars Giorno Giovanna, the son of DIO who was conceived with Jonathan Joestar's body after his resurrection in the 1980s. Having inherited both the righteousness of the Joestars and the ruthless ambitions of DIO, following a massive crime wave in Italy, he seeks to take over TheMafia in order to turn it into an organization for good instead of crime. After a brief scuffle with a Stand-using mafia assassin named Bruno Bucciarati, the two realize that they share a common goal, and so Bucciarati allows Giorno to join his squadron of Stand-using gangsters, which also includes Leone Abbacchio, Guido Mista, Narancia Ghirga, and Pannacotta Fugo.

Giorno and Bucciarati's secret goal of overthrowing The Boss gets complicated when they receive an order to guard The Boss's daughter, Trish Una, from other members of the mob who want to take her hostage to take the mob for themselves. What follows is a road trip throughout all of Italy, fending off attacks from rival mobsters and culminating in a final confrontation with The Boss himself.

The events of the story were adapted by Creator/{{Capcom}} into a 2002 BeatEmUp for the UsefulNotes/PlayStation2. An international release was announced under the title ''[=GioGio=]'s Bizarre Adventure'' but was cancelled [[note]]Due to copyright issues involving Stand names (Mainly Music/{{Prince}} and "Gold Experience") and the obscurity of the series in global markets at the time[[/note]]. In October of 2018, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-M8ncaolysg a fan-translation patch into English was released for the game]]. Giorno and all members of Bucciarati's gang (barring Abbacchio) have been consistent fighters in the Creator/CyberConnect2 fighting games, ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureAllStarBattle'' and ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureEyesOfHeaven''.

Two {{light novel}}s have been released that feature stories based on ''Vento Aureo''. The first, ''Golden Heart, Golden Ring'', was released in 2001. It was written by Shotaro Miya and Gichi Otsuka, with illustrations by Araki, and features a story shortly after the first encounter with the Boss, and the apparent betrayal of one of the team members. The second light novel ''LightNovel/PurpleHazeFeedback'' was released as part of the series 25th anniversary celebrations in 2011. Written by Kouhei Kadono with illustrations provided by Araki, it is set after the events of ''Vento Aureo'' and follows Pannacota Fugo as he deals with the aftermath of decisions made in ''Vento Aureo''. However, as with other light novels created for the series, it has not been released outside of Japan and is generally treated as OptionalCanon.

On June 21, 2018, an anime adaptation by Creator/DavidProduction was announced, about 2 years after the same studio finished airing ''Diamond is Unbreakable''. The first episode premiered in Japan on July 5th, 2018. Following that, the entire 39-episode anime aired in Japan from October 5, 2018 to July 28, 2019, with a simulcast on Website/{{Crunchyroll}}. The English dub of the anime aired on Creator/{{Toonami}} from October 26, 2019 to October 24, 2020.
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!!How on Earth do all these tropes work, it makes no-- '''[[MemeticMutation IT JUST WORKS]]'''.

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Tropes # to D]]
* AbortedArc: Fugo was supposed to be revealed as the Boss's mole within Bucciarati's team and would have betrayed them at one point. However, Araki felt that it would be too depressing to actually portray a FaceHeelTurn so he decided to just let him quit the team without reappearing.
* AccidentalPervert:
** When the group is going to the train station by van, a sudden stop makes Fugo stumble and fall face-first onto Trish's chest. Mista then proceeds to pull a second-hand SuspiciouslySpecificDenial ("He's sorry! He totally didn't use the sudden stop as an excuse to feel your boobs or look up your skirt!"), until Fugo yells "[[DiggingYourselfDeeper Quit saying things that make it sound worse!]]"
** When Mista in Trish's body has to scratch under her skirt due to her garments being too tight, Trish (in Mista's body) understandably gets very angry and thinks that Mista was touching himself.
* ActorAllusion: Cioccolata, whose hair is green, just like his Stand Green Day, is voiced by Creator/AtsushiMiyauchi, who is the official Japanese dub voice of [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk]] in the ''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse''. Extra points Green Day is also big and sports a muscled body like Hulk.
** The English dub retains the same kind of allusion with Bill Butts, who is a bodybuilder on the side of being a voice actor.
* AdaptationalEarlyAppearance: A number of characters show up much earlier in the anime than in the manga. Most notably is La Squadra, whose members only reveal themselves in their arcs while initially they're only framed in shadow. In the anime their debut has them interact as a group and shows off each member's personality. In addition Sorbet's death is shown and his killer is revealed as [[spoiler:Ciocclata and Secco]].
* AdaptationExpansion:
** Downplayed example, but the Playstation 2 videogame adaptation recontextualized Giorno's scene with all the [=JoJos=] after defeating Black Sabbath as the game's AttractMode intro since Koichi isn't in this version. This allowed them to add Jonathan Joestar to the images of past [=JoJos=] above Giorno, since otherwise Jonathan is not included in either the manga or anime since, from a narrative point of view, Koichi never met him and nobody ever told him about Jonathan.
** The first episode of the anime spends some extra time showing the crime wave in Naples, as well as original scenes where Giorno steals back a wallet from a pickpocket and returns it kindly its proprietor, only for him to snatch two bank notes for himself, and Leaky-Eye Luca shaking down a man for doing business in his territory, which is how he found out about Giorno.
** The second episode expands on Giorno's backstory, and gives a little characterization to the gangster he helped in his childhood; cruel but just, he killed a father who was selling drugs to children, and didn't bat an eyelid when his victim's son threatened to shoot him in grief. It also shows what Giorno looked like as an adolescent and teenager before he got his blond hair.
** Abbachio's backstory in the manga never explained how he actually ''joined'' Passione after his partner's death, so the anime added two short original scenes where Bucciarati visits Abbachio's apartment and asks him to join the gang. It also canonizes a fan theory that Abbachio became TheAlcoholic after being fired from the police force.
** La Squadra Esecuzioni gets expanded on quite a bit with episode 10 establishing their personalities much earlier than in the manga and even show them performing an assassination. Even Sorbet and Gelato's deaths are expanded upon, showing the silhouettes of Cioccolata and Secco with the former doing the killing and the latter filming it.
** The manga did not elaborate much on Pannacotta Fugo's backstory, other than him being accepted into a university at a young age only to be kicked out after beating a professor with an encyclopedia. In the anime, Fugo was being sexually harassed by the teacher, which is why he lashed out at him. The assault resulted in him being abandoned by his family, becoming a thief to survive, and being caught during a dine-and-dash only for Bucciarati to come to his aid and invite him to join the gang. ''LightNovel/PurpleHazeFeedback'' gives a different account of the event, where the motive for the assault was that Fugo was being criticized for letting his grandmother's death affect his grades.
** Episode 12 has a post-credit scene of Risotto coming across a dead body at a train station and finding a burnt photograph. [[spoiler:The corpse is Pericolo's after he relayed the instructions for Bucciarati's gang to head to Venice and killed himself. This scene explains how La Squadra knew how the gang were heading to Venice]], though first-time viewers would not understand the context.
** In Episode 35 [[spoiler: right after Narancia's death, Fugo is seen returning to Naples and wandering near their restaurant, only to stop and look further, as if sensing Narancia's passing]].
* AdaptedOut: To keep the focus of the game on Giorno and his journey, as well as their minimal roles to begin with, Koichi and Jotaro are nowhere to be seen in the [=PS2=] game. They have an audio drama in the game's OST at least.
* AerithAndBob: a [[DownplayedTrope downplayed]] and truly bizarre example, but characters in this part tend to have full names in which one half will be realistic (Guido, Leone), and the other will be a [[EdibleThemeNaming silly reference to food]] (Pannacotta, Narancia).
* AfterlifeWelcome: When [[spoiler:Abbacchio]] dies, the scene changes to him sitting outside a cafe and meeting a police officer. Said police officer turns out to be [[spoiler:his old deceased partner]] who tells him that he's dead when he tries getting on a nearby bus to get back to the others.
* AnachronismStew: In the anime, during Mista's flashback (which is presumably set in the year 2000) a cinema is shown with posters of ''Film/TheMartian'' (2015), ''Film/WarHorse'' (2011) and ''Film/TheDarkKnight'' (2008).
* AnIcePerson: Ghiaccio's stand, White Album, allows him to freeze the area around him to extremely low temperatures, to the point of being able to freeze the air around him. His stand also comes with it's own [[AnIceSuit ice suit]].
* AnIceSuit: As stated above, Ghiaccio's White Album allows him to make an extremely durable suit of ice that allows him to avoid being frozen to death by his own stand. It even comes with [[RollerbladeGood ice skates, which he can use to skate on non-ice surfaces]].
* AnimationBump: While the anime is well animated in general, the scene where King Crimson's ability is revealed in full ramps up the quality several notches to jaw-dropping levels.
* AntiHero: All of the protagonists are {{Pragmatic Hero}}es since they are gangsters and have no reservations about killing their enemies.
* AntiVillain: La Squadra whose goals are to take out The Boss in vengeance for their deceased allies.
* AnyoneCanDie: One of the most brutal parts in this regard. Aside from the minor antagonists working for Passione, and the members of La Squadra, [[spoiler: Abbacchio, Narancia, and Bucciarati end up being the biggest losses on the protagonist's side. And even returning characters aren't safe--Jean-Pierre Polnareff from Part 3 returns only to be fatally impaled by King Crimson soon after (though his spirit ''does'' survive within Coco Jumbo)]]
* ArcWords: "Resolve" (or "Kakugo" in Japanese). Often associated with and symbolic of Giorno, but is shared with his comrades and enemies alike as the story goes. Can be used in both noun and verb form, but generally translates to something with the effect of readiness to do something dangerous and/or costly without a second thought. Has also been translated as "preparedness", "consciousness", "determination", etc, leading to the catch-all word being [[LostInTranslation watered down through the different contexts]].
* ArchnemesisDad: Trish joins the fight against her scumbag of a father, who not only is a ruthless mob boss, but also tried to kill her.
* ArtisticLicenseBiology
** While some studies show that women can have lower body temperatures, the difference is negligible. That being said, Trish shouldn't be aging that slowly from The Grateful Dead with only a few wrinkles compared to the rest of the gang's shriveled up bodies.
** Risotto Nero's Stand Metallica can create objects such as razors, nails, or scissors out of the iron in one's blood. In reality, the human body only contains about 4 grams of iron, absolutely not enough for scissors. A few razors or nails would actually be plausible, however.
* ArtShift: In the anime, Jotaro's photograph of the Crusaders is done in Part 3's style, since the Part 3 anime features the scene of the picture being taken. [[spoiler:Polnareff's flashback to the group visiting the Giza Pyramids is also done in a similar way; though not as evident, the Crusaders have the clearly defined musculature of Part 3's artstyle. Whereas the flashback of Jotaro and Polnareff deciding to track the Stand Arrows have them in Part 5's art style.]]
* AscendedMeme:
** Robert Fripp acknowledged the "it just works" meme in a Facebook post.
** Phillip Reich's [[https://youtu.be/-vCw1tMAn0A announcement]] as the English voice of Giorno is based on the "Coda" memes.
* AssassinOutclassin: Whereas many antagonistic Stand users are specifically sent to kill the heroes, La Squadra Esecuzioni are professional assassins. All but one are defeated by the gang, though.
* AssholeVictim: The woman targeted by Melone on the stopped train for Babyface to bear a child assassin to hunt down Team Bucciarati made her debut by [[RichBitch showing a snobbish contempt for her fellow passengers,]] and when Melone left, she intended to [[FrivolousLawsuit sue the train company despite the staff being as respectful and helpful as they could to her, ESPECIALLY after what all the passengers just went through.]] That being said, not only was her scene with Babyface framed in a way that looked liked it '''raped''' her, Junior disintegrated her shortly after pissing down her neck.
* BadPowersGoodPeople: Fugo's [[PoisonousPerson Stand power]] is so lethal and disgusting that even his friends are creeped out by it. However, he's still one of the good guys, [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters sort of]].
* TheBerserker: Fugo, and by extension his Stand Purple Haze, are this. Fugo has a legendarily short temper and has stabbed or beaten Narancia on more than one occasion for ''screwing up a math problem'', and Purple Haze is one of the few Stands shown to have a personality outside of that which its User ascribes to it because it's ''that consistently pissed off.''
* BilingualBonus: Since this part takes place in Italy, Italian phrases come up now and then; The Boss' messages to his capos and Giorno's subconscious writing on the plane, for a couple of examples. In the anime, they are fully shown on screen, so those who know the language could just read it from there. However, it gets subverted because the characters will just read it out loud in Japanese, making its contents more readily available for the audience.
* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Diavolo is sent to an infinite amount of deaths by Gold Experience Requiem's power at the end of the story and Giorno was able to become the Boss. But it came at the cost of Abbacchio, Naranchia and Bucciarati's lives.]]
* BloodIron: Risotto's Stand, Metallica, is capable of manipulating iron, including the iron present in the blood of a person. Being an Mafia assassin, his methods aren't pleasant to watch; those unfortunate enough to be within Metallica's range will find themselves coughing out ''razor blades'' from their throats, and will discover all sorts of sharp, nasty objects protruding from their face and neck. This way, Risotto can eventually cause his victims to die of suffocation by robbing them of the iron needed to transport precious oxygen, to the point their blood turns ''yellow''.
* BloodierAndGorier: While ''[=JoJo=]'' is quite a gory series especially for a shonen, ''Vento Aureo'' is even gorier and more violent than previous parts. Especially because there's very little censoring in the anime. The "King Crimson vs. Metallica" arc in particular is full of gruesome wounds. The more serious shift in body horror can also be attributed to Giorno possessing healing abilities as to heal said gruesome injuries.
* BlueMeansCold: Ghiacco, whose name means "ice" in Italian, has blue hair and his Stand White Album can freeze things and control ice.
* BodyHorror:
** Purple Haze ''melts'' his victims down after finishing with them, as [[spoiler: Illuso]] can attest to.
** Risotto Nero's Metallica does this in spades. [[spoiler: Not only did he use Doppio's own iron to attack him, but also Doppio's blood turned yellow due to lack of iron in his body, ''making him unable to breathe''. If Diavolo didn't trick Narancia into shooting Risotto, the Boss and Doppio would have died a gruesome death]].
** Cioccolata's Green Day [[spoiler: dissolves people if the mold generated by it is fast enough. And also, Cioccolata can ''sever'' his body parts in order to levitate while using his mold to prevent blood loss.]]
** [[spoiler:Bucciarati's flesh began to melt as Secco's stand ability is to turn everything to mud. It got to the point where his fingers bent so hard it broke when he touched his face and we can see the bone of his finger.]]
** The mutations that [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]] forces on living things around him include extra eyes and heads, weird insectoid limbs and horrifying unidentifiable lumps.
* BondOneLiner: Some of the heroes have a cool one-liner after their {{Kiai}}:
--> '''Bucciarati (after defeating Pesci) and Trish (after defeating Notorious B.I.G.)''': Arrivedeci. (Farewell)
--> '''Narancia (after defeating Squalo)''': Volare via. (Go flying)
* BondVillainStupidity: How [[spoiler: Polnareff lives long enough to contact Team Bucciarati even with Diavolo giving him a CurbStompBattle]].
* BookDumb: Narancia may not be able to make a simple multiplication, but he is still a resourceful Stand user.
* BookEnds:
** Giorno's first Stand duel is against Bucciarati, and he uses Gold Experience's life shot ability to accelerate his opponent's senses and give him an OutOfBodyExperience. This happens again at the halfway point of the story when [[spoiler:Diavolo's time erasure makes Bucciarati see a vision of his past self]], and again when [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem reverses time and makes Diavolo see images of his past selves]].
** The beginning of Traitor's Requiem, the opening for the second part of the anime, involves a door and then what looks like a man kissing somebody's hand. [[spoiler:That's the ending of Vento Aureo - where the "hand" they're kissing is Giorno's hand after he took over Passione.]]
** In the first episode of the anime, the story starts with Giorno looking at his surroundings with a light smile on his face, followed with golden sparkles flies around him. [[spoiler:After Diavolo's defeat, Giorno looking at his surroundings, this time with stern facial expression and more golden sparkles flies around him.]]
** The first song in the anime adaption's first OST is "il vento d'oro" (golden wind). The second last song in the final OST is "fine della vento aureo" (end of the golden wind), a slowed down version of the original. This is also a nod to Giorno's stand power which can speed up people's thought processes causing them to perceive the world moving in slow motion (including the song if they were listening to it).
* BossGame: The game based on ''Vento Aureo'' is nothing but 22 chapters of bosses (excluding one that involves Mista avoiding Secco and his Stand Oasis and another that is dedicated to [[spoiler:Abbaccio's death]]).
* BrickJoke: Starting from episode 2 to episode 19, the anime adaptation had Jodeci's [[IntercourseWithYou "Freek'n You"]] as the ending theme. Most anime viewers first heard the ED with some confusion, but quickly got used to it as part of the general '''FABULOUSNESS''' of the franchise. Then came Episode 19, with the infamous park bench scene with Giorno and Mista, and when the sultry R&B of the end theme hit after the scene, the true purpose of the ED was revealed. (A significant amount of the manga readers predicted this would happen, and just as the story shifted to the next arc, the ED was changed to "Modern Crusaders".)
** Early in the anime Fugo mentions that Mista damaged the car. During the "Sleeping Slaves arc" (at the end of Part 5) we see how that happened.
* BullyHunter: More subtle than most, but Giorno's dream to become the Don of Italy is so that the Mafia will once again ''protect'' the weak and innocent as they once did, rather than prey on and victimize them. Point in fact, witness his terrifying TranquilFury as he tricks a ''Capo'' into swallowing a gun for casually murdering a helpless old janitor who worked at his middle school.
* BuryYourGays: While they aren't explicitly confirmed to be homosexual, the interactions between Squalo and Tiziano are ''heavily'' implicative of them being a couple, leading to them being the perfect candidates for enforcing this trope when they're both killed off by Narancia to protect Bucciarati's team once they've gone rogue.
** There's also Sorbet and Gelato, two [[PosthumousCharacter Posthumous Characters]] who are heavily implied to be a couple.
* CallBack:
** In the anime, when [[spoiler:Polnareff]] explains the nature of the Stand Arrow, it plays a brief snippet of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2fmArRXjp8 Fists of Platinum]]" from the ''Manga/StardustCrusaders'' anime over silhouettes of the Crusaders themselves and their Stands.
** In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FH2tdw8oQWQ the final OP]], Giorno's pose as [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem resets time]] is a dead ringer for [[Manga/StardustCrusaders his father's]] most iconic one.
* CallForward:
** In the anime, during the sequence where Zucchero is tortured, the scene cuts to a stylized graphic of his head being brutalized in between clips of the dancing gang members. [[https://twitter.com/golden_wolfram/status/1063852934935527425 As explained here]], those cutaways are actually early hints at the three unrevealed stands.
** Also in the anime, the first OP and the second ED feature statues. At the base of both are spherical boulders; for anyone who has reached the end of the original manga, they may recognize these rocks as Rolling Stones, the Stand that foretold the fates of Bucciarati's group.
* CarCushion: In the ''Sleeping Slaves'' arc, Mista jumps down six stories and luckily lands on Fugo's car. To be fair, Mista knew that he wouldn't die because Rolling Stones didn't predict his death so he was free to take any risk.
* CarnivalOfKillers: The Boss's Guard Squad tasked with killing traitors of Passione is one of them. There's also the members of La Squadra who the protagonists encounter in the first half of the story.
* CastingGag:
** Creator/KenshoOno voicing Giorno for the TV Anime continues the tradition of Onos voicing [=JoJos=], following the footsteps of Creator/DaisukeOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Jotaro]]) and Creator/YukiOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Part 4 Josuke]]). In fact, Kensho sharing his surname with the latter two is why he got to voice Giorno to begin with.
** Creator/KyleMcCarley once again [[LightNovel/{{Durarara}} voices an ill-tempered gangster who is]] OlderThanTheyLook who gets stabbed in the hand with a pen.
** This isn't the first time Creator/KellenGoff voices [[Manga/MyHeroAcademia a crime boss who is also a really lousy father]].
* CentralTheme: As mentioned above in ArcWords, "resolve".
* CerebusSyndrome: Started to kick in with this part. Whereas parts 1 through 4 are traditional lighthearted shounen battle series with the occasional mature themes this is where it starts to become clear that Araki wanted to move away from Shounen Jump. This part in particular features some of the most gruesome violence in the series, antagonists who are just as sympathetic as the protagonists, many major character deaths, and characters having tragic backstories. All of these would carry over into the future parts.
* TheChosenOne: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] fancies himself being chosen and favoured by Fate itself, claiming it is his right to lord over everyone and take the Arrow for himself.
* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: The introductory story arc is told primarily from Koichi Hirose's perspective as he's robbed by Giorno, and then he comes back again a short while later playing a key part in the fight with Black Sabbath. After that, he (and his reporting to Jotaro) are never so much as mentioned again. The anime deals with this by having Koichi decide that he's learned everything about Giorno that he needs to know, and that he's going to go sightseeing for a bit before returning home and reporting to Jotaro.
* CleavageWindow: If there's a male equivalent to this trope, then Giorno and Bucciarati's outfits ([[UpToEleven as well as a bunch of other characters]]) both qualify for it.
* ClosedCircle: The fight with [[BlobMonster Notorious B.I.G]] is made scarier by the fact that the gang are all stuck on an airplane over the ocean.
* ConflictingLoyalty: Bruno Bucciarati is conflicted between his disgust of drugs and his duty towards Passione, who is dealing them in the streets. When [[spoiler:Diavolo attempts to murder his daughter, Trish, who the gang had spent most of the part protecting]], he chooses his side and revolts against the Boss.
* ContrastingSequelAntagonist: The antagonists of ''Stardust Crusaders'' and ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' were regular people/thugs who happened to be given Stand powers. As such some of them were pretty incompetent while the best ones were either smart or got lucky because they had powerful Stand abilities. In this part however the antagonists are all professional killers who by nature are smart and cunning on top of the fact that their Stand abilities are very useful.
* ContrastingSequelMainCharacter: Despite being recognized as the most morally grey of the original [=JoJos=], Giorno is the only one who goes after the main villain of his own free will, rather than the villain removing their choice by making it personal. This directly contrasts the previous protagonist, Josuke, who initially believed that Kira wasn't their problem if he wasn't a Stand User. This leaves Giorno as a wild card to the villains for almost the whole way (even at the end the BigBad sees Bucciarati as his nemesis and Giorno as just some newbie), contrary to Josuke's very strong spotlight. Thematically, this lines up with Giorno being descended from a villain, as he [[VillainsActHeroesReact acts while the other [=JoJos=] reacted]].
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: [[spoiler:All of the Hitman Team are hit with this fate after their encounters with Giorno and the gang. Meanwhile, Sorbet and Gelato became the victims of Cioccolata and Secco to warn the Hitman Team to never trying to find out the Boss's true identity.]]
* CreatorProvincialism: A few characters are seen bowing in gratitude, Mista mentions the RedStringOfFate and is superstitious about the [[FourIsDeath number four being unlucky]]. These are all drawn from Japanese culture despite the story's Italian setting. Likewise, the attitudes of the main characters towards [[DrugsAreBad drugs]] are more characteristic of yakuza than of Italian mafiosi.
* DarkerAndEdgier: While still having some of the self-aware charm of the previous parts, ''Vento Aureo'' plays itself more straight, and is a lot more brutal with its violence. There's also the fact that the main protagonists are anti-heroes who kill people, some of the villains are well-intentioned, and Araki's famous AnyOneCanDie rule is taken to an extreme.
* TheDarknessBeforeDeath: Halfway through the comic, [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati is killed by the BigBad and healed by TheProtagonist's Stand]], allowing him to keep moving forward and fight out of sheer will, until the final chapters of the comic, where [[spoiler:his blindness makes him realize that he's running out of will and strength to fight, and will be dead for real soon]].
* DeadlyRemoteControlToy: Narancia's Stand, Aerosmith, resembles a remote-controlled toy plane. It can fire bullets, drop bombs, and track enemies with its radar by monitoring their breathing.
* DefectorFromDecadence: Bucciarati had already some ConflictingLoyalty about Passione's drug business and passively let Giorno do his thing. However, when he sees how The Boss is willing to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter because she's a liability]], he immediately and openly rebels against the gang.
* DisneyAcidSequence: The anime adaptation adds trippy visuals to the infamous "torture dance" scene, presumably representing Zucchero going crazy from the pain of [[EyeScream getting his eyeball cooked by concentrated sunlight]].
* DiscOneFinalBoss: Ghiaccio is the last member of La Squadra that the protagonists face off against with his fight concluding the first half of the story.
* DoingInTheWizard: Stands, introduced as a mystic power, are now explained as an alien virus infecting worthy people and granting them power. It still doesn't explain ''why'' a virus from a meteorite gives people highly-specified psychic powers and seemingly draws them together, but some explanation is better than none.
* DramaticIrony:
** Giorno doesn't learn of his father's connection to the Joestars, even when he comes across [[spoiler:Polnareff]] in the climax. [[spoiler:Polnareff himself was stranded in Italy with no way to contact Jotaro for help, making it painfully ironic how Jotaro had Giorno investigated partly out of grief for his friends killed by Dio during his journey in Egypt.]]
** Towards the end, Bucciarati is gravely injured and deprived of most of his senses while being helped up by an enemy he thinks is Trish. He asks "her" to start a new life on his hometown once everything is done with. Previously, the real Trish was upset Bucciarati was acting too cold towards his team.
* DramaticUnmask: [[spoiler: Diavolo]], who was TheFaceless for the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'', finally and climactically drops the mask of [[spoiler: Doppio in front of Polnareff in the Colosseum of Rome.]]
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: [[spoiler: How Diavolo kills Abbacchio and Narancia]].
* DrugsAreBad: Giorno Giovanna's primary motivation in becoming the new Don of Italy is so that the new Mafia that he rules over will be one that will ''not'' sell drugs ''period'', especially to innocent children.
* DubNameChange: While it was rather minor in previous installments, this one is shaping to have the most prevalent name changes for the Stand names. The show's lawyers must've had a field day with this series.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes E to M]]
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
** When [[spoiler: Diavolo]] first appeared while shrouded in shadows, he had shorter hair and he was wearing a business suit, not unlike your typical mob boss. However, by the time he made his first physical appearance, he was given long hair and an outfit that wouldn't look out of place in a death metal concert.
** Gold Experience's early abilities don't really line up with what it's consistently shown to be able to do later on. For example, its AttackReflector ability was quickly dropped after being used once (Luca trying to kill a frog with his shovel), and its ability to give a person more life energy and cause an OutOfBodyExperience is only used in his fight with Bucciarati before going unused again (although this does make a bit of sense, since Giorno didn't have many opportunities to punch an opponent), though it is possible that the latter does still occur but isn't highlighted.
** When Bucciarati first appeared, he was much more ruthless, as he interrogated Giorno by showing him Leaky-Eye Luca's severed fingers and seemed legitimately loyal to the Boss. This is a stark contrast from the NobleDemon he's established to be after his and Giorno's fight.
* EdibleThemeNaming: Many characters in ''Vento Aureo'' are named after Italian foods. Examples include Pannacotta Fugo, Leone Abbacchio, Risotto Nero, Melone, Cioccolata, Gelato, Sorbet (which is not actually Italian, the correct word being "sorbetto"), Prosciutto, Pesci, Formaggio, and Mario Zucchero.
* ElephantInTheLivingRoom: Giorno and Bucciarati both know that [[spoiler:Bucciarati is undead after his fight with King Crimson]], but are too disturbed by the thought to tell their teammates.
* EliteMooks: The assassins deployed in Venezia (Squalo, Tiziano, and Carne) are referred to as The Boss's Elite Guard.
* ElsewhereFic: Bears less relation to the overall MythArc than the other stories of the first six parts, focusing on its own characters within its own setting. The only real relation aside from [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Jotaro and Koichi's]] presence at the beginning is that Part 5 [[spoiler:reveals more about the arrows, and how this part's BigBad is unknowingly the perpetrator of every tragedy after Part 2]] and [[spoiler:features a very prominent appearance by [[JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Polnareff]]]]. Even the most obvious connection between ''Vento Aureo'' and the actions of DIO, that Giorno is DIO's bastard son, is never properly followed up on and serves more as a [[CentralTheme thematic]] than a narrative device.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: The anime adds in a moment where Giorno is introduced stealing back a woman’s wallet from a pickpocket, showing his kindness. He then uses Gold Experience to snatch a generous helping of Lire from the wallet, showing his cunning and that he’s not above being the lesser evil.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: [[spoiler: Diavolo]] may flood Italy with drugs and be petty enough to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter for unjustified paranoia]], but even he's disgusted to send Cioccolata and Secco after the gang, risking total destruction of Rome just to get few people. [[spoiler: Diavolo]] even calls them the scum of Passione.
** He doesn't do anything to a child [[spoiler: who witnessed him transforming from Doppio to Diavolo]], instead letting him go safe and sound.
* EveryoneHasStandards:
** Bucciarati and Giorno break the ice when the latter realizes the former, despite being a mafioso whose family deals hard drugs, is not okay with said drugs being sold to teens.
** La Squadra Esecuzioni are the hitmen of Passione and won't bat an eyelash if bystanders are hit during their hits, but even they are grossed out when they find out what happened to Sorbet and Gelato.
* EveryCarIsAPinto:
** During his fight against Formaggio, Narancia blasts all the cars on the street apart with Aerosmith's bullets, detonating multiple fiery explosions to force his smaller opponent to reveal himself.
** Later, Mista shoots the engine of the motorboat Narancia is on to make it explode, propelling him onto the shore.
* EvolvingCredits:
** The second ED, Modern Crusaders, showcases all Stands shown so far, and Notorious B.I.G., Spice Girl, Metallica, Green Day & Oasis, and [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]] are included as they are introduced. By the final episode, [[spoiler:Rolling Stones bears Bucciarati's image and Gold Experience is replaced with Gold Experience Requiem.]]
** The second version of the second opening, Traitor's Requiem, shows Doppio [[spoiler:transforming into Diavolo, and once again, the main villain uses their time powers [[OnceASeason to interrupt the opening]]]], starting in Episode 34.
** In the final two episodes, the opening changes one more time to have [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem nullifying Diavolo's King Crimson while the second verse of Traitor's Requiem plays.]]
* ExtremelyShortTimespan: While most ''[=JoJo=]'' parts take place over the span of months, ''Vento Aureo'' takes place over the course of a scant ''8 days'', from the moment Giorno steals Koichi's luggage to the very end. Yes, this is the amount of time Giorno goes from being a complete newbie to Passione to [[spoiler:becoming the boss]].
* EyeCatch: Stand stats still function as these in the anime, but Vento Aureo departs slightly from the format used in the previous two parts; the eyecatches kick off with a spinning coin based off of a vintage Italian 500 lira coin, with the Stand stats featured on the blank face of it, and a segment of the main theme playing for its duration.
* TheFaceless: At four points in ''Vento Aureo'' a mysterious character whose face Araki doesn't want to reveal is seen entirely shrouded in shadow.
** Sale is the first one, being faceless while having a conversation with his partner Zucchero in the car, prior to Team Bucciarati sailing to Capri.
** Prosciutto is the second and most ludicrous example, as he is seen shrouded in shadows even though he's in the middle of a train station in broad daylight and everyone else is drawn normally. This is omitted from the anime as Prosciutto (along with the rest of the Squadra) first appeared [[AdaptationalEarlyAppearance much earlier]].
** The Boss for the entire part sans the final battle. His first fight against Bucciarati features him as a man fully hidden in the dark.
** [[spoiler: Silver Chariot Requiem]] is entirely black and its face is hidden by its hat, and is never revealed.
* FingerInTheMail: An extreme example. When the mafia's La Squadra Esecuzioni tried to look into the Boss's past, he chopped up and killed one of them and then mailed the body parts, framed in containers full of formaldehyde, as a grim warning to everyone who dares try looking into his past.
* FluffyTheTerrible: Thanks to the [[DubNameChange dub changing Stand names,]] Green Day and Oasis are renamed Green Tea and Sanctuary, which means their episodes sound more like calm, slow-paced [[BreatherEpisode breathers]] and less like a harrowing chase sequence involving two mass murdering psychopaths.
* {{Foreshadowing}}:
** Mista has a deep fear of the number four, associating it with misfortune. [[spoiler:Bucciarati dying at the hands of The Boss and then rebelling against him]] takes place on the fourth day Giorno joins the team. [[spoiler: Also, Abbachio takes one of the four pieces of cake and ends up being the first to die.]]
** The second ED shows [[spoiler:the team's and Diavolo's Stands in the order they die (or in Fugo's case, leave). From top to bottom, it starts with Purple Haze, then goes to Moody Blues, Aerosmith, Sticky Fingers, and King Crimson, culminating with Sex Pistols, Spice Girl, and Gold Experience at the top for the ones who survived. Once Chariot Requiem is introduced, we see it positioned above Moody Blues and Aerosmith, but below Sticky Fingers. Abbacchio is already dead, Narancia dies rather early during Chariot Requiem's rampage thanks to a sneak attack by King Crimson, and Bucciarati's spirit moves on after finding a way to kill Chariot Requiem once and for all. Also, it shows King Crimson's arm wrapped around Spice Girl's body, foreshadowing how Diavolo takes control of Trish's body by grabbing and manipulating her Stand.]]
** [[spoiler:Notorious B.I.G introduces the concept of a "dead stand" that has outlived its master and is thus unkillable. The penultimate enemy of the part is a stand that has outlived its master and is virtually unkillable.]]
* FourIsDeath: Ironically after the last part being LighterAndSofter part. Not only one of the main characters, Mista, literally fears this trope, but [[spoiler: Bucciarati dies at the Boss's hands in the fourth day of Giorno joining the gang]], and then [[spoiler: Diavolo manages to kill Bucciarati, Abbachio, Polnareff, and Narancia]].
* FreakyFridayFlip: Near the climax, a body swap scenario thanks to [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem. Giorno and Narancia trade bodies, Trish and Mista trade bodies and Bucciarati and Doppio trade bodies. Diavolo lies in wait as a split personality for Mista's body (occupied by Trish), and once given the chance goes after the [[EleventhHourSuperpower Stand arrow]]]].
* FunnyBackgroundEvent: While Mista walks away no worse for wear after jumping on a building and landing spine first on a car, Fugo can be seen crawling out of the wreckage.
* GeoEffects: A good handful of the enemy Stands in this part are reliant on having a terrain advantage. Man in the Mirror and Clash are useless if they don't have something to "conduct" them (mirrors for the former, liquid for the latter). Beach Boy and Notorious B.I.G, on the other hand, seriously benefit from being fought in the location they're in (The many walls and linearity of a train make it easy for Pesci to target his enemies from one end of it, while an enclosed, fast-moving plane makes it nigh impossible to escape B.I.G's handicap of only targeting moving things).
* TheGhost: The Boss is an InUniverse example, as he has erased any evidence and information related to his person, and issues orders through varying layers of proxies. No one knows anything about him, they just know he exists and is the Boss of Italy's most powerful crime syndicate.
* GiantSpider: This story uses the "[[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrunken hero]]" vs. regular-sized spider variant, as Formaggio traps Narancia (who has been affected by Formaggio's Little Feet stand) in a bottle and pits him against a normal tarantula.
* GodzillaThreshold:
** Cioccolata is this for The Boss. Cioccolata's Stand, Green Day, is an immensely destructive area-of-effect Stand much like Prosciutto's which has a theoretically infinite range. However, unlike Prosciutto who was a cold professional, Cioccolata is an AxCrazy madman and thus doesn't care about civilian casualties. He massacres an entire port town trying to kill the gang, and as the fight moves to Rome, his massacre escalates in severity.
** [[spoiler: Polnareff uses the Arrow and unleashes Chariot Requiem in Rome,]] risking everyone's souls in the process because the alternative [[spoiler: (Diavolo getting the Arrow)]] is worse.
* GoodIsNotNice: Bucciarati's group maybe your RagtagBunchOfMisfits and Bucciarati is nice enough that the townsfolk is very friendly with him top the point that old ladies ask him for help. But they won't hesitate to do anything to do what they think is right, and won't hesitate to kill anyone that stands in their way.
* {{Gorn}}: Appropriately, for the setting. The increased violence in this part lends itself to some frightening injuries, but the fight with Green Day takes the cake- the viewer is subjected to numerous examples of people rotting away ''right in plain view'', with people literally rotting away into nonexistence in some examples. None of this is censored in the original manga.
* GratuitousItalian:
** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English, Part 5 has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bucciarati and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".
** The English dub of the 2018 anime [[ForeignCussWord included a wide selection of Italian profanity]] where the Japanese dub didn't. There's even an "Italian Language Consigliere" [[note]]Paola Giovanna Cresti[[/note]] in the localization credits.
* GreaterScopeVillain: If it isn't enough that [[spoiler: Diavolo]] is the main villain of this part, he also indirectly caused the events of ''Stardust Crusaders'', ''Diamond is Unbreakable'', and ''Stone Ocean''. His discovery of the Stand Arrows is what led DIO to awaken to "The World" and create his army of Stand using minions among everything listed under this trope on the ''Stardust Crusaders'' page, and then Mr Nijimura and Yoshihiro Kira, both DIO's minions in Japan, were given the arrows, which in the former case, his elder son Keicho used in an insane rampage to find someone to end his father's suffering, and in the latter case, Yoshihiro turning his son Yoshikage into a SerialKiller who is also a MadBomber. This is all ironic seeing as how he doesn't have much physical presence in this part itself, only being the center of influence with how the story goes.
* GutPunch:
** One that occurs for both the audience and Bucciarati is when he realizes that he's suddenly only holding [[spoiler:Trish's disembodied hand]], and the boss never had good intentions with the mission he sent them on. This arguably cascades into an example that also happens to be literal when [[spoiler:Bucciarati himself is]] [[AnyoneCanDie fatally punched through the gut]], putting him on borrowed time for the rest of the story.
** The deaths of both [[spoiler:Abbacchio]] and [[spoiler:Narancia]] also apply for both the audience and the characters. In both cases, the death is tragic, sudden, and unavoidable, and happens right under the noses of the heroes. In the latter, the characters don't even have evidence of an enemy being nearby before or afterward, making it especially shocking.
* HandWave: Why did DIO let some women live after having sex with them? The narration says no one knows, which raises the question of why even mention this in the first place.
* HarmlessFreezing: Averted, as Ghiaccio's freezing power does cause frostbites and freezes limbs enough so that he can invoke LiterallyShatteredLives.
* TheHedonist: Guido Mista is described as this, living a simple life full of simple pleasures.
* HiddenInPlainSight: Doppio looks young enough to pass off as a kid. [[spoiler: So Diavolo takes his place in a gang of kids playing soccer and purposefully shoots the ball toward Abbacchio to get close to him. He was even posing as a tourist in the fight with Secco and Bucciarati, with Secco [[HostageSituation taking him hostage]] to prevent Bucciarati from killing him.]]
* HopeSpot: A couple in Bucciarati's flashback. When he was a child, his father happened upon a drug deal and was gunned down. Though he was shot 7 times the coast guard found him and he survived. The gang later tried to kill him in the hospital, but Bucciarati got the drop on them and killed the two thugs. Though his dad survived both encounters, he ultimately lived for only 5 more years, with chronic pain, on account of the damage the bullets had done to him.
* HowWeGotHere: The final chapters following [[spoiler: Diavolo's defeat]] are a side-story about Bucciarati and the gang before they met Giorno. It also features a Stand that [[spoiler: foreshadows the deaths of Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia.]]
* IceBreaker: Before it is revealed that Ghiaccio was attacking Giorno and Mista while they were driving to Venice, Mista's finger ends up breaking off his body after he touches the car window, even taking him a few moments to realize what happened.
* IDieFree: [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati tells this to Giorno from beyond the grave, saying that he freed himself from being a slave of Fate and took his own path.]]
* IfWeGetThroughThis: During the final fight of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler:Narancia]] dreams of returning to school after getting through this fight; [[spoiler:of course, he is the first casualty.]]
* ILied: A rare heroic example in ''Vento Aureo''. [[spoiler:After shooting [[AxCrazy Cioccolata]] in the head, Giorno suspects that he's still alive and says that he won't attack so long as Cioccolata doesn't move. When Cioccolata springs back into action and tries taking Giorno's friends hostage, Giorno reveals that he'd already planted what was essentially a time bomb in Cioccolata's head. Now dying for real, Cioccolata complains that Giorno broke his previous word. Giorno's response: "Know your place."]]
* InMediasRes: [[spoiler: After Diavolo is defeated and Giorno is crowned the Boss of the Passione Family, the next chapters is a flashback from Bucciarati's group before Giorno entered the group.]]
* InSeriesNickname: Zig Zagged. In the Japanese version of the anime, everyone refers to Narancia as "Naran-Chan". His name is properly pronounced in the English Dub.
* InstantDramaJustAddTracheotomy: In Venice, Narancia gets his own tongue cut off by Clash and he begins to choke, somehow. To save Narancia, Giorno performs a makeshift tracheotomy with a hollow pen to make him breathe through his throat until he can regenerate the tongue.
* {{Irony}}: [[spoiler: In episode 21, Bucciarati was killed by The boss with a GutPunch, with only Giorno saving him that he is still alive. 11 episodes later, he unknowingly returned the favor when he gave a GutPunch to Doppio, who is The Boss's split personality.]]
** Mista is terrified of 4, as he believes FourIsDeath. Not only Mista is the fourth member of Team Bucciarati, but [[spoiler: he's also the only survivor of Team Bucciarati]].
* ItHasBeenAnHonor: [[spoiler: Bucciarati thanks Giorno for having met him in Naples, before ascending to Heaven.]]
* JabbaTableManners: Polpo cannot eat a simple cracker without spilling half of it on his cheeks.
* JerkassHasAPoint: The anime had a scene of Fugo trying to convince Narancia [[spoiler: not to betray Passione, as rebellion will be met with execution by the Boss. He's sadly proven right]].
* JuggleFu: Happens at the beginning of the fight between Secco and Bucciarati. Secco throws his camera in the air, proceeds to pummel Bucciarati for long enough to make him realize his techniques and force him to flee before catching the camera.
* JumpScare: In Episode 24, after Notorious B.I.G. is thrown out the plane for the second time, Trish spots what appears to be a ball rolling around the plane's wing. She gets up to take a closer look, when the enemy Stand very suddenly slams against the window.
* KillEmAll: Compared to the idealistic ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' this is a much darker story with almost every Stand battle being a fight to the death. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia all die. Fugo leaves which means the gang is reduced to just Giorno and Mista. Returning hero Polnareff physically dies but his spirit lives on inside Coco Jumbo. Risotto's gang is wiped out completely by Bucciarati's gang. Every other named Passione member is killed, with the exception of Zucchero and depending on canon he dies as well in the ''Purple Haze Feedback'' spinoff.]]
* KlingonPromotion:
** A driving motivation of the La Squadra Esecuzioni is to find out the Boss' identity, so that they can kill him and take over his position.
** [[spoiler:Giorno himself eventually becomes the Boss of Passione by killing Diavolo.]]
* LactoseOverLiquor: When La Squadra, Passione's hitman team, goes to a restaurant, Pesci orders milk instead of alcohol or espresso. He is the most inexperienced member of the team and displays a hesitant, meek and cowardly personality.
* LifeOrLimbDecision: All over the place. Perhaps most notable for this is the White Album arc, where ''all of the combatants'' uses their own blood to gain an advantage, all in short succession; Giorno uses his blood to reveal a path through the frozen air, Mista sprays his blood to temporarily blind Ghiaccio, and Ghiaccio uses his (admittedly, already spilled) blood to prevent himself from being fully impaled on a spike.
* LineInTheSand: After Bucciarati decides to [[spoiler:go against [[TheDon Diavolo]]]], he tells his subordinates that if they aren't 100% certain about whether or not they want to follow him, they should stay behind; otherwise, they can get aboard his boat to confirm that they agree with him. [[spoiler:Narancia and Fugo both decide not to follow him, however, Narancia has a change of heart almost immediately and swims after the boat, meaning that Fugo is the only one who gets PutOnABus.]]
* LonersAreFreaks: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] is a schizophrenic man who is living alone and refuses to have relationships because he doesn't want anyone to learn anything about him.
* LuxuryPrisonSuite: Polpo inhabits a pretty luxurious prison cell decorated with paintings and has a personal fridge.
* MafiaPrincess: Trish is a subversion. Although she is the daughter of The Boss and acts like a spoiled teen used to have servants, she only learned it recently and freaks out at the idea of meeting her father as well as being the target of her father's enemies. Moreover although the Boss seems to try to care for her, he just [[spoiler: wants to kill her because she is a potential weakness]].
* ManIFeelLikeAWoman: [[spoiler:When Silver Chariot Requiem causes everyone to body-swap, Mista finds himself stuck in Trish's body and gets a bit… hands-y, though to his credit it was mostly him trying to adjust her underwear because he's not used to having it so tight or to wearing a bra in general.]]
* ManlyTears: Much like other parts in the franchise, there are times the manly heroes simply cannot stop themselves from crying. Notable examples are when Abbacchio sheds tears [[spoiler:upon meeting his former partner in the afterlife]], Bucciarati and Narancia crying over [[spoiler: Abbacchio's death]] and when both Giorno and Mista cry over [[spoiler:the death of Narancia.]]
* MatterOfLifeAndDeath: While a staple of the series, in ''Vento Aureo'', '''everyone''' is constantly fighting with the intent to kill.
* MegatonPunch: [[spoiler: King Crimson, having a very high Strength can cause much greater damage than Star Platinum, The World or Crazy Diamond's RapidFireFisticuffs by simply driving his fists in one blow. Diavolo uses this to kill his enemies quickly before they could blurt his identity out.]]
* MixAndMatchMan: Giorno Giovanna qualifies because his biological father is Dio Brando's head attached to Jonathan's body, causing several traits from both going to him.
* TheMobBossIsScarier: When Bucciarati announces his betrayal of Passione, the majority of the team is shaking in fear of The Boss' retaliation. Fortunately for Giorno and Bucciarati, only Fugo remains scared enough to stay behind.
* MundaneMacGuffinPerson: Trish Una is the recently discovered illegitimate daughter of Passione's Boss. All of the Boss' enemies want to capture and/or kill her, so she ends up under the protection of the heroes, thus driving most of the plot.
* MusicalThemeNaming:
** A continued trope. This part's theme is renowned artists of the [[TheSixties late '60s]] and [[TheSeventies early '70s]] such as Music/KingCrimson, Music/SexPistols, and Music/TheMoodyBlues along with a few contemporary rock and pop acts who were notable during publishing. Taken even further in the light novel sequel where three new Stands are introduced all of them taking their namesake from post-punk bands that first formed in the late 70's.
** Both the hero and the villain have Stands that allude to royalty (Giorno with Golden Experience by ''Prince'' and [[spoiler:Diavolo]] with ''King'' Crimson).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes N to Z]]
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: [[spoiler:Diavolo, which is Italian for ''Devil''.]] Not that anyone knows his name, though.
* NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters:
** Team Bucciarati. Unlike the rest of Passione (who are decidedly ''not'' neighborhood-friendly), Bucciarati's group is beloved by the general community, with even old people willingly going to them, a group of rogues with supernatural abilities and trouble surrounding them, for help. Bucciarati and Giorno only joined up with Passione in the first place to stop the mafia from dealing drugs, and their goal is to overthrow TheDon of Passione and insert one of their own in his place. [[spoiler: In fact, they outright openly rebel and gun for him when they learn the hard way that he is willing to kill his own daughter only because of the insane paranoid idea that she could be a clue to his identity, despite having never met the man in her life nor know anything about him. The personal targeting of an innocent and unrelated teenage girl was the last straw]].
** Giorno got into crime because of one of these. When he was a child, regularly bullied and abused, he found a man bleeding out in a patch of tall grass. The men who'd shot him asked Giorno where the man had gone, and Giorno lied, saving the injured man's life. That man was a powerful gangster in Naples, and after he recovered he made it a point to protect Giorno from a distance (his first act: having a "quick talk" with Giorno's abusive stepfather). The only person who ''ever'' treated Giorno well was in the Mafia, and that inspired him to go the same route.
* NiceJobFixingItVillain: Had [[spoiler: Diavolo confirmed Polnareff's death]] instead of [[BondVillainStupidity assuming him dead and walking away]], [[spoiler: he would have successfully killed his daughter and rest of Team Bucciarati with zero opposition, and would have continued to rule Italy in the shadows.]]
* NighInvulnerable: The Stand Notorious [=B.I.G=] cannot be killed first due to being a BlobMonster, but its user is already dead so the heroes are reduced to [[spoiler: simply tossing it into the ocean by destroying their plane.]]
* NoSell: [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem]] in a nutshell. [[spoiler:Any actions or processes attempted against Giorno are brought to zero the moment his enemies oppose him, thus every action is rendered moot. Even Diavolo's time erasing powers don't affect Gold Experience Requiem.]]
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: Lasting ''[[UpToEleven seven whole pages,]]'' Giorno's beatdown of Cioccolata is the biggest example of this trope in a franchise that made this trope a meme.
** Giorno gives another one to [[spoiler: ''Diavolo himself'']] after [[spoiler: Gold Experience Requiem evolves.]]
* NoOneSeesTheBoss: Apart from being full of Stand users, the gang Passione is unique by how secretive its Boss is. The Boss never directly interacts with his subordinates, sending proxies, using computers and leaving messages behind for his subordinates to read and obey, but otherwise no one knows what the Boss looks like. It's a very deliberate attempt from the Boss' part to make himself be seen more as a concept or an omnipotent being rather than a man who could be killed. It worked rather well, until word of his daughter came out.
* OddNameOut: Every [=JoJo's=] name begins with the letters "Jo", except '''Gio'''rno '''Gio'''vanna, mostly because the letter J does not exist in Italian.
* OffingTheOffspring: [[spoiler: The Boss wanted to kill his daughter personally so that his enemies could not use her to trace back to him.]]
* OneBulletLeft: During the fight between Mista and Sale, Mista is left with only one bullet. Proudly announcing it as if he was going to take full advantage of this one shot, Mista is, in fact, aiming to use Sex Pistols on Sale's own bullet to defeat him.
* OneHitKill:
** How [[spoiler:Diavolo]] deals with enemies, due in no small part to [[MegatonPunch King Crimson's strength]].
** The Requiem power unlocked by having someone stab the Arrow with their Stands is this. Gold Experience Requiem's power delves so much into metaphysics, even [[spoiler:Diavolo]]'s time erasure is outclassed completely.
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] is only known as "The Boss" until [[spoiler:Polnareff reveals it to the gang.]]
* OutOfBodyExperience: Being punched by Gold Experience causes one to think so fast the body cannot follow up and the consciousness can see their immobile body if it happens to visualize themselves moving into another position.
* PayEvilUntoEvil: [[spoiler: Diavolo's death loop]] represents a particularly extreme version of this trope, with an incredibly evil person being subjected to an incredibly torturous punishment for eternity.
* PietaPlagiarism: In Part 5, Giorno holds an injured Mista that way at the end of the White Album arc. Unlike other examples, the one who dies is their enemy Ghiaccio.
* PlotCoupon: In ''Vento Aureo'', the Arrow becomes a key item as it can [[spoiler: unlock Requiem Stands, said to always be able to surpass the likes of even King Crimson]].
* PragmaticAdaptation: The [=PS2=] game modified some of the Stand powers so that they would be more palatable in a straight-laced BeatEmUp genre; for example, Little Feet's shrinking activates instantaneously on Formaggio's targets, but wears off after a short period of time. It also significantly [[AdaptationDistillation pares down]] the number of fights[[note]]Zucchero, Sale, Melone, Squalo, Tizano, and Risotto aren't fought, instead showing up in the game's unlockable "Story drama" scenes and they have models viewable in the gallery[[/note]], and some of the plot points are modified to compact the story (Pericolo's assignment is given right after Giorno joins the group).
* ProfessionalKiller: La Squadra Esecuzioni, also known as the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Hitman Team]] are a rouge band of eccentric personalities that hunt down Team Bucciarati in a desperate attempt to discover the Boss's identity. [[spoiler: After Bucciarati and his team betray the organization, the boss's top bodyguards, Unità Speciale, also hunt down their group under direct orders from the boss.]]
* PsychoForHire: [[MadDoctor Cioccolata]] is an [[AxCrazy maniacal]] hitman with a HumanPet who is seen by everyone, even the boss, as a crazy, creepy psychopath. In the anime, it is implied that they were responsible for the brutal deaths of Sorbet and Gelato, which kick-starts La Squadra's motivation for hunting down the boss's identity.
* PutOnABus: [[spoiler: Following Bucciarati's betrayal of The Boss, Fugo refuses to go along with the rest of the protagonists and is dropped from the story altogether. He was originally meant to return as an enemy, but Araki felt that the heroes having to fight a former friend would be too dark.]]
* ReachingTowardsTheAudience: The first cover of ''Vento Aureo''.
* RecapEpisode: The first and (so far) only animated Part that includes ClipShow that details what happened during the course of the story. There are three episodes, each of them summarizes some events across the Part.
** ''Episode 13.5 - Inizio del Vento Aureo'': The first recap episode, it is mostly focusing on the various battles that the protagonists go through as well as the route that Team Bucciarati takes throughout Italy.
** ''Episode 21.5 - Determinazione'': The second recap episode, this episode retells each of Team Bucciarati's members' backstories as well as showing their respective resolves and reason for following Bucciarati. It also recounting current situations of the conflict between Team Bucciarati and Squadra Esecuzioni.
** ''Episode 28.5 - Determinazione'': The third and final recap episode, this episode retelss Trish Una's backstory and Team Bucciarati's mission of protecting her. It also retelling now defected Team Bucciarati's first encounter against Unita Speciale, Boss' personal bodyguard.
* RecruitedFromTheGutter: Narancia was first spotted by Fugo trying to scavenge garbage cans, but was later accepted into Passione, although Bucciarati was against it.
* RedHerring: The plotline of finding out The Boss' true identity falls into this a bit. Almost the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'' is spent with various groups trying to dig up information about his past, certain that there must be ''something'' he's hiding that would be a weakness for him. [[spoiler: Once we actually find out the Boss' identity, it turns out he really wasn't hiding any inherent weakness, nor was he anybody they would recognize. He was just ''that'' paranoid]]. What lessens this somewhat is that he ''is'' revealed to be more important in the grand scheme of things than one might assume at first glance, [[spoiler: being the one who discovered the Stand Arrows and sold them to DIO's service, and therefore being an indirect but deciding reason why Part 3 played out the way it did and why everything from Part 4 onward happened at all. His origins do trace back to the Requiem Arrow, but even he wasn't aware of its true properties until toward the end of the part]]. In other words, TheReveal of his identity wasn't actually that much of a game-changer in the context of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler: but it did have huge implications for the series as a whole]].
* RefugeInAudacity: The rest of the gang quickly learns that when Giorno does something completely weird, out there, or seemingly inexplicable, it's going to end in success. Perhaps the earliest example of this is, after fighting Bucciarati, he outright ''tells'' him he's going to [[DefeatMeansFriendship become his ally]] and it ''works.''
* ResurrectionDeathLoop: [[spoiler:Diavolo is struck by this in the final fight of Part 5. After receiving a thorough CurbStompBattle by the newly awakened Gold Experience Requiem he also begins to be affected by Requiem's 'back to zero' effect, which in his case means he constantly dies over and over, always in a different way. He can't ever escape from it, making it both this and AFateWorseThanDeath.]]
* {{Retirony}}: Right before [[spoiler:Narancia]] dies they begin talking about everything they're going to do once the Boss is defeated. [[spoiler:Wanting to get through highschool, being there for Trish, seeing Fugo again, eating some piping hot pizza and getting his life together]]. Unfortunately you seeing this trope here means that they couldn't do any of this.
* RodandReelRepurposed: Pesci's Stand, Beach Boy, is a fishing rod capable of three things: it's capable of tracking people and literally fishing them out from other rooms, it can phase through any and all objects including skin, and attacking the line simply reflects damage.
* RousingSpeech: Giorno is fond of making motivational speeches about subjects such as one's resolve or growth following/followed by a badass move.
* {{Sadist}}: Cioccolata's entire character essentially revolves around this, with him being [[MadDoctor a doctor who would intentionally put completely healthy patients under surgery and intentionally inject not enough anesthesia so that his patients wake up mid-operation.]] He joined Passione for the same reason, and has his [[ThisIsMyHuman human pet Secco]] record him killing his targets and whatever other collateral damage from his stand so that he can view their pain later.
* SceneryPorn: ''Vento Aureo'' is basically a tour through a hand-drawn version of Italy with Stand battles thrown in. The anime goes a step further by showing beautiful, panning birds-eye shots of the locations that the gang visits while narration provides a brief description of the place's history.
* ScottyTime: A downplayed example, but once Bucciarati's group reaches Sardinia, and he asks Abbachio how long it will take for Moody Blues to rewind and replay the actions of the boss's only known lover:
-->'''Abbachio''': If we're going back 15 years... It might take 8-10 minutes.\\
'''Bucciarati''': Do it in five.
* ScrewDestiny: [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem's]] use of his power is an exaggerated example. He outright admits that Epitaph's prediction of [[spoiler:Giorno's death]] is absolutely true and is "going to happen", but that he nevertheless [[RealityWarper won't let anyone reach that moment]].
* SecretTestOfCharacter: Polpo's test is this. He asks the initiates to carry a lighter for twenty-four hours, never allowing it to go out. However, the flame is incredibly weak, making it extremely difficult to keep lit for that long, as well as getting through the prison security. The secret is that re-igniting it causes his Stand to appear and stab them with an arrow, where the ''true'' test of whether they'll create a Stand or die commences. It's not so much as a test of trust, more that it's a test of strength. And as Polpo notes, if somehow, someone manages to keep the lighter on, Passione gains a regular but clever member.
* SeinfeldianConversation: Usually held around the dining table by Team Bucciarati, mostly between Mista and Narancia.
* ShadowWalker: Black Sabbath can teleport through intersecting shadows, but is otherwise unable to walk out of them.
* ShootTheMedicFirst: Tizziano and Squalo try this tactic in ''Vento Aureo''. Aware that Giorno can heal his teammates, the duo do their best to lure him into a trap alone by manipulating Narancia. They remarkably succeed, but fail to kill Giorno in time.
* ShootingAtYourOwnProjectiles
** Early in Mista's fight with Sale, Mista manages to shoot his opponent in the head. Unfortunately for Mista, Sale's Stand, Kraft Work, stops the bullet's momentum, which leaves it lodged in Sale's skull while Sale himself is otherwise unharmed and able to keep going. Mista's finishing move in that fight is to shoot a second bullet into the exact same bullet hole, causing the second shot to hit the first and drive it even deeper into Sale's brain.
** With Giorno's help, Mista shoots a metal bolt with a bullet that launches the former into the head of Ghiaccio, who is protected by his Stand White Album. Mista then fires more bullets at the bolt to knock Ghiaccio unconscious.
* ShoutOut:
** As a work centered on the Mafia, there are naturally a few shout outs to Mario Puzo's crime novel Film/TheGodfather:
*** The plot thread of Narancia contracting an eye infection after losing his mother and wandering the streets, only to have it healed after being "adopted" into Bucciarati's gang and then being angrily told to continue his education is note-for-note ''identical'' to that of Tom Hagen, the informally-adopted Irish on and lawyer of the Corleone Family.
*** Gelato choking to death swallowing the towel stuffed in his mouth as he watched his lover Sorbet hacked to pieces alive by Cioccolata is identical to how a victim of a double-murder committed by Luca Brazi, the Corleone Head Enforcer and hitman, died watching his friend dismembered limb-by-limb with a fire-axe.
*** The final panels with the hand-kissing in a sign of loyalty to [[spoiler: the new Don, Giorno Giovanna]] while Mista observes in the distance, much like the iconic final scene of the first movie with Don Michael Corleone having a hand-kissing and Kay observes.
** The way Sorbet's body was hacked into pieces and preserved in cases filled with formaldehyde is likely inspired by [[https://damienhirst.com/artworks/catalogue?category=23&p=0 some of Damien Hirst's artworks]], in which he preserves animal bodies (sometimes chopped into pieces) in formaldehyde solution; the most famous of them being [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Physical_Impossibility_of_Death_in_the_Mind_of_Someone_Living "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"]].
* SlidingScaleOfVillainEffectiveness: Doesn't exist in this part as every antagonist is smart (except Zucchero and Sale), comes equipped with a powerful Stand ability, and a good majority of them come close to emerging victorious.
* SpaghettiAndGondolas: Downplayed. Like in ''Battle Tendency'', Rome and Venice are still the most prominent cities shown in the series, with ''Vento Aureo's'' greatest plot twists occurring there, but Araki made an effort to feature other places such as Pompeii; Naples; or Capri, Sardegna; Naples being his favorite Italian city. The countryside is also featured at one point.
* SpannerInTheWorks: [[spoiler:Polnareff]]. He discovers the method of [[spoiler:awakening Requiem]], something The Boss nor any other Stand User was aware even existed, and ultimately decided to share this information with the heroes to help them defeat The Boss.
* SpellMyNameWithAnS: Prone to this, even more so than other ''[=JoJo=]'' parts, due to the complexities of taking Italian names that had already been transliterated into Japanese and then rendering them into English. Bucciarati is an excellent example: no one is really sure if he's supposed to be named "Bruno Buccellati" (a logical approximation of his first name, and a [[ThemeNaming last name taken from an Italian fashion designer]]), "[[JapaneseRanguage Blono/Brono]] Bucciarati" (an ''accurate'' transliteration of his Japanese name), or some combination of the two. Not even Shueisha, Lucky Land, or Araki are quite sure, considering how both variations appear in the 25th anniversary ''JOJOVELLER'' art book. Even the name of the part itself is subject to some debate, with ''Vento Aureo'' being the more dominant term over the years due to the official use in Japanese media and most English releases favoring it. However, with the debut of the anime, ''Golden Wind'' has become more popular.
* SpoilerOpening:
** As with previous adaptations, the first opening "Fighting Gold" has some subtle hints about the events of the story, meant more for attentive fans than giving away a twist. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Narancia, and Abbachio's body silhouettes become black, unlike the other members of Passione, and in the pentultimate shot, they are all framed on the right side of the screen, making a subtle reference at their deaths]]. On a less subtle level, "Fighting Gold" also prominently features Trish, who wasn't previously shown in promotional material and didn't appear in the manga until her debut 29 chapters in.
*** In addition, a silhouette of [[spoiler:Bucciarati carved out of Rolling Stones]] can be seen in the background of the opening shot.
** The second opening "Uragirimono no Requiem" ("Traitor's Requiem") is even less subtle than the first in spoiling the second half of the story. The very ''first'' scene of the opening [[spoiler:is the very ''end'' of the series, when Giorno is made Boss of Passione.]] Other plot points spoiled include [[spoiler:Trish's stand Spice Girl (as well as her role as a fighter), Vinegar Doppio and his fight with Risotto, and parts of the final battle, including Giorno claiming the Stand Arrow, although Gold Experience Requiem isn't shown.]]
* SpontaneousChoreography: The infamous dance Narancia, Mista and Fugo join in on while torturing Zucchero features this, especially in the anime.
* StealthPun: TheHero of Part 5 is Dio's bastard son, and the BigBad is named [[spoiler:Diavolo]]. In other words, [[spoiler:[[BilingualBonus the son of God is fighting the Devil]]]].
* StevenUlyssesPerhero: Many of the musical references in the Stand names aren't just for show in this part. Sex Pistols can manipulate bullets, Aerosmith is an airplane, Little Feet makes things little, Beach Boy is a fishing rod, Talking Head prevents its victim from speaking correctly, and so on.
* StrongFamilyResemblance: A pretty perverted example with Trish and her ArchnemesisDad [[spoiler: Diavolo]]. Both of them have purple hair, and have a preference for {{Stripperific}} clothing. Also, both [[spoiler: King Crimson and Spice Girl]] have rather similar looking Stand designs. [[spoiler: Ironically, this familial resemblance is exactly what causes Diavolo to go after her, fearing her Stand abilities can be linked of his own.]]
* SupportingProtagonist: Giorno may be the eponymous Jojo (or [=GioGio=]) of the part, and is instrumental in a massive amount of fights, either through his actions or what he's figured out, but after joining Bucciarati's gang, he mostly passively goes along with what the rest of the group is doing plotwise.
* SuperMode: Essentially what the "Requiem" effect is the arrow has on Stands. A Stand struck by the arrow and which proves worthy receives a dramatic upgrade in which their old power is cast away (except in the case of Gold Experience, whose life-giving ability powered up after transforming) and they get a StoryBreakerPower which delves into the metaphysical.
* TheManyDeathsOfYou: [[spoiler:Diavolo is forced to live through many scenario in which he dies, unable to do anything about it because his death is set back to 0: the point right before he dies.]]
* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: Cioccolata's death is one of most brutal in the series, even if compared to the main villain's. Before the barrage, Cioccolata's been shot with a bullet to the head. Such bullet is transformed by Gold Experience into a stag beetle which proceeds to destroy his brain from inside out. Every single punch Gold Experience delivers afterward has expanding and delaying effects, putting him in lasting pain and suffering before he's thrown down a tall building and crashes full-speed into a garbage truck for combustible wastes.
* ThisIsMyHuman: Secco is the feral human pet for Cioccolata that speaks only in grunts and obeys his master's every command. Cioccolata even coddles him similar to how one would with a dog and gives him treats in the form of sugar cubes. He breaks this dog-like behavior, however, once learning of Cioccolata's death.
* ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman: When Zucchero attacks Bucciarati's team on their boat with Soft Machine, making everyone disappear after he basically deflates them like a balloon, Abbacchio's Moody Blues comes in handy as its power to mimic past events is perfect for investigating Zucchero's powers.
* TongueTied: The Stand Talking Head has this as its power. Crosses with CanNotSpitItOut as Narancia desperately tries to figure out a way to circumvent its ability and warn the others about a different enemy Stand.
* ToThePain: Formaggio uses his Stand Little Feet to [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrink down Narancia]] and trap him in a glass bottle along with a venomous spider (who appears to be a GiantSpider from his perspective). Formaggio then proceeds to describe, in detail, what the experience of being eaten by a spider would be like: first, he'd be injected with a paralyzing venom, then with digestive enzymes that would slowly liquefy his insides while keeping him conscious, until the spider is able to slurp him up. Thankfully, Narancia manages to fight off the spider (using a glass shard as an improvised shiv) and escape before getting bitten.
* TraintopBattle: The ''Grateful Dead'' arc features a battle inside an express train.
* TransformationSequence: One happens when Doppio lets [[spoiler:Diavolo]] take the reins of their shared body, which grows more muscular and the face changes completely alongside the hair.
* TranslationConvention: It's implied that everyone's speaking Italian instead of whatever language the viewer is watching in, as, in the first arc of the story, Giorno will compliment Koichi's fluent Italian.
* TrickBullet:
** Giorno gives Mista bullets that transform into trees to fire at Ghiaccio to knock him off their car and unfreeze it. The bullets themselves aren't special, but the heat from them is necessary for Gold Experience to sprout life in the sub-zero temperatures.
** When fighting Cioccolata, Giorno modifies some bullets that transform into a tree for Mista to fire at Cioccolata's helicopter to ensnare it. Later Giorno uses another bullet to transform into another tree to prevent him from falling, and kicks a section of its branch for it to later transform back into a bullet to fire itself into Cioccolata's head. Later, said bullet transforms into a beetle that burrows out of his head.
* TheUnfought: While Risotto Nero fights Doppio, he never fights the protagonists directly and [[spoiler: Narancia killing him was both an accident and a coincidence at the same time.]]
* {{Unperson}}: The Boss intentionally pulled this on himself due to having a near psychopathic obsession with his own anonymity. No one in Passione (and likely the entire world) knows his name or what he looks like due to his systematic erasure of anything that could lead back to him or his identity, and he only gives orders through a complex series of proxies and go-betweens that he is not above killing to preserve said anonymity if it is required.
* ViceCity: Naples at the beginning of the part is presented as a corrupt town where the mob is more feared by the police, and said police is also near totally corrupt or ineffective.
* VillainOfTheWeek: Much like ''Stardust Crusaders'', each new arc introduces a new villain for the protagonists. There's the two rival mobsters encountered before the protagonists meet Trish, the eight members of La Squadra who are the primary antagonists of the first half, and The Boss' five personal assassins who take over La Squadra's role in the second half. At least, for La Squadra Esecuzioni, the battles are tied into one another because the mere fact that one of the assassins manages to find the group forces them to move out immediately, pursued by the rest of La Squadra.
* WalkingWasteland: In ''Vento Aureo'', Purple Haze and Green Day can release respectively a flesh eating virus and a mold with exponential growth which can both kill people in seconds, infect victims indiscriminately and at high speed, and are able to kill the entire population of a city in minutes.
* WeAllLiveInAmerica:
** The main characters are [[TheMafia Italian gangsters]] who [[HonorAmongThieves despise the drug trade]]. Such beliefs are commonly attributed to {{Yakuza}}, but aren't generally associated with organized crimes much of anywhere else.
** While doing math, Narancia draws a ''[[{{Henohenomoheji}} henohenomoheji]]'' on the side of his paper (which is made of Japanese characters).
** Guido Mista has a deep superstitious fear of [[FourIsDeath number four]], as if he were Japanese. Italians actually fear seventeen the most. The InUniverse explanation is that his tetraphobia originates from his neighbor being attacked by a kitten who was born in a litter of four, which is a rather weak justification.
* WeHardlyKnewYe: Sorbet and Gelato, who was only shown in one panel and are hinted to be lovers just before they [[spoiler: are shown to be killed by Cioccolata and Secco.]] Meanwhile, Carne just appeared in one scene before he was killed by Mista, to the point that his name is [[AllInTheManual only revealed in the manual.]] Hell, Notorious B.I.G. is more well known than him.
* WhamLine: While recapping how he accidentally let [[spoiler:Polnareff]] live, [[spoiler:Diavolo]] reveals just how important he is to events after Part 2.
-->'''[[spoiler:Diavolo]]''': An old woman [[spoiler: named Enya who had 2 right hands]] told me she'd tell me how [[spoiler:the arrow]] worked in return for shooting some. I figured one will be more than enough, so [[spoiler: I sold the other five for a handsome sum]].
* WhamShot: The last panel of "Green Day and Oasis, part 12" which reveals that [[spoiler:the third party the gang is meeting at the Coliseum is none other than Jean-Pierre Polnareff.]]
* WholeCostumeReference: The colored version of the manga made an [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/jjba/images/1/12/Oldjanitor.png unnamed janitor]] wear [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]] clothing. Brown shoes, blue overalls, red long sleeved shirt and a red cap. Only thing missing was the white gloves.
* YouAllMeetInAnInn: In ''Vento Aureo'', Bucciarati's gang introduction features all the characters participating in a SeinfeldianConversation in a restaurant.
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->''"Arrivederci."''
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[[caption-width-right:350:[[ThemeMusicPowerUp I, Giorno Giovanna,]] [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters have a dream that I know is just.]]]]

->''"You see, I'm planning to beat your boss, and take back this city for the people. To rid this city of drug dealing and child abusing mafiosi... I have no other choice but to become a mafioso myself."''
-->-- '''Giorno Giovanna'''

''Vento Aureo'' (黄金の風, lit. ''Golden Wind''), is part 5 of the long-running ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' series. It is preceded by ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Diamond is Unbreakable]]'' and followed by ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean Stone Ocean]]''. This part's original run on Magazine/ShonenJump went from 1995 to 1999.

Set in 2001, ''Vento Aureo'' stars Giorno Giovanna, the son of DIO who was conceived with Jonathan Joestar's body after his resurrection in the 1980s. Having inherited both the righteousness of the Joestars and the ruthless ambitions of DIO, following a massive crime wave in Italy, he seeks to take over TheMafia in order to turn it into an organization for good instead of crime. After a brief scuffle with a Stand-using mafia assassin named Bruno Bucciarati, the two realize that they share a common goal, and so Bucciarati allows Giorno to join his squadron of Stand-using gangsters, which also includes Leone Abbacchio, Guido Mista, Narancia Ghirga, and Pannacotta Fugo.

Giorno and Bucciarati's secret goal of overthrowing The Boss gets complicated when they receive an order to guard The Boss's daughter, Trish Una, from other members of the mob who want to take her hostage to take the mob for themselves. What follows is a road trip throughout all of Italy, fending off attacks from rival mobsters and culminating in a final confrontation with The Boss himself.

The events of the story were adapted by Creator/{{Capcom}} into a 2002 BeatEmUp for the UsefulNotes/PlayStation2. An international release was announced under the title ''[=GioGio=]'s Bizarre Adventure'' but was cancelled [[note]]Due to copyright issues involving Stand names (Mainly Music/{{Prince}} and "Gold Experience") and the obscurity of the series in global markets at the time[[/note]]. In October of 2018, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-M8ncaolysg a fan-translation patch into English was released for the game]]. Giorno and all members of Bucciarati's gang (barring Abbacchio) have been consistent fighters in the Creator/CyberConnect2 fighting games, ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureAllStarBattle'' and ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureEyesOfHeaven''.

Two {{light novel}}s have been released that feature stories based on ''Vento Aureo''. The first, ''Golden Heart, Golden Ring'', was released in 2001. It was written by Shotaro Miya and Gichi Otsuka, with illustrations by Araki, and features a story shortly after the first encounter with the Boss, and the apparent betrayal of one of the team members. The second light novel ''LightNovel/PurpleHazeFeedback'' was released as part of the series 25th anniversary celebrations in 2011. Written by Kouhei Kadono with illustrations provided by Araki, it is set after the events of ''Vento Aureo'' and follows Pannacota Fugo as he deals with the aftermath of decisions made in ''Vento Aureo''. However, as with other light novels created for the series, it has not been released outside of Japan and is generally treated as OptionalCanon.

On June 21, 2018, an anime adaptation by Creator/DavidProduction was announced, about 2 years after the same studio finished airing ''Diamond is Unbreakable''. The first episode premiered in Japan on July 5th, 2018. Following that, the entire 39-episode anime aired in Japan from October 5, 2018 to July 28, 2019, with a simulcast on Website/{{Crunchyroll}}. The English dub of the anime aired on Creator/{{Toonami}} from October 26, 2019 to October 24, 2020.
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!!How on Earth do all these tropes work, it makes no-- '''[[MemeticMutation IT JUST WORKS]]'''.

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Tropes # to D]]
* AbortedArc: Fugo was supposed to be revealed as the Boss's mole within Bucciarati's team and would have betrayed them at one point. However, Araki felt that it would be too depressing to actually portray a FaceHeelTurn so he decided to just let him quit the team without reappearing.
* AccidentalPervert:
** When the group is going to the train station by van, a sudden stop makes Fugo stumble and fall face-first onto Trish's chest. Mista then proceeds to pull a second-hand SuspiciouslySpecificDenial ("He's sorry! He totally didn't use the sudden stop as an excuse to feel your boobs or look up your skirt!"), until Fugo yells "[[DiggingYourselfDeeper Quit saying things that make it sound worse!]]"
** When Mista in Trish's body has to scratch under her skirt due to her garments being too tight, Trish (in Mista's body) understandably gets very angry and thinks that Mista was touching himself.
* ActorAllusion: Cioccolata, whose hair is green, just like his Stand Green Day, is voiced by Creator/AtsushiMiyauchi, who is the official Japanese dub voice of [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk]] in the ''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse''. Extra points Green Day is also big and sports a muscled body like Hulk.
** The English dub retains the same kind of allusion with Bill Butts, who is a bodybuilder on the side of being a voice actor.
* AdaptationalEarlyAppearance: A number of characters show up much earlier in the anime than in the manga. Most notably is La Squadra, whose members only reveal themselves in their arcs while initially they're only framed in shadow. In the anime their debut has them interact as a group and shows off each member's personality. In addition Sorbet's death is shown and his killer is revealed as [[spoiler:Ciocclata and Secco]].
* AdaptationExpansion:
** Downplayed example, but the Playstation 2 videogame adaptation recontextualized Giorno's scene with all the [=JoJos=] after defeating Black Sabbath as the game's AttractMode intro since Koichi isn't in this version. This allowed them to add Jonathan Joestar to the images of past [=JoJos=] above Giorno, since otherwise Jonathan is not included in either the manga or anime since, from a narrative point of view, Koichi never met him and nobody ever told him about Jonathan.
** The first episode of the anime spends some extra time showing the crime wave in Naples, as well as original scenes where Giorno steals back a wallet from a pickpocket and returns it kindly its proprietor, only for him to snatch two bank notes for himself, and Leaky-Eye Luca shaking down a man for doing business in his territory, which is how he found out about Giorno.
** The second episode expands on Giorno's backstory, and gives a little characterization to the gangster he helped in his childhood; cruel but just, he killed a father who was selling drugs to children, and didn't bat an eyelid when his victim's son threatened to shoot him in grief. It also shows what Giorno looked like as an adolescent and teenager before he got his blond hair.
** Abbachio's backstory in the manga never explained how he actually ''joined'' Passione after his partner's death, so the anime added two short original scenes where Bucciarati visits Abbachio's apartment and asks him to join the gang. It also canonizes a fan theory that Abbachio became TheAlcoholic after being fired from the police force.
** La Squadra Esecuzioni gets expanded on quite a bit with episode 10 establishing their personalities much earlier than in the manga and even show them performing an assassination. Even Sorbet and Gelato's deaths are expanded upon, showing the silhouettes of Cioccolata and Secco with the former doing the killing and the latter filming it.
** The manga did not elaborate much on Pannacotta Fugo's backstory, other than him being accepted into a university at a young age only to be kicked out after beating a professor with an encyclopedia. In the anime, Fugo was being sexually harassed by the teacher, which is why he lashed out at him. The assault resulted in him being abandoned by his family, becoming a thief to survive, and being caught during a dine-and-dash only for Bucciarati to come to his aid and invite him to join the gang. ''LightNovel/PurpleHazeFeedback'' gives a different account of the event, where the motive for the assault was that Fugo was being criticized for letting his grandmother's death affect his grades.
** Episode 12 has a post-credit scene of Risotto coming across a dead body at a train station and finding a burnt photograph. [[spoiler:The corpse is Pericolo's after he relayed the instructions for Bucciarati's gang to head to Venice and killed himself. This scene explains how La Squadra knew how the gang were heading to Venice]], though first-time viewers would not understand the context.
** In Episode 35 [[spoiler: right after Narancia's death, Fugo is seen returning to Naples and wandering near their restaurant, only to stop and look further, as if sensing Narancia's passing]].
* AdaptedOut: To keep the focus of the game on Giorno and his journey, as well as their minimal roles to begin with, Koichi and Jotaro are nowhere to be seen in the [=PS2=] game. They have an audio drama in the game's OST at least.
* AerithAndBob: a [[DownplayedTrope downplayed]] and truly bizarre example, but characters in this part tend to have full names in which one half will be realistic (Guido, Leone), and the other will be a [[EdibleThemeNaming silly reference to food]] (Pannacotta, Narancia).
* AfterlifeWelcome: When [[spoiler:Abbacchio]] dies, the scene changes to him sitting outside a cafe and meeting a police officer. Said police officer turns out to be [[spoiler:his old deceased partner]] who tells him that he's dead when he tries getting on a nearby bus to get back to the others.
* AnachronismStew: In the anime, during Mista's flashback (which is presumably set in the year 2000) a cinema is shown with posters of ''Film/TheMartian'' (2015), ''Film/WarHorse'' (2011) and ''Film/TheDarkKnight'' (2008).
* AnIcePerson: Ghiaccio's stand, White Album, allows him to freeze the area around him to extremely low temperatures, to the point of being able to freeze the air around him. His stand also comes with it's own [[AnIceSuit ice suit]].
* AnIceSuit: As stated above, Ghiaccio's White Album allows him to make an extremely durable suit of ice that allows him to avoid being frozen to death by his own stand. It even comes with [[RollerbladeGood ice skates, which he can use to skate on non-ice surfaces]].
* AnimationBump: While the anime is well animated in general, the scene where King Crimson's ability is revealed in full ramps up the quality several notches to jaw-dropping levels.
* AntiHero: All of the protagonists are {{Pragmatic Hero}}es since they are gangsters and have no reservations about killing their enemies.
* AntiVillain: La Squadra whose goals are to take out The Boss in vengeance for their deceased allies.
* AnyoneCanDie: One of the most brutal parts in this regard. Aside from the minor antagonists working for Passione, and the members of La Squadra, [[spoiler: Abbacchio, Narancia, and Bucciarati end up being the biggest losses on the protagonist's side. And even returning characters aren't safe--Jean-Pierre Polnareff from Part 3 returns only to be fatally impaled by King Crimson soon after (though his spirit ''does'' survive within Coco Jumbo)]]
* ArcWords: "Resolve" (or "Kakugo" in Japanese). Often associated with and symbolic of Giorno, but is shared with his comrades and enemies alike as the story goes. Can be used in both noun and verb form, but generally translates to something with the effect of readiness to do something dangerous and/or costly without a second thought. Has also been translated as "preparedness", "consciousness", "determination", etc, leading to the catch-all word being [[LostInTranslation watered down through the different contexts]].
* ArchnemesisDad: Trish joins the fight against her scumbag of a father, who not only is a ruthless mob boss, but also tried to kill her.
* ArtisticLicenseBiology
** While some studies show that women can have lower body temperatures, the difference is negligible. That being said, Trish shouldn't be aging that slowly from The Grateful Dead with only a few wrinkles compared to the rest of the gang's shriveled up bodies.
** Risotto Nero's Stand Metallica can create objects such as razors, nails, or scissors out of the iron in one's blood. In reality, the human body only contains about 4 grams of iron, absolutely not enough for scissors. A few razors or nails would actually be plausible, however.
* ArtShift: In the anime, Jotaro's photograph of the Crusaders is done in Part 3's style, since the Part 3 anime features the scene of the picture being taken. [[spoiler:Polnareff's flashback to the group visiting the Giza Pyramids is also done in a similar way; though not as evident, the Crusaders have the clearly defined musculature of Part 3's artstyle. Whereas the flashback of Jotaro and Polnareff deciding to track the Stand Arrows have them in Part 5's art style.]]
* AscendedMeme:
** Robert Fripp acknowledged the "it just works" meme in a Facebook post.
** Phillip Reich's [[https://youtu.be/-vCw1tMAn0A announcement]] as the English voice of Giorno is based on the "Coda" memes.
* AssassinOutclassin: Whereas many antagonistic Stand users are specifically sent to kill the heroes, La Squadra Esecuzioni are professional assassins. All but one are defeated by the gang, though.
* AssholeVictim: The woman targeted by Melone on the stopped train for Babyface to bear a child assassin to hunt down Team Bucciarati made her debut by [[RichBitch showing a snobbish contempt for her fellow passengers,]] and when Melone left, she intended to [[FrivolousLawsuit sue the train company despite the staff being as respectful and helpful as they could to her, ESPECIALLY after what all the passengers just went through.]] That being said, not only was her scene with Babyface framed in a way that looked liked it '''raped''' her, Junior disintegrated her shortly after pissing down her neck.
* BadPowersGoodPeople: Fugo's [[PoisonousPerson Stand power]] is so lethal and disgusting that even his friends are creeped out by it. However, he's still one of the good guys, [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters sort of]].
* TheBerserker: Fugo, and by extension his Stand Purple Haze, are this. Fugo has a legendarily short temper and has stabbed or beaten Narancia on more than one occasion for ''screwing up a math problem'', and Purple Haze is one of the few Stands shown to have a personality outside of that which its User ascribes to it because it's ''that consistently pissed off.''
* BilingualBonus: Since this part takes place in Italy, Italian phrases come up now and then; The Boss' messages to his capos and Giorno's subconscious writing on the plane, for a couple of examples. In the anime, they are fully shown on screen, so those who know the language could just read it from there. However, it gets subverted because the characters will just read it out loud in Japanese, making its contents more readily available for the audience.
* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Diavolo is sent to an infinite amount of deaths by Gold Experience Requiem's power at the end of the story and Giorno was able to become the Boss. But it came at the cost of Abbacchio, Naranchia and Bucciarati's lives.]]
* BloodIron: Risotto's Stand, Metallica, is capable of manipulating iron, including the iron present in the blood of a person. Being an Mafia assassin, his methods aren't pleasant to watch; those unfortunate enough to be within Metallica's range will find themselves coughing out ''razor blades'' from their throats, and will discover all sorts of sharp, nasty objects protruding from their face and neck. This way, Risotto can eventually cause his victims to die of suffocation by robbing them of the iron needed to transport precious oxygen, to the point their blood turns ''yellow''.
* BloodierAndGorier: While ''[=JoJo=]'' is quite a gory series especially for a shonen, ''Vento Aureo'' is even gorier and more violent than previous parts. Especially because there's very little censoring in the anime. The "King Crimson vs. Metallica" arc in particular is full of gruesome wounds. The more serious shift in body horror can also be attributed to Giorno possessing healing abilities as to heal said gruesome injuries.
* BlueMeansCold: Ghiacco, whose name means "ice" in Italian, has blue hair and his Stand White Album can freeze things and control ice.
* BodyHorror:
** Purple Haze ''melts'' his victims down after finishing with them, as [[spoiler: Illuso]] can attest to.
** Risotto Nero's Metallica does this in spades. [[spoiler: Not only did he use Doppio's own iron to attack him, but also Doppio's blood turned yellow due to lack of iron in his body, ''making him unable to breathe''. If Diavolo didn't trick Narancia into shooting Risotto, the Boss and Doppio would have died a gruesome death]].
** Cioccolata's Green Day [[spoiler: dissolves people if the mold generated by it is fast enough. And also, Cioccolata can ''sever'' his body parts in order to levitate while using his mold to prevent blood loss.]]
** [[spoiler:Bucciarati's flesh began to melt as Secco's stand ability is to turn everything to mud. It got to the point where his fingers bent so hard it broke when he touched his face and we can see the bone of his finger.]]
** The mutations that [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]] forces on living things around him include extra eyes and heads, weird insectoid limbs and horrifying unidentifiable lumps.
* BondOneLiner: Some of the heroes have a cool one-liner after their {{Kiai}}:
--> '''Bucciarati (after defeating Pesci) and Trish (after defeating Notorious B.I.G.)''': Arrivedeci. (Farewell)
--> '''Narancia (after defeating Squalo)''': Volare via. (Go flying)
* BondVillainStupidity: How [[spoiler: Polnareff lives long enough to contact Team Bucciarati even with Diavolo giving him a CurbStompBattle]].
* BookDumb: Narancia may not be able to make a simple multiplication, but he is still a resourceful Stand user.
* BookEnds:
** Giorno's first Stand duel is against Bucciarati, and he uses Gold Experience's life shot ability to accelerate his opponent's senses and give him an OutOfBodyExperience. This happens again at the halfway point of the story when [[spoiler:Diavolo's time erasure makes Bucciarati see a vision of his past self]], and again when [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem reverses time and makes Diavolo see images of his past selves]].
** The beginning of Traitor's Requiem, the opening for the second part of the anime, involves a door and then what looks like a man kissing somebody's hand. [[spoiler:That's the ending of Vento Aureo - where the "hand" they're kissing is Giorno's hand after he took over Passione.]]
** In the first episode of the anime, the story starts with Giorno looking at his surroundings with a light smile on his face, followed with golden sparkles flies around him. [[spoiler:After Diavolo's defeat, Giorno looking at his surroundings, this time with stern facial expression and more golden sparkles flies around him.]]
** The first song in the anime adaption's first OST is "il vento d'oro" (golden wind). The second last song in the final OST is "fine della vento aureo" (end of the golden wind), a slowed down version of the original. This is also a nod to Giorno's stand power which can speed up people's thought processes causing them to perceive the world moving in slow motion (including the song if they were listening to it).
* BossGame: The game based on ''Vento Aureo'' is nothing but 22 chapters of bosses (excluding one that involves Mista avoiding Secco and his Stand Oasis and another that is dedicated to [[spoiler:Abbaccio's death]]).
* BrickJoke: Starting from episode 2 to episode 19, the anime adaptation had Jodeci's [[IntercourseWithYou "Freek'n You"]] as the ending theme. Most anime viewers first heard the ED with some confusion, but quickly got used to it as part of the general '''FABULOUSNESS''' of the franchise. Then came Episode 19, with the infamous park bench scene with Giorno and Mista, and when the sultry R&B of the end theme hit after the scene, the true purpose of the ED was revealed. (A significant amount of the manga readers predicted this would happen, and just as the story shifted to the next arc, the ED was changed to "Modern Crusaders".)
** Early in the anime Fugo mentions that Mista damaged the car. During the "Sleeping Slaves arc" (at the end of Part 5) we see how that happened.
* BullyHunter: More subtle than most, but Giorno's dream to become the Don of Italy is so that the Mafia will once again ''protect'' the weak and innocent as they once did, rather than prey on and victimize them. Point in fact, witness his terrifying TranquilFury as he tricks a ''Capo'' into swallowing a gun for casually murdering a helpless old janitor who worked at his middle school.
* BuryYourGays: While they aren't explicitly confirmed to be homosexual, the interactions between Squalo and Tiziano are ''heavily'' implicative of them being a couple, leading to them being the perfect candidates for enforcing this trope when they're both killed off by Narancia to protect Bucciarati's team once they've gone rogue.
** There's also Sorbet and Gelato, two [[PosthumousCharacter Posthumous Characters]] who are heavily implied to be a couple.
* CallBack:
** In the anime, when [[spoiler:Polnareff]] explains the nature of the Stand Arrow, it plays a brief snippet of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2fmArRXjp8 Fists of Platinum]]" from the ''Manga/StardustCrusaders'' anime over silhouettes of the Crusaders themselves and their Stands.
** In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FH2tdw8oQWQ the final OP]], Giorno's pose as [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem resets time]] is a dead ringer for [[Manga/StardustCrusaders his father's]] most iconic one.
* CallForward:
** In the anime, during the sequence where Zucchero is tortured, the scene cuts to a stylized graphic of his head being brutalized in between clips of the dancing gang members. [[https://twitter.com/golden_wolfram/status/1063852934935527425 As explained here]], those cutaways are actually early hints at the three unrevealed stands.
** Also in the anime, the first OP and the second ED feature statues. At the base of both are spherical boulders; for anyone who has reached the end of the original manga, they may recognize these rocks as Rolling Stones, the Stand that foretold the fates of Bucciarati's group.
* CarCushion: In the ''Sleeping Slaves'' arc, Mista jumps down six stories and luckily lands on Fugo's car. To be fair, Mista knew that he wouldn't die because Rolling Stones didn't predict his death so he was free to take any risk.
* CarnivalOfKillers: The Boss's Guard Squad tasked with killing traitors of Passione is one of them. There's also the members of La Squadra who the protagonists encounter in the first half of the story.
* CastingGag:
** Creator/KenshoOno voicing Giorno for the TV Anime continues the tradition of Onos voicing [=JoJos=], following the footsteps of Creator/DaisukeOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Jotaro]]) and Creator/YukiOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Part 4 Josuke]]). In fact, Kensho sharing his surname with the latter two is why he got to voice Giorno to begin with.
** Creator/KyleMcCarley once again [[LightNovel/{{Durarara}} voices an ill-tempered gangster who is]] OlderThanTheyLook who gets stabbed in the hand with a pen.
** This isn't the first time Creator/KellenGoff voices [[Manga/MyHeroAcademia a crime boss who is also a really lousy father]].
* CentralTheme: As mentioned above in ArcWords, "resolve".
* CerebusSyndrome: Started to kick in with this part. Whereas parts 1 through 4 are traditional lighthearted shounen battle series with the occasional mature themes this is where it starts to become clear that Araki wanted to move away from Shounen Jump. This part in particular features some of the most gruesome violence in the series, antagonists who are just as sympathetic as the protagonists, many major character deaths, and characters having tragic backstories. All of these would carry over into the future parts.
* TheChosenOne: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] fancies himself being chosen and favoured by Fate itself, claiming it is his right to lord over everyone and take the Arrow for himself.
* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: The introductory story arc is told primarily from Koichi Hirose's perspective as he's robbed by Giorno, and then he comes back again a short while later playing a key part in the fight with Black Sabbath. After that, he (and his reporting to Jotaro) are never so much as mentioned again. The anime deals with this by having Koichi decide that he's learned everything about Giorno that he needs to know, and that he's going to go sightseeing for a bit before returning home and reporting to Jotaro.
* CleavageWindow: If there's a male equivalent to this trope, then Giorno and Bucciarati's outfits ([[UpToEleven as well as a bunch of other characters]]) both qualify for it.
* ClosedCircle: The fight with [[BlobMonster Notorious B.I.G]] is made scarier by the fact that the gang are all stuck on an airplane over the ocean.
* ConflictingLoyalty: Bruno Bucciarati is conflicted between his disgust of drugs and his duty towards Passione, who is dealing them in the streets. When [[spoiler:Diavolo attempts to murder his daughter, Trish, who the gang had spent most of the part protecting]], he chooses his side and revolts against the Boss.
* ContrastingSequelAntagonist: The antagonists of ''Stardust Crusaders'' and ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' were regular people/thugs who happened to be given Stand powers. As such some of them were pretty incompetent while the best ones were either smart or got lucky because they had powerful Stand abilities. In this part however the antagonists are all professional killers who by nature are smart and cunning on top of the fact that their Stand abilities are very useful.
* ContrastingSequelMainCharacter: Despite being recognized as the most morally grey of the original [=JoJos=], Giorno is the only one who goes after the main villain of his own free will, rather than the villain removing their choice by making it personal. This directly contrasts the previous protagonist, Josuke, who initially believed that Kira wasn't their problem if he wasn't a Stand User. This leaves Giorno as a wild card to the villains for almost the whole way (even at the end the BigBad sees Bucciarati as his nemesis and Giorno as just some newbie), contrary to Josuke's very strong spotlight. Thematically, this lines up with Giorno being descended from a villain, as he [[VillainsActHeroesReact acts while the other [=JoJos=] reacted]].
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: [[spoiler:All of the Hitman Team are hit with this fate after their encounters with Giorno and the gang. Meanwhile, Sorbet and Gelato became the victims of Cioccolata and Secco to warn the Hitman Team to never trying to find out the Boss's true identity.]]
* CreatorProvincialism: A few characters are seen bowing in gratitude, Mista mentions the RedStringOfFate and is superstitious about the [[FourIsDeath number four being unlucky]]. These are all drawn from Japanese culture despite the story's Italian setting. Likewise, the attitudes of the main characters towards [[DrugsAreBad drugs]] are more characteristic of yakuza than of Italian mafiosi.
* DarkerAndEdgier: While still having some of the self-aware charm of the previous parts, ''Vento Aureo'' plays itself more straight, and is a lot more brutal with its violence. There's also the fact that the main protagonists are anti-heroes who kill people, some of the villains are well-intentioned, and Araki's famous AnyOneCanDie rule is taken to an extreme.
* TheDarknessBeforeDeath: Halfway through the comic, [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati is killed by the BigBad and healed by TheProtagonist's Stand]], allowing him to keep moving forward and fight out of sheer will, until the final chapters of the comic, where [[spoiler:his blindness makes him realize that he's running out of will and strength to fight, and will be dead for real soon]].
* DeadlyRemoteControlToy: Narancia's Stand, Aerosmith, resembles a remote-controlled toy plane. It can fire bullets, drop bombs, and track enemies with its radar by monitoring their breathing.
* DefectorFromDecadence: Bucciarati had already some ConflictingLoyalty about Passione's drug business and passively let Giorno do his thing. However, when he sees how The Boss is willing to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter because she's a liability]], he immediately and openly rebels against the gang.
* DisneyAcidSequence: The anime adaptation adds trippy visuals to the infamous "torture dance" scene, presumably representing Zucchero going crazy from the pain of [[EyeScream getting his eyeball cooked by concentrated sunlight]].
* DiscOneFinalBoss: Ghiaccio is the last member of La Squadra that the protagonists face off against with his fight concluding the first half of the story.
* DoingInTheWizard: Stands, introduced as a mystic power, are now explained as an alien virus infecting worthy people and granting them power. It still doesn't explain ''why'' a virus from a meteorite gives people highly-specified psychic powers and seemingly draws them together, but some explanation is better than none.
* DramaticIrony:
** Giorno doesn't learn of his father's connection to the Joestars, even when he comes across [[spoiler:Polnareff]] in the climax. [[spoiler:Polnareff himself was stranded in Italy with no way to contact Jotaro for help, making it painfully ironic how Jotaro had Giorno investigated partly out of grief for his friends killed by Dio during his journey in Egypt.]]
** Towards the end, Bucciarati is gravely injured and deprived of most of his senses while being helped up by an enemy he thinks is Trish. He asks "her" to start a new life on his hometown once everything is done with. Previously, the real Trish was upset Bucciarati was acting too cold towards his team.
* DramaticUnmask: [[spoiler: Diavolo]], who was TheFaceless for the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'', finally and climactically drops the mask of [[spoiler: Doppio in front of Polnareff in the Colosseum of Rome.]]
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: [[spoiler: How Diavolo kills Abbacchio and Narancia]].
* DrugsAreBad: Giorno Giovanna's primary motivation in becoming the new Don of Italy is so that the new Mafia that he rules over will be one that will ''not'' sell drugs ''period'', especially to innocent children.
* DubNameChange: While it was rather minor in previous installments, this one is shaping to have the most prevalent name changes for the Stand names. The show's lawyers must've had a field day with this series.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes E to M]]
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
** When [[spoiler: Diavolo]] first appeared while shrouded in shadows, he had shorter hair and he was wearing a business suit, not unlike your typical mob boss. However, by the time he made his first physical appearance, he was given long hair and an outfit that wouldn't look out of place in a death metal concert.
** Gold Experience's early abilities don't really line up with what it's consistently shown to be able to do later on. For example, its AttackReflector ability was quickly dropped after being used once (Luca trying to kill a frog with his shovel), and its ability to give a person more life energy and cause an OutOfBodyExperience is only used in his fight with Bucciarati before going unused again (although this does make a bit of sense, since Giorno didn't have many opportunities to punch an opponent), though it is possible that the latter does still occur but isn't highlighted.
** When Bucciarati first appeared, he was much more ruthless, as he interrogated Giorno by showing him Leaky-Eye Luca's severed fingers and seemed legitimately loyal to the Boss. This is a stark contrast from the NobleDemon he's established to be after his and Giorno's fight.
* EdibleThemeNaming: Many characters in ''Vento Aureo'' are named after Italian foods. Examples include Pannacotta Fugo, Leone Abbacchio, Risotto Nero, Melone, Cioccolata, Gelato, Sorbet (which is not actually Italian, the correct word being "sorbetto"), Prosciutto, Pesci, Formaggio, and Mario Zucchero.
* ElephantInTheLivingRoom: Giorno and Bucciarati both know that [[spoiler:Bucciarati is undead after his fight with King Crimson]], but are too disturbed by the thought to tell their teammates.
* EliteMooks: The assassins deployed in Venezia (Squalo, Tiziano, and Carne) are referred to as The Boss's Elite Guard.
* ElsewhereFic: Bears less relation to the overall MythArc than the other stories of the first six parts, focusing on its own characters within its own setting. The only real relation aside from [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Jotaro and Koichi's]] presence at the beginning is that Part 5 [[spoiler:reveals more about the arrows, and how this part's BigBad is unknowingly the perpetrator of every tragedy after Part 2]] and [[spoiler:features a very prominent appearance by [[JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Polnareff]]]]. Even the most obvious connection between ''Vento Aureo'' and the actions of DIO, that Giorno is DIO's bastard son, is never properly followed up on and serves more as a [[CentralTheme thematic]] than a narrative device.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: The anime adds in a moment where Giorno is introduced stealing back a woman’s wallet from a pickpocket, showing his kindness. He then uses Gold Experience to snatch a generous helping of Lire from the wallet, showing his cunning and that he’s not above being the lesser evil.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: [[spoiler: Diavolo]] may flood Italy with drugs and be petty enough to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter for unjustified paranoia]], but even he's disgusted to send Cioccolata and Secco after the gang, risking total destruction of Rome just to get few people. [[spoiler: Diavolo]] even calls them the scum of Passione.
** He doesn't do anything to a child [[spoiler: who witnessed him transforming from Doppio to Diavolo]], instead letting him go safe and sound.
* EveryoneHasStandards:
** Bucciarati and Giorno break the ice when the latter realizes the former, despite being a mafioso whose family deals hard drugs, is not okay with said drugs being sold to teens.
** La Squadra Esecuzioni are the hitmen of Passione and won't bat an eyelash if bystanders are hit during their hits, but even they are grossed out when they find out what happened to Sorbet and Gelato.
* EveryCarIsAPinto:
** During his fight against Formaggio, Narancia blasts all the cars on the street apart with Aerosmith's bullets, detonating multiple fiery explosions to force his smaller opponent to reveal himself.
** Later, Mista shoots the engine of the motorboat Narancia is on to make it explode, propelling him onto the shore.
* EvolvingCredits:
** The second ED, Modern Crusaders, showcases all Stands shown so far, and Notorious B.I.G., Spice Girl, Metallica, Green Day & Oasis, and [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]] are included as they are introduced. By the final episode, [[spoiler:Rolling Stones bears Bucciarati's image and Gold Experience is replaced with Gold Experience Requiem.]]
** The second version of the second opening, Traitor's Requiem, shows Doppio [[spoiler:transforming into Diavolo, and once again, the main villain uses their time powers [[OnceASeason to interrupt the opening]]]], starting in Episode 34.
** In the final two episodes, the opening changes one more time to have [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem nullifying Diavolo's King Crimson while the second verse of Traitor's Requiem plays.]]
* ExtremelyShortTimespan: While most ''[=JoJo=]'' parts take place over the span of months, ''Vento Aureo'' takes place over the course of a scant ''8 days'', from the moment Giorno steals Koichi's luggage to the very end. Yes, this is the amount of time Giorno goes from being a complete newbie to Passione to [[spoiler:becoming the boss]].
* EyeCatch: Stand stats still function as these in the anime, but Vento Aureo departs slightly from the format used in the previous two parts; the eyecatches kick off with a spinning coin based off of a vintage Italian 500 lira coin, with the Stand stats featured on the blank face of it, and a segment of the main theme playing for its duration.
* TheFaceless: At four points in ''Vento Aureo'' a mysterious character whose face Araki doesn't want to reveal is seen entirely shrouded in shadow.
** Sale is the first one, being faceless while having a conversation with his partner Zucchero in the car, prior to Team Bucciarati sailing to Capri.
** Prosciutto is the second and most ludicrous example, as he is seen shrouded in shadows even though he's in the middle of a train station in broad daylight and everyone else is drawn normally. This is omitted from the anime as Prosciutto (along with the rest of the Squadra) first appeared [[AdaptationalEarlyAppearance much earlier]].
** The Boss for the entire part sans the final battle. His first fight against Bucciarati features him as a man fully hidden in the dark.
** [[spoiler: Silver Chariot Requiem]] is entirely black and its face is hidden by its hat, and is never revealed.
* FingerInTheMail: An extreme example. When the mafia's La Squadra Esecuzioni tried to look into the Boss's past, he chopped up and killed one of them and then mailed the body parts, framed in containers full of formaldehyde, as a grim warning to everyone who dares try looking into his past.
* FluffyTheTerrible: Thanks to the [[DubNameChange dub changing Stand names,]] Green Day and Oasis are renamed Green Tea and Sanctuary, which means their episodes sound more like calm, slow-paced [[BreatherEpisode breathers]] and less like a harrowing chase sequence involving two mass murdering psychopaths.
* {{Foreshadowing}}:
** Mista has a deep fear of the number four, associating it with misfortune. [[spoiler:Bucciarati dying at the hands of The Boss and then rebelling against him]] takes place on the fourth day Giorno joins the team. [[spoiler: Also, Abbachio takes one of the four pieces of cake and ends up being the first to die.]]
** The second ED shows [[spoiler:the team's and Diavolo's Stands in the order they die (or in Fugo's case, leave). From top to bottom, it starts with Purple Haze, then goes to Moody Blues, Aerosmith, Sticky Fingers, and King Crimson, culminating with Sex Pistols, Spice Girl, and Gold Experience at the top for the ones who survived. Once Chariot Requiem is introduced, we see it positioned above Moody Blues and Aerosmith, but below Sticky Fingers. Abbacchio is already dead, Narancia dies rather early during Chariot Requiem's rampage thanks to a sneak attack by King Crimson, and Bucciarati's spirit moves on after finding a way to kill Chariot Requiem once and for all. Also, it shows King Crimson's arm wrapped around Spice Girl's body, foreshadowing how Diavolo takes control of Trish's body by grabbing and manipulating her Stand.]]
** [[spoiler:Notorious B.I.G introduces the concept of a "dead stand" that has outlived its master and is thus unkillable. The penultimate enemy of the part is a stand that has outlived its master and is virtually unkillable.]]
* FourIsDeath: Ironically after the last part being LighterAndSofter part. Not only one of the main characters, Mista, literally fears this trope, but [[spoiler: Bucciarati dies at the Boss's hands in the fourth day of Giorno joining the gang]], and then [[spoiler: Diavolo manages to kill Bucciarati, Abbachio, Polnareff, and Narancia]].
* FreakyFridayFlip: Near the climax, a body swap scenario thanks to [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem. Giorno and Narancia trade bodies, Trish and Mista trade bodies and Bucciarati and Doppio trade bodies. Diavolo lies in wait as a split personality for Mista's body (occupied by Trish), and once given the chance goes after the [[EleventhHourSuperpower Stand arrow]]]].
* FunnyBackgroundEvent: While Mista walks away no worse for wear after jumping on a building and landing spine first on a car, Fugo can be seen crawling out of the wreckage.
* GeoEffects: A good handful of the enemy Stands in this part are reliant on having a terrain advantage. Man in the Mirror and Clash are useless if they don't have something to "conduct" them (mirrors for the former, liquid for the latter). Beach Boy and Notorious B.I.G, on the other hand, seriously benefit from being fought in the location they're in (The many walls and linearity of a train make it easy for Pesci to target his enemies from one end of it, while an enclosed, fast-moving plane makes it nigh impossible to escape B.I.G's handicap of only targeting moving things).
* TheGhost: The Boss is an InUniverse example, as he has erased any evidence and information related to his person, and issues orders through varying layers of proxies. No one knows anything about him, they just know he exists and is the Boss of Italy's most powerful crime syndicate.
* GiantSpider: This story uses the "[[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrunken hero]]" vs. regular-sized spider variant, as Formaggio traps Narancia (who has been affected by Formaggio's Little Feet stand) in a bottle and pits him against a normal tarantula.
* GodzillaThreshold:
** Cioccolata is this for The Boss. Cioccolata's Stand, Green Day, is an immensely destructive area-of-effect Stand much like Prosciutto's which has a theoretically infinite range. However, unlike Prosciutto who was a cold professional, Cioccolata is an AxCrazy madman and thus doesn't care about civilian casualties. He massacres an entire port town trying to kill the gang, and as the fight moves to Rome, his massacre escalates in severity.
** [[spoiler: Polnareff uses the Arrow and unleashes Chariot Requiem in Rome,]] risking everyone's souls in the process because the alternative [[spoiler: (Diavolo getting the Arrow)]] is worse.
* GoodIsNotNice: Bucciarati's group maybe your RagtagBunchOfMisfits and Bucciarati is nice enough that the townsfolk is very friendly with him top the point that old ladies ask him for help. But they won't hesitate to do anything to do what they think is right, and won't hesitate to kill anyone that stands in their way.
* {{Gorn}}: Appropriately, for the setting. The increased violence in this part lends itself to some frightening injuries, but the fight with Green Day takes the cake- the viewer is subjected to numerous examples of people rotting away ''right in plain view'', with people literally rotting away into nonexistence in some examples. None of this is censored in the original manga.
* GratuitousItalian:
** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English, Part 5 has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bucciarati and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".
** The English dub of the 2018 anime [[ForeignCussWord included a wide selection of Italian profanity]] where the Japanese dub didn't. There's even an "Italian Language Consigliere" [[note]]Paola Giovanna Cresti[[/note]] in the localization credits.
* GreaterScopeVillain: If it isn't enough that [[spoiler: Diavolo]] is the main villain of this part, he also indirectly caused the events of ''Stardust Crusaders'', ''Diamond is Unbreakable'', and ''Stone Ocean''. His discovery of the Stand Arrows is what led DIO to awaken to "The World" and create his army of Stand using minions among everything listed under this trope on the ''Stardust Crusaders'' page, and then Mr Nijimura and Yoshihiro Kira, both DIO's minions in Japan, were given the arrows, which in the former case, his elder son Keicho used in an insane rampage to find someone to end his father's suffering, and in the latter case, Yoshihiro turning his son Yoshikage into a SerialKiller who is also a MadBomber. This is all ironic seeing as how he doesn't have much physical presence in this part itself, only being the center of influence with how the story goes.
* GutPunch:
** One that occurs for both the audience and Bucciarati is when he realizes that he's suddenly only holding [[spoiler:Trish's disembodied hand]], and the boss never had good intentions with the mission he sent them on. This arguably cascades into an example that also happens to be literal when [[spoiler:Bucciarati himself is]] [[AnyoneCanDie fatally punched through the gut]], putting him on borrowed time for the rest of the story.
** The deaths of both [[spoiler:Abbacchio]] and [[spoiler:Narancia]] also apply for both the audience and the characters. In both cases, the death is tragic, sudden, and unavoidable, and happens right under the noses of the heroes. In the latter, the characters don't even have evidence of an enemy being nearby before or afterward, making it especially shocking.
* HandWave: Why did DIO let some women live after having sex with them? The narration says no one knows, which raises the question of why even mention this in the first place.
* HarmlessFreezing: Averted, as Ghiaccio's freezing power does cause frostbites and freezes limbs enough so that he can invoke LiterallyShatteredLives.
* TheHedonist: Guido Mista is described as this, living a simple life full of simple pleasures.
* HiddenInPlainSight: Doppio looks young enough to pass off as a kid. [[spoiler: So Diavolo takes his place in a gang of kids playing soccer and purposefully shoots the ball toward Abbacchio to get close to him. He was even posing as a tourist in the fight with Secco and Bucciarati, with Secco [[HostageSituation taking him hostage]] to prevent Bucciarati from killing him.]]
* HopeSpot: A couple in Bucciarati's flashback. When he was a child, his father happened upon a drug deal and was gunned down. Though he was shot 7 times the coast guard found him and he survived. The gang later tried to kill him in the hospital, but Bucciarati got the drop on them and killed the two thugs. Though his dad survived both encounters, he ultimately lived for only 5 more years, with chronic pain, on account of the damage the bullets had done to him.
* HowWeGotHere: The final chapters following [[spoiler: Diavolo's defeat]] are a side-story about Bucciarati and the gang before they met Giorno. It also features a Stand that [[spoiler: foreshadows the deaths of Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia.]]
* IceBreaker: Before it is revealed that Ghiaccio was attacking Giorno and Mista while they were driving to Venice, Mista's finger ends up breaking off his body after he touches the car window, even taking him a few moments to realize what happened.
* IDieFree: [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati tells this to Giorno from beyond the grave, saying that he freed himself from being a slave of Fate and took his own path.]]
* IfWeGetThroughThis: During the final fight of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler:Narancia]] dreams of returning to school after getting through this fight; [[spoiler:of course, he is the first casualty.]]
* ILied: A rare heroic example in ''Vento Aureo''. [[spoiler:After shooting [[AxCrazy Cioccolata]] in the head, Giorno suspects that he's still alive and says that he won't attack so long as Cioccolata doesn't move. When Cioccolata springs back into action and tries taking Giorno's friends hostage, Giorno reveals that he'd already planted what was essentially a time bomb in Cioccolata's head. Now dying for real, Cioccolata complains that Giorno broke his previous word. Giorno's response: "Know your place."]]
* InMediasRes: [[spoiler: After Diavolo is defeated and Giorno is crowned the Boss of the Passione Family, the next chapters is a flashback from Bucciarati's group before Giorno entered the group.]]
* InSeriesNickname: Zig Zagged. In the Japanese version of the anime, everyone refers to Narancia as "Naran-Chan". His name is properly pronounced in the English Dub.
* InstantDramaJustAddTracheotomy: In Venice, Narancia gets his own tongue cut off by Clash and he begins to choke, somehow. To save Narancia, Giorno performs a makeshift tracheotomy with a hollow pen to make him breathe through his throat until he can regenerate the tongue.
* {{Irony}}: [[spoiler: In episode 21, Bucciarati was killed by The boss with a GutPunch, with only Giorno saving him that he is still alive. 11 episodes later, he unknowingly returned the favor when he gave a GutPunch to Doppio, who is The Boss's split personality.]]
** Mista is terrified of 4, as he believes FourIsDeath. Not only Mista is the fourth member of Team Bucciarati, but [[spoiler: he's also the only survivor of Team Bucciarati]].
* ItHasBeenAnHonor: [[spoiler: Bucciarati thanks Giorno for having met him in Naples, before ascending to Heaven.]]
* JabbaTableManners: Polpo cannot eat a simple cracker without spilling half of it on his cheeks.
* JerkassHasAPoint: The anime had a scene of Fugo trying to convince Narancia [[spoiler: not to betray Passione, as rebellion will be met with execution by the Boss. He's sadly proven right]].
* JuggleFu: Happens at the beginning of the fight between Secco and Bucciarati. Secco throws his camera in the air, proceeds to pummel Bucciarati for long enough to make him realize his techniques and force him to flee before catching the camera.
* JumpScare: In Episode 24, after Notorious B.I.G. is thrown out the plane for the second time, Trish spots what appears to be a ball rolling around the plane's wing. She gets up to take a closer look, when the enemy Stand very suddenly slams against the window.
* KillEmAll: Compared to the idealistic ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' this is a much darker story with almost every Stand battle being a fight to the death. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia all die. Fugo leaves which means the gang is reduced to just Giorno and Mista. Returning hero Polnareff physically dies but his spirit lives on inside Coco Jumbo. Risotto's gang is wiped out completely by Bucciarati's gang. Every other named Passione member is killed, with the exception of Zucchero and depending on canon he dies as well in the ''Purple Haze Feedback'' spinoff.]]
* KlingonPromotion:
** A driving motivation of the La Squadra Esecuzioni is to find out the Boss' identity, so that they can kill him and take over his position.
** [[spoiler:Giorno himself eventually becomes the Boss of Passione by killing Diavolo.]]
* LactoseOverLiquor: When La Squadra, Passione's hitman team, goes to a restaurant, Pesci orders milk instead of alcohol or espresso. He is the most inexperienced member of the team and displays a hesitant, meek and cowardly personality.
* LifeOrLimbDecision: All over the place. Perhaps most notable for this is the White Album arc, where ''all of the combatants'' uses their own blood to gain an advantage, all in short succession; Giorno uses his blood to reveal a path through the frozen air, Mista sprays his blood to temporarily blind Ghiaccio, and Ghiaccio uses his (admittedly, already spilled) blood to prevent himself from being fully impaled on a spike.
* LineInTheSand: After Bucciarati decides to [[spoiler:go against [[TheDon Diavolo]]]], he tells his subordinates that if they aren't 100% certain about whether or not they want to follow him, they should stay behind; otherwise, they can get aboard his boat to confirm that they agree with him. [[spoiler:Narancia and Fugo both decide not to follow him, however, Narancia has a change of heart almost immediately and swims after the boat, meaning that Fugo is the only one who gets PutOnABus.]]
* LonersAreFreaks: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] is a schizophrenic man who is living alone and refuses to have relationships because he doesn't want anyone to learn anything about him.
* LuxuryPrisonSuite: Polpo inhabits a pretty luxurious prison cell decorated with paintings and has a personal fridge.
* MafiaPrincess: Trish is a subversion. Although she is the daughter of The Boss and acts like a spoiled teen used to have servants, she only learned it recently and freaks out at the idea of meeting her father as well as being the target of her father's enemies. Moreover although the Boss seems to try to care for her, he just [[spoiler: wants to kill her because she is a potential weakness]].
* ManIFeelLikeAWoman: [[spoiler:When Silver Chariot Requiem causes everyone to body-swap, Mista finds himself stuck in Trish's body and gets a bit… hands-y, though to his credit it was mostly him trying to adjust her underwear because he's not used to having it so tight or to wearing a bra in general.]]
* ManlyTears: Much like other parts in the franchise, there are times the manly heroes simply cannot stop themselves from crying. Notable examples are when Abbacchio sheds tears [[spoiler:upon meeting his former partner in the afterlife]], Bucciarati and Narancia crying over [[spoiler: Abbacchio's death]] and when both Giorno and Mista cry over [[spoiler:the death of Narancia.]]
* MatterOfLifeAndDeath: While a staple of the series, in ''Vento Aureo'', '''everyone''' is constantly fighting with the intent to kill.
* MegatonPunch: [[spoiler: King Crimson, having a very high Strength can cause much greater damage than Star Platinum, The World or Crazy Diamond's RapidFireFisticuffs by simply driving his fists in one blow. Diavolo uses this to kill his enemies quickly before they could blurt his identity out.]]
* MixAndMatchMan: Giorno Giovanna qualifies because his biological father is Dio Brando's head attached to Jonathan's body, causing several traits from both going to him.
* TheMobBossIsScarier: When Bucciarati announces his betrayal of Passione, the majority of the team is shaking in fear of The Boss' retaliation. Fortunately for Giorno and Bucciarati, only Fugo remains scared enough to stay behind.
* MundaneMacGuffinPerson: Trish Una is the recently discovered illegitimate daughter of Passione's Boss. All of the Boss' enemies want to capture and/or kill her, so she ends up under the protection of the heroes, thus driving most of the plot.
* MusicalThemeNaming:
** A continued trope. This part's theme is renowned artists of the [[TheSixties late '60s]] and [[TheSeventies early '70s]] such as Music/KingCrimson, Music/SexPistols, and Music/TheMoodyBlues along with a few contemporary rock and pop acts who were notable during publishing. Taken even further in the light novel sequel where three new Stands are introduced all of them taking their namesake from post-punk bands that first formed in the late 70's.
** Both the hero and the villain have Stands that allude to royalty (Giorno with Golden Experience by ''Prince'' and [[spoiler:Diavolo]] with ''King'' Crimson).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes N to Z]]
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: [[spoiler:Diavolo, which is Italian for ''Devil''.]] Not that anyone knows his name, though.
* NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters:
** Team Bucciarati. Unlike the rest of Passione (who are decidedly ''not'' neighborhood-friendly), Bucciarati's group is beloved by the general community, with even old people willingly going to them, a group of rogues with supernatural abilities and trouble surrounding them, for help. Bucciarati and Giorno only joined up with Passione in the first place to stop the mafia from dealing drugs, and their goal is to overthrow TheDon of Passione and insert one of their own in his place. [[spoiler: In fact, they outright openly rebel and gun for him when they learn the hard way that he is willing to kill his own daughter only because of the insane paranoid idea that she could be a clue to his identity, despite having never met the man in her life nor know anything about him. The personal targeting of an innocent and unrelated teenage girl was the last straw]].
** Giorno got into crime because of one of these. When he was a child, regularly bullied and abused, he found a man bleeding out in a patch of tall grass. The men who'd shot him asked Giorno where the man had gone, and Giorno lied, saving the injured man's life. That man was a powerful gangster in Naples, and after he recovered he made it a point to protect Giorno from a distance (his first act: having a "quick talk" with Giorno's abusive stepfather). The only person who ''ever'' treated Giorno well was in the Mafia, and that inspired him to go the same route.
* NiceJobFixingItVillain: Had [[spoiler: Diavolo confirmed Polnareff's death]] instead of [[BondVillainStupidity assuming him dead and walking away]], [[spoiler: he would have successfully killed his daughter and rest of Team Bucciarati with zero opposition, and would have continued to rule Italy in the shadows.]]
* NighInvulnerable: The Stand Notorious [=B.I.G=] cannot be killed first due to being a BlobMonster, but its user is already dead so the heroes are reduced to [[spoiler: simply tossing it into the ocean by destroying their plane.]]
* NoSell: [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem]] in a nutshell. [[spoiler:Any actions or processes attempted against Giorno are brought to zero the moment his enemies oppose him, thus every action is rendered moot. Even Diavolo's time erasing powers don't affect Gold Experience Requiem.]]
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: Lasting ''[[UpToEleven seven whole pages,]]'' Giorno's beatdown of Cioccolata is the biggest example of this trope in a franchise that made this trope a meme.
** Giorno gives another one to [[spoiler: ''Diavolo himself'']] after [[spoiler: Gold Experience Requiem evolves.]]
* NoOneSeesTheBoss: Apart from being full of Stand users, the gang Passione is unique by how secretive its Boss is. The Boss never directly interacts with his subordinates, sending proxies, using computers and leaving messages behind for his subordinates to read and obey, but otherwise no one knows what the Boss looks like. It's a very deliberate attempt from the Boss' part to make himself be seen more as a concept or an omnipotent being rather than a man who could be killed. It worked rather well, until word of his daughter came out.
* OddNameOut: Every [=JoJo's=] name begins with the letters "Jo", except '''Gio'''rno '''Gio'''vanna, mostly because the letter J does not exist in Italian.
* OffingTheOffspring: [[spoiler: The Boss wanted to kill his daughter personally so that his enemies could not use her to trace back to him.]]
* OneBulletLeft: During the fight between Mista and Sale, Mista is left with only one bullet. Proudly announcing it as if he was going to take full advantage of this one shot, Mista is, in fact, aiming to use Sex Pistols on Sale's own bullet to defeat him.
* OneHitKill:
** How [[spoiler:Diavolo]] deals with enemies, due in no small part to [[MegatonPunch King Crimson's strength]].
** The Requiem power unlocked by having someone stab the Arrow with their Stands is this. Gold Experience Requiem's power delves so much into metaphysics, even [[spoiler:Diavolo]]'s time erasure is outclassed completely.
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] is only known as "The Boss" until [[spoiler:Polnareff reveals it to the gang.]]
* OutOfBodyExperience: Being punched by Gold Experience causes one to think so fast the body cannot follow up and the consciousness can see their immobile body if it happens to visualize themselves moving into another position.
* PayEvilUntoEvil: [[spoiler: Diavolo's death loop]] represents a particularly extreme version of this trope, with an incredibly evil person being subjected to an incredibly torturous punishment for eternity.
* PietaPlagiarism: In Part 5, Giorno holds an injured Mista that way at the end of the White Album arc. Unlike other examples, the one who dies is their enemy Ghiaccio.
* PlotCoupon: In ''Vento Aureo'', the Arrow becomes a key item as it can [[spoiler: unlock Requiem Stands, said to always be able to surpass the likes of even King Crimson]].
* PragmaticAdaptation: The [=PS2=] game modified some of the Stand powers so that they would be more palatable in a straight-laced BeatEmUp genre; for example, Little Feet's shrinking activates instantaneously on Formaggio's targets, but wears off after a short period of time. It also significantly [[AdaptationDistillation pares down]] the number of fights[[note]]Zucchero, Sale, Melone, Squalo, Tizano, and Risotto aren't fought, instead showing up in the game's unlockable "Story drama" scenes and they have models viewable in the gallery[[/note]], and some of the plot points are modified to compact the story (Pericolo's assignment is given right after Giorno joins the group).
* ProfessionalKiller: La Squadra Esecuzioni, also known as the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Hitman Team]] are a rouge band of eccentric personalities that hunt down Team Bucciarati in a desperate attempt to discover the Boss's identity. [[spoiler: After Bucciarati and his team betray the organization, the boss's top bodyguards, Unità Speciale, also hunt down their group under direct orders from the boss.]]
* PsychoForHire: [[MadDoctor Cioccolata]] is an [[AxCrazy maniacal]] hitman with a HumanPet who is seen by everyone, even the boss, as a crazy, creepy psychopath. In the anime, it is implied that they were responsible for the brutal deaths of Sorbet and Gelato, which kick-starts La Squadra's motivation for hunting down the boss's identity.
* PutOnABus: [[spoiler: Following Bucciarati's betrayal of The Boss, Fugo refuses to go along with the rest of the protagonists and is dropped from the story altogether. He was originally meant to return as an enemy, but Araki felt that the heroes having to fight a former friend would be too dark.]]
* ReachingTowardsTheAudience: The first cover of ''Vento Aureo''.
* RecapEpisode: The first and (so far) only animated Part that includes ClipShow that details what happened during the course of the story. There are three episodes, each of them summarizes some events across the Part.
** ''Episode 13.5 - Inizio del Vento Aureo'': The first recap episode, it is mostly focusing on the various battles that the protagonists go through as well as the route that Team Bucciarati takes throughout Italy.
** ''Episode 21.5 - Determinazione'': The second recap episode, this episode retells each of Team Bucciarati's members' backstories as well as showing their respective resolves and reason for following Bucciarati. It also recounting current situations of the conflict between Team Bucciarati and Squadra Esecuzioni.
** ''Episode 28.5 - Determinazione'': The third and final recap episode, this episode retelss Trish Una's backstory and Team Bucciarati's mission of protecting her. It also retelling now defected Team Bucciarati's first encounter against Unita Speciale, Boss' personal bodyguard.
* RecruitedFromTheGutter: Narancia was first spotted by Fugo trying to scavenge garbage cans, but was later accepted into Passione, although Bucciarati was against it.
* RedHerring: The plotline of finding out The Boss' true identity falls into this a bit. Almost the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'' is spent with various groups trying to dig up information about his past, certain that there must be ''something'' he's hiding that would be a weakness for him. [[spoiler: Once we actually find out the Boss' identity, it turns out he really wasn't hiding any inherent weakness, nor was he anybody they would recognize. He was just ''that'' paranoid]]. What lessens this somewhat is that he ''is'' revealed to be more important in the grand scheme of things than one might assume at first glance, [[spoiler: being the one who discovered the Stand Arrows and sold them to DIO's service, and therefore being an indirect but deciding reason why Part 3 played out the way it did and why everything from Part 4 onward happened at all. His origins do trace back to the Requiem Arrow, but even he wasn't aware of its true properties until toward the end of the part]]. In other words, TheReveal of his identity wasn't actually that much of a game-changer in the context of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler: but it did have huge implications for the series as a whole]].
* RefugeInAudacity: The rest of the gang quickly learns that when Giorno does something completely weird, out there, or seemingly inexplicable, it's going to end in success. Perhaps the earliest example of this is, after fighting Bucciarati, he outright ''tells'' him he's going to [[DefeatMeansFriendship become his ally]] and it ''works.''
* ResurrectionDeathLoop: [[spoiler:Diavolo is struck by this in the final fight of Part 5. After receiving a thorough CurbStompBattle by the newly awakened Gold Experience Requiem he also begins to be affected by Requiem's 'back to zero' effect, which in his case means he constantly dies over and over, always in a different way. He can't ever escape from it, making it both this and AFateWorseThanDeath.]]
* {{Retirony}}: Right before [[spoiler:Narancia]] dies they begin talking about everything they're going to do once the Boss is defeated. [[spoiler:Wanting to get through highschool, being there for Trish, seeing Fugo again, eating some piping hot pizza and getting his life together]]. Unfortunately you seeing this trope here means that they couldn't do any of this.
* RodandReelRepurposed: Pesci's Stand, Beach Boy, is a fishing rod capable of three things: it's capable of tracking people and literally fishing them out from other rooms, it can phase through any and all objects including skin, and attacking the line simply reflects damage.
* RousingSpeech: Giorno is fond of making motivational speeches about subjects such as one's resolve or growth following/followed by a badass move.
* {{Sadist}}: Cioccolata's entire character essentially revolves around this, with him being [[MadDoctor a doctor who would intentionally put completely healthy patients under surgery and intentionally inject not enough anesthesia so that his patients wake up mid-operation.]] He joined Passione for the same reason, and has his [[ThisIsMyHuman human pet Secco]] record him killing his targets and whatever other collateral damage from his stand so that he can view their pain later.
* SceneryPorn: ''Vento Aureo'' is basically a tour through a hand-drawn version of Italy with Stand battles thrown in. The anime goes a step further by showing beautiful, panning birds-eye shots of the locations that the gang visits while narration provides a brief description of the place's history.
* ScottyTime: A downplayed example, but once Bucciarati's group reaches Sardinia, and he asks Abbachio how long it will take for Moody Blues to rewind and replay the actions of the boss's only known lover:
-->'''Abbachio''': If we're going back 15 years... It might take 8-10 minutes.\\
'''Bucciarati''': Do it in five.
* ScrewDestiny: [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem's]] use of his power is an exaggerated example. He outright admits that Epitaph's prediction of [[spoiler:Giorno's death]] is absolutely true and is "going to happen", but that he nevertheless [[RealityWarper won't let anyone reach that moment]].
* SecretTestOfCharacter: Polpo's test is this. He asks the initiates to carry a lighter for twenty-four hours, never allowing it to go out. However, the flame is incredibly weak, making it extremely difficult to keep lit for that long, as well as getting through the prison security. The secret is that re-igniting it causes his Stand to appear and stab them with an arrow, where the ''true'' test of whether they'll create a Stand or die commences. It's not so much as a test of trust, more that it's a test of strength. And as Polpo notes, if somehow, someone manages to keep the lighter on, Passione gains a regular but clever member.
* SeinfeldianConversation: Usually held around the dining table by Team Bucciarati, mostly between Mista and Narancia.
* ShadowWalker: Black Sabbath can teleport through intersecting shadows, but is otherwise unable to walk out of them.
* ShootTheMedicFirst: Tizziano and Squalo try this tactic in ''Vento Aureo''. Aware that Giorno can heal his teammates, the duo do their best to lure him into a trap alone by manipulating Narancia. They remarkably succeed, but fail to kill Giorno in time.
* ShootingAtYourOwnProjectiles
** Early in Mista's fight with Sale, Mista manages to shoot his opponent in the head. Unfortunately for Mista, Sale's Stand, Kraft Work, stops the bullet's momentum, which leaves it lodged in Sale's skull while Sale himself is otherwise unharmed and able to keep going. Mista's finishing move in that fight is to shoot a second bullet into the exact same bullet hole, causing the second shot to hit the first and drive it even deeper into Sale's brain.
** With Giorno's help, Mista shoots a metal bolt with a bullet that launches the former into the head of Ghiaccio, who is protected by his Stand White Album. Mista then fires more bullets at the bolt to knock Ghiaccio unconscious.
* ShoutOut:
** As a work centered on the Mafia, there are naturally a few shout outs to Mario Puzo's crime novel Film/TheGodfather:
*** The plot thread of Narancia contracting an eye infection after losing his mother and wandering the streets, only to have it healed after being "adopted" into Bucciarati's gang and then being angrily told to continue his education is note-for-note ''identical'' to that of Tom Hagen, the informally-adopted Irish on and lawyer of the Corleone Family.
*** Gelato choking to death swallowing the towel stuffed in his mouth as he watched his lover Sorbet hacked to pieces alive by Cioccolata is identical to how a victim of a double-murder committed by Luca Brazi, the Corleone Head Enforcer and hitman, died watching his friend dismembered limb-by-limb with a fire-axe.
*** The final panels with the hand-kissing in a sign of loyalty to [[spoiler: the new Don, Giorno Giovanna]] while Mista observes in the distance, much like the iconic final scene of the first movie with Don Michael Corleone having a hand-kissing and Kay observes.
** The way Sorbet's body was hacked into pieces and preserved in cases filled with formaldehyde is likely inspired by [[https://damienhirst.com/artworks/catalogue?category=23&p=0 some of Damien Hirst's artworks]], in which he preserves animal bodies (sometimes chopped into pieces) in formaldehyde solution; the most famous of them being [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Physical_Impossibility_of_Death_in_the_Mind_of_Someone_Living "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"]].
* SlidingScaleOfVillainEffectiveness: Doesn't exist in this part as every antagonist is smart (except Zucchero and Sale), comes equipped with a powerful Stand ability, and a good majority of them come close to emerging victorious.
* SpaghettiAndGondolas: Downplayed. Like in ''Battle Tendency'', Rome and Venice are still the most prominent cities shown in the series, with ''Vento Aureo's'' greatest plot twists occurring there, but Araki made an effort to feature other places such as Pompeii; Naples; or Capri, Sardegna; Naples being his favorite Italian city. The countryside is also featured at one point.
* SpannerInTheWorks: [[spoiler:Polnareff]]. He discovers the method of [[spoiler:awakening Requiem]], something The Boss nor any other Stand User was aware even existed, and ultimately decided to share this information with the heroes to help them defeat The Boss.
* SpellMyNameWithAnS: Prone to this, even more so than other ''[=JoJo=]'' parts, due to the complexities of taking Italian names that had already been transliterated into Japanese and then rendering them into English. Bucciarati is an excellent example: no one is really sure if he's supposed to be named "Bruno Buccellati" (a logical approximation of his first name, and a [[ThemeNaming last name taken from an Italian fashion designer]]), "[[JapaneseRanguage Blono/Brono]] Bucciarati" (an ''accurate'' transliteration of his Japanese name), or some combination of the two. Not even Shueisha, Lucky Land, or Araki are quite sure, considering how both variations appear in the 25th anniversary ''JOJOVELLER'' art book. Even the name of the part itself is subject to some debate, with ''Vento Aureo'' being the more dominant term over the years due to the official use in Japanese media and most English releases favoring it. However, with the debut of the anime, ''Golden Wind'' has become more popular.
* SpoilerOpening:
** As with previous adaptations, the first opening "Fighting Gold" has some subtle hints about the events of the story, meant more for attentive fans than giving away a twist. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Narancia, and Abbachio's body silhouettes become black, unlike the other members of Passione, and in the pentultimate shot, they are all framed on the right side of the screen, making a subtle reference at their deaths]]. On a less subtle level, "Fighting Gold" also prominently features Trish, who wasn't previously shown in promotional material and didn't appear in the manga until her debut 29 chapters in.
*** In addition, a silhouette of [[spoiler:Bucciarati carved out of Rolling Stones]] can be seen in the background of the opening shot.
** The second opening "Uragirimono no Requiem" ("Traitor's Requiem") is even less subtle than the first in spoiling the second half of the story. The very ''first'' scene of the opening [[spoiler:is the very ''end'' of the series, when Giorno is made Boss of Passione.]] Other plot points spoiled include [[spoiler:Trish's stand Spice Girl (as well as her role as a fighter), Vinegar Doppio and his fight with Risotto, and parts of the final battle, including Giorno claiming the Stand Arrow, although Gold Experience Requiem isn't shown.]]
* SpontaneousChoreography: The infamous dance Narancia, Mista and Fugo join in on while torturing Zucchero features this, especially in the anime.
* StealthPun: TheHero of Part 5 is Dio's bastard son, and the BigBad is named [[spoiler:Diavolo]]. In other words, [[spoiler:[[BilingualBonus the son of God is fighting the Devil]]]].
* StevenUlyssesPerhero: Many of the musical references in the Stand names aren't just for show in this part. Sex Pistols can manipulate bullets, Aerosmith is an airplane, Little Feet makes things little, Beach Boy is a fishing rod, Talking Head prevents its victim from speaking correctly, and so on.
* StrongFamilyResemblance: A pretty perverted example with Trish and her ArchnemesisDad [[spoiler: Diavolo]]. Both of them have purple hair, and have a preference for {{Stripperific}} clothing. Also, both [[spoiler: King Crimson and Spice Girl]] have rather similar looking Stand designs. [[spoiler: Ironically, this familial resemblance is exactly what causes Diavolo to go after her, fearing her Stand abilities can be linked of his own.]]
* SupportingProtagonist: Giorno may be the eponymous Jojo (or [=GioGio=]) of the part, and is instrumental in a massive amount of fights, either through his actions or what he's figured out, but after joining Bucciarati's gang, he mostly passively goes along with what the rest of the group is doing plotwise.
* SuperMode: Essentially what the "Requiem" effect is the arrow has on Stands. A Stand struck by the arrow and which proves worthy receives a dramatic upgrade in which their old power is cast away (except in the case of Gold Experience, whose life-giving ability powered up after transforming) and they get a StoryBreakerPower which delves into the metaphysical.
* TheManyDeathsOfYou: [[spoiler:Diavolo is forced to live through many scenario in which he dies, unable to do anything about it because his death is set back to 0: the point right before he dies.]]
* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: Cioccolata's death is one of most brutal in the series, even if compared to the main villain's. Before the barrage, Cioccolata's been shot with a bullet to the head. Such bullet is transformed by Gold Experience into a stag beetle which proceeds to destroy his brain from inside out. Every single punch Gold Experience delivers afterward has expanding and delaying effects, putting him in lasting pain and suffering before he's thrown down a tall building and crashes full-speed into a garbage truck for combustible wastes.
* ThisIsMyHuman: Secco is the feral human pet for Cioccolata that speaks only in grunts and obeys his master's every command. Cioccolata even coddles him similar to how one would with a dog and gives him treats in the form of sugar cubes. He breaks this dog-like behavior, however, once learning of Cioccolata's death.
* ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman: When Zucchero attacks Bucciarati's team on their boat with Soft Machine, making everyone disappear after he basically deflates them like a balloon, Abbacchio's Moody Blues comes in handy as its power to mimic past events is perfect for investigating Zucchero's powers.
* TongueTied: The Stand Talking Head has this as its power. Crosses with CanNotSpitItOut as Narancia desperately tries to figure out a way to circumvent its ability and warn the others about a different enemy Stand.
* ToThePain: Formaggio uses his Stand Little Feet to [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrink down Narancia]] and trap him in a glass bottle along with a venomous spider (who appears to be a GiantSpider from his perspective). Formaggio then proceeds to describe, in detail, what the experience of being eaten by a spider would be like: first, he'd be injected with a paralyzing venom, then with digestive enzymes that would slowly liquefy his insides while keeping him conscious, until the spider is able to slurp him up. Thankfully, Narancia manages to fight off the spider (using a glass shard as an improvised shiv) and escape before getting bitten.
* TraintopBattle: The ''Grateful Dead'' arc features a battle inside an express train.
* TransformationSequence: One happens when Doppio lets [[spoiler:Diavolo]] take the reins of their shared body, which grows more muscular and the face changes completely alongside the hair.
* TranslationConvention: It's implied that everyone's speaking Italian instead of whatever language the viewer is watching in, as, in the first arc of the story, Giorno will compliment Koichi's fluent Italian.
* TrickBullet:
** Giorno gives Mista bullets that transform into trees to fire at Ghiaccio to knock him off their car and unfreeze it. The bullets themselves aren't special, but the heat from them is necessary for Gold Experience to sprout life in the sub-zero temperatures.
** When fighting Cioccolata, Giorno modifies some bullets that transform into a tree for Mista to fire at Cioccolata's helicopter to ensnare it. Later Giorno uses another bullet to transform into another tree to prevent him from falling, and kicks a section of its branch for it to later transform back into a bullet to fire itself into Cioccolata's head. Later, said bullet transforms into a beetle that burrows out of his head.
* TheUnfought: While Risotto Nero fights Doppio, he never fights the protagonists directly and [[spoiler: Narancia killing him was both an accident and a coincidence at the same time.]]
* {{Unperson}}: The Boss intentionally pulled this on himself due to having a near psychopathic obsession with his own anonymity. No one in Passione (and likely the entire world) knows his name or what he looks like due to his systematic erasure of anything that could lead back to him or his identity, and he only gives orders through a complex series of proxies and go-betweens that he is not above killing to preserve said anonymity if it is required.
* ViceCity: Naples at the beginning of the part is presented as a corrupt town where the mob is more feared by the police, and said police is also near totally corrupt or ineffective.
* VillainOfTheWeek: Much like ''Stardust Crusaders'', each new arc introduces a new villain for the protagonists. There's the two rival mobsters encountered before the protagonists meet Trish, the eight members of La Squadra who are the primary antagonists of the first half, and The Boss' five personal assassins who take over La Squadra's role in the second half. At least, for La Squadra Esecuzioni, the battles are tied into one another because the mere fact that one of the assassins manages to find the group forces them to move out immediately, pursued by the rest of La Squadra.
* WalkingWasteland: In ''Vento Aureo'', Purple Haze and Green Day can release respectively a flesh eating virus and a mold with exponential growth which can both kill people in seconds, infect victims indiscriminately and at high speed, and are able to kill the entire population of a city in minutes.
* WeAllLiveInAmerica:
** The main characters are [[TheMafia Italian gangsters]] who [[HonorAmongThieves despise the drug trade]]. Such beliefs are commonly attributed to {{Yakuza}}, but aren't generally associated with organized crimes much of anywhere else.
** While doing math, Narancia draws a ''[[{{Henohenomoheji}} henohenomoheji]]'' on the side of his paper (which is made of Japanese characters).
** Guido Mista has a deep superstitious fear of [[FourIsDeath number four]], as if he were Japanese. Italians actually fear seventeen the most. The InUniverse explanation is that his tetraphobia originates from his neighbor being attacked by a kitten who was born in a litter of four, which is a rather weak justification.
* WeHardlyKnewYe: Sorbet and Gelato, who was only shown in one panel and are hinted to be lovers just before they [[spoiler: are shown to be killed by Cioccolata and Secco.]] Meanwhile, Carne just appeared in one scene before he was killed by Mista, to the point that his name is [[AllInTheManual only revealed in the manual.]] Hell, Notorious B.I.G. is more well known than him.
* WhamLine: While recapping how he accidentally let [[spoiler:Polnareff]] live, [[spoiler:Diavolo]] reveals just how important he is to events after Part 2.
-->'''[[spoiler:Diavolo]]''': An old woman [[spoiler: named Enya who had 2 right hands]] told me she'd tell me how [[spoiler:the arrow]] worked in return for shooting some. I figured one will be more than enough, so [[spoiler: I sold the other five for a handsome sum]].
* WhamShot: The last panel of "Green Day and Oasis, part 12" which reveals that [[spoiler:the third party the gang is meeting at the Coliseum is none other than Jean-Pierre Polnareff.]]
* WholeCostumeReference: The colored version of the manga made an [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/jjba/images/1/12/Oldjanitor.png unnamed janitor]] wear [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]] clothing. Brown shoes, blue overalls, red long sleeved shirt and a red cap. Only thing missing was the white gloves.
* YouAllMeetInAnInn: In ''Vento Aureo'', Bucciarati's gang introduction features all the characters participating in a SeinfeldianConversation in a restaurant.
[[/folder]]
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->''"Arrivederci."''
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/golden_wind_promo.png]]
[[caption-width-right:350:[[ThemeMusicPowerUp I, Giorno Giovanna,]] [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters have a dream that I know is just.]]]]

->''"You see, I'm planning to beat your boss, and take back this city for the people. To rid this city of drug dealing and child abusing mafiosi... I have no other choice but to become a mafioso myself."''
-->-- '''Giorno Giovanna'''

''Vento Aureo'' (黄金の風, lit. ''Golden Wind''), is part 5 of the long-running ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' series. It is preceded by ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Diamond is Unbreakable]]'' and followed by ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean Stone Ocean]]''. This part's original run on Magazine/ShonenJump went from 1995 to 1999.

Set in 2001, ''Vento Aureo'' stars Giorno Giovanna, the son of DIO who was conceived with Jonathan Joestar's body after his resurrection in the 1980s. Having inherited both the righteousness of the Joestars and the ruthless ambitions of DIO, following a massive crime wave in Italy, he seeks to take over TheMafia in order to turn it into an organization for good instead of crime. After a brief scuffle with a Stand-using mafia assassin named Bruno Bucciarati, the two realize that they share a common goal, and so Bucciarati allows Giorno to join his squadron of Stand-using gangsters, which also includes Leone Abbacchio, Guido Mista, Narancia Ghirga, and Pannacotta Fugo.

Giorno and Bucciarati's secret goal of overthrowing The Boss gets complicated when they receive an order to guard The Boss's daughter, Trish Una, from other members of the mob who want to take her hostage to take the mob for themselves. What follows is a road trip throughout all of Italy, fending off attacks from rival mobsters and culminating in a final confrontation with The Boss himself.

The events of the story were adapted by Creator/{{Capcom}} into a 2002 BeatEmUp for the UsefulNotes/PlayStation2. An international release was announced under the title ''[=GioGio=]'s Bizarre Adventure'' but was cancelled [[note]]Due to copyright issues involving Stand names (Mainly Music/{{Prince}} and "Gold Experience") and the obscurity of the series in global markets at the time[[/note]]. In October of 2018, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-M8ncaolysg a fan-translation patch into English was released for the game]]. Giorno and all members of Bucciarati's gang (barring Abbacchio) have been consistent fighters in the Creator/CyberConnect2 fighting games, ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureAllStarBattle'' and ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureEyesOfHeaven''.

Two {{light novel}}s have been released that feature stories based on ''Vento Aureo''. The first, ''Golden Heart, Golden Ring'', was released in 2001. It was written by Shotaro Miya and Gichi Otsuka, with illustrations by Araki, and features a story shortly after the first encounter with the Boss, and the apparent betrayal of one of the team members. The second light novel ''LightNovel/PurpleHazeFeedback'' was released as part of the series 25th anniversary celebrations in 2011. Written by Kouhei Kadono with illustrations provided by Araki, it is set after the events of ''Vento Aureo'' and follows Pannacota Fugo as he deals with the aftermath of decisions made in ''Vento Aureo''. However, as with other light novels created for the series, it has not been released outside of Japan and is generally treated as OptionalCanon.

On June 21, 2018, an anime adaptation by Creator/DavidProduction was announced, about 2 years after the same studio finished airing ''Diamond is Unbreakable''. The first episode premiered in Japan on July 5th, 2018. Following that, the entire 39-episode anime aired in Japan from October 5, 2018 to July 28, 2019, with a simulcast on Website/{{Crunchyroll}}. The English dub of the anime aired on Creator/{{Toonami}} from October 26, 2019 to October 24, 2020.
----
!!How on Earth do all these tropes work, it makes no-- '''[[MemeticMutation IT JUST WORKS]]'''.

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Tropes # to D]]
* AbortedArc: Fugo was supposed to be revealed as the Boss's mole within Bucciarati's team and would have betrayed them at one point. However, Araki felt that it would be too depressing to actually portray a FaceHeelTurn so he decided to just let him quit the team without reappearing.
* AccidentalPervert:
** When the group is going to the train station by van, a sudden stop makes Fugo stumble and fall face-first onto Trish's chest. Mista then proceeds to pull a second-hand SuspiciouslySpecificDenial ("He's sorry! He totally didn't use the sudden stop as an excuse to feel your boobs or look up your skirt!"), until Fugo yells "[[DiggingYourselfDeeper Quit saying things that make it sound worse!]]"
** When Mista in Trish's body has to scratch under her skirt due to her garments being too tight, Trish (in Mista's body) understandably gets very angry and thinks that Mista was touching himself.
* ActorAllusion: Cioccolata, whose hair is green, just like his Stand Green Day, is voiced by Creator/AtsushiMiyauchi, who is the official Japanese dub voice of [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk]] in the ''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse''. Extra points Green Day is also big and sports a muscled body like Hulk.
** The English dub retains the same kind of allusion with Bill Butts, who is a bodybuilder on the side of being a voice actor.
* AdaptationalEarlyAppearance: A number of characters show up much earlier in the anime than in the manga. Most notably is La Squadra, whose members only reveal themselves in their arcs while initially they're only framed in shadow. In the anime their debut has them interact as a group and shows off each member's personality. In addition Sorbet's death is shown and his killer is revealed as [[spoiler:Ciocclata and Secco]].
* AdaptationExpansion:
** Downplayed example, but the Playstation 2 videogame adaptation recontextualized Giorno's scene with all the [=JoJos=] after defeating Black Sabbath as the game's AttractMode intro since Koichi isn't in this version. This allowed them to add Jonathan Joestar to the images of past [=JoJos=] above Giorno, since otherwise Jonathan is not included in either the manga or anime since, from a narrative point of view, Koichi never met him and nobody ever told him about Jonathan.
** The first episode of the anime spends some extra time showing the crime wave in Naples, as well as original scenes where Giorno steals back a wallet from a pickpocket and returns it kindly its proprietor, only for him to snatch two bank notes for himself, and Leaky-Eye Luca shaking down a man for doing business in his territory, which is how he found out about Giorno.
** The second episode expands on Giorno's backstory, and gives a little characterization to the gangster he helped in his childhood; cruel but just, he killed a father who was selling drugs to children, and didn't bat an eyelid when his victim's son threatened to shoot him in grief. It also shows what Giorno looked like as an adolescent and teenager before he got his blond hair.
** Abbachio's backstory in the manga never explained how he actually ''joined'' Passione after his partner's death, so the anime added two short original scenes where Bucciarati visits Abbachio's apartment and asks him to join the gang. It also canonizes a fan theory that Abbachio became TheAlcoholic after being fired from the police force.
** La Squadra Esecuzioni gets expanded on quite a bit with episode 10 establishing their personalities much earlier than in the manga and even show them performing an assassination. Even Sorbet and Gelato's deaths are expanded upon, showing the silhouettes of Cioccolata and Secco with the former doing the killing and the latter filming it.
** The manga did not elaborate much on Pannacotta Fugo's backstory, other than him being accepted into a university at a young age only to be kicked out after beating a professor with an encyclopedia. In the anime, Fugo was being sexually harassed by the teacher, which is why he lashed out at him. The assault resulted in him being abandoned by his family, becoming a thief to survive, and being caught during a dine-and-dash only for Bucciarati to come to his aid and invite him to join the gang. ''LightNovel/PurpleHazeFeedback'' gives a different account of the event, where the motive for the assault was that Fugo was being criticized for letting his grandmother's death affect his grades.
** Episode 12 has a post-credit scene of Risotto coming across a dead body at a train station and finding a burnt photograph. [[spoiler:The corpse is Pericolo's after he relayed the instructions for Bucciarati's gang to head to Venice and killed himself. This scene explains how La Squadra knew how the gang were heading to Venice]], though first-time viewers would not understand the context.
** In Episode 35 [[spoiler: right after Narancia's death, Fugo is seen returning to Naples and wandering near their restaurant, only to stop and look further, as if sensing Narancia's passing]].
* AdaptedOut: To keep the focus of the game on Giorno and his journey, as well as their minimal roles to begin with, Koichi and Jotaro are nowhere to be seen in the [=PS2=] game. They have an audio drama in the game's OST at least.
* AerithAndBob: a [[DownplayedTrope downplayed]] and truly bizarre example, but characters in this part tend to have full names in which one half will be realistic (Guido, Leone), and the other will be a [[EdibleThemeNaming silly reference to food]] (Pannacotta, Narancia).
* AfterlifeWelcome: When [[spoiler:Abbacchio]] dies, the scene changes to him sitting outside a cafe and meeting a police officer. Said police officer turns out to be [[spoiler:his old deceased partner]] who tells him that he's dead when he tries getting on a nearby bus to get back to the others.
* AnachronismStew: In the anime, during Mista's flashback (which is presumably set in the year 2000) a cinema is shown with posters of ''Film/TheMartian'' (2015), ''Film/WarHorse'' (2011) and ''Film/TheDarkKnight'' (2008).
* AnIcePerson: Ghiaccio's stand, White Album, allows him to freeze the area around him to extremely low temperatures, to the point of being able to freeze the air around him. His stand also comes with it's own [[AnIceSuit ice suit]].
* AnIceSuit: As stated above, Ghiaccio's White Album allows him to make an extremely durable suit of ice that allows him to avoid being frozen to death by his own stand. It even comes with [[RollerbladeGood ice skates, which he can use to skate on non-ice surfaces]].
* AnimationBump: While the anime is well animated in general, the scene where King Crimson's ability is revealed in full ramps up the quality several notches to jaw-dropping levels.
* AntiHero: All of the protagonists are {{Pragmatic Hero}}es since they are gangsters and have no reservations about killing their enemies.
* AntiVillain: La Squadra whose goals are to take out The Boss in vengeance for their deceased allies.
* AnyoneCanDie: One of the most brutal parts in this regard. Aside from the minor antagonists working for Passione, and the members of La Squadra, [[spoiler: Abbacchio, Narancia, and Bucciarati end up being the biggest losses on the protagonist's side. And even returning characters aren't safe--Jean-Pierre Polnareff from Part 3 returns only to be fatally impaled by King Crimson soon after (though his spirit ''does'' survive within Coco Jumbo)]]
* ArcWords: "Resolve" (or "Kakugo" in Japanese). Often associated with and symbolic of Giorno, but is shared with his comrades and enemies alike as the story goes. Can be used in both noun and verb form, but generally translates to something with the effect of readiness to do something dangerous and/or costly without a second thought. Has also been translated as "preparedness", "consciousness", "determination", etc, leading to the catch-all word being [[LostInTranslation watered down through the different contexts]].
* ArchnemesisDad: Trish joins the fight against her scumbag of a father, who not only is a ruthless mob boss, but also tried to kill her.
* ArtisticLicenseBiology
** While some studies show that women can have lower body temperatures, the difference is negligible. That being said, Trish shouldn't be aging that slowly from The Grateful Dead with only a few wrinkles compared to the rest of the gang's shriveled up bodies.
** Risotto Nero's Stand Metallica can create objects such as razors, nails, or scissors out of the iron in one's blood. In reality, the human body only contains about 4 grams of iron, absolutely not enough for scissors. A few razors or nails would actually be plausible, however.
* ArtShift: In the anime, Jotaro's photograph of the Crusaders is done in Part 3's style, since the Part 3 anime features the scene of the picture being taken. [[spoiler:Polnareff's flashback to the group visiting the Giza Pyramids is also done in a similar way; though not as evident, the Crusaders have the clearly defined musculature of Part 3's artstyle. Whereas the flashback of Jotaro and Polnareff deciding to track the Stand Arrows have them in Part 5's art style.]]
* AscendedMeme:
** Robert Fripp acknowledged the "it just works" meme in a Facebook post.
** Phillip Reich's [[https://youtu.be/-vCw1tMAn0A announcement]] as the English voice of Giorno is based on the "Coda" memes.
* AssassinOutclassin: Whereas many antagonistic Stand users are specifically sent to kill the heroes, La Squadra Esecuzioni are professional assassins. All but one are defeated by the gang, though.
* AssholeVictim: The woman targeted by Melone on the stopped train for Babyface to bear a child assassin to hunt down Team Bucciarati made her debut by [[RichBitch showing a snobbish contempt for her fellow passengers,]] and when Melone left, she intended to [[FrivolousLawsuit sue the train company despite the staff being as respectful and helpful as they could to her, ESPECIALLY after what all the passengers just went through.]] That being said, not only was her scene with Babyface framed in a way that looked liked it '''raped''' her, Junior disintegrated her shortly after pissing down her neck.
* BadPowersGoodPeople: Fugo's [[PoisonousPerson Stand power]] is so lethal and disgusting that even his friends are creeped out by it. However, he's still one of the good guys, [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters sort of]].
* TheBerserker: Fugo, and by extension his Stand Purple Haze, are this. Fugo has a legendarily short temper and has stabbed or beaten Narancia on more than one occasion for ''screwing up a math problem'', and Purple Haze is one of the few Stands shown to have a personality outside of that which its User ascribes to it because it's ''that consistently pissed off.''
* BilingualBonus: Since this part takes place in Italy, Italian phrases come up now and then; The Boss' messages to his capos and Giorno's subconscious writing on the plane, for a couple of examples. In the anime, they are fully shown on screen, so those who know the language could just read it from there. However, it gets subverted because the characters will just read it out loud in Japanese, making its contents more readily available for the audience.
* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Diavolo is sent to an infinite amount of deaths by Gold Experience Requiem's power at the end of the story and Giorno was able to become the Boss. But it came at the cost of Abbacchio, Naranchia and Bucciarati's lives.]]
* BloodIron: Risotto's Stand, Metallica, is capable of manipulating iron, including the iron present in the blood of a person. Being an Mafia assassin, his methods aren't pleasant to watch; those unfortunate enough to be within Metallica's range will find themselves coughing out ''razor blades'' from their throats, and will discover all sorts of sharp, nasty objects protruding from their face and neck. This way, Risotto can eventually cause his victims to die of suffocation by robbing them of the iron needed to transport precious oxygen, to the point their blood turns ''yellow''.
* BloodierAndGorier: While ''[=JoJo=]'' is quite a gory series especially for a shonen, ''Vento Aureo'' is even gorier and more violent than previous parts. Especially because there's very little censoring in the anime. The "King Crimson vs. Metallica" arc in particular is full of gruesome wounds. The more serious shift in body horror can also be attributed to Giorno possessing healing abilities as to heal said gruesome injuries.
* BlueMeansCold: Ghiacco, whose name means "ice" in Italian, has blue hair and his Stand White Album can freeze things and control ice.
* BodyHorror:
** Purple Haze ''melts'' his victims down after finishing with them, as [[spoiler: Illuso]] can attest to.
** Risotto Nero's Metallica does this in spades. [[spoiler: Not only did he use Doppio's own iron to attack him, but also Doppio's blood turned yellow due to lack of iron in his body, ''making him unable to breathe''. If Diavolo didn't trick Narancia into shooting Risotto, the Boss and Doppio would have died a gruesome death]].
** Cioccolata's Green Day [[spoiler: dissolves people if the mold generated by it is fast enough. And also, Cioccolata can ''sever'' his body parts in order to levitate while using his mold to prevent blood loss.]]
** [[spoiler:Bucciarati's flesh began to melt as Secco's stand ability is to turn everything to mud. It got to the point where his fingers bent so hard it broke when he touched his face and we can see the bone of his finger.]]
** The mutations that [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]] forces on living things around him include extra eyes and heads, weird insectoid limbs and horrifying unidentifiable lumps.
* BondOneLiner: Some of the heroes have a cool one-liner after their {{Kiai}}:
--> '''Bucciarati (after defeating Pesci) and Trish (after defeating Notorious B.I.G.)''': Arrivedeci. (Farewell)
--> '''Narancia (after defeating Squalo)''': Volare via. (Go flying)
* BondVillainStupidity: How [[spoiler: Polnareff lives long enough to contact Team Bucciarati even with Diavolo giving him a CurbStompBattle]].
* BookDumb: Narancia may not be able to make a simple multiplication, but he is still a resourceful Stand user.
* BookEnds:
** Giorno's first Stand duel is against Bucciarati, and he uses Gold Experience's life shot ability to accelerate his opponent's senses and give him an OutOfBodyExperience. This happens again at the halfway point of the story when [[spoiler:Diavolo's time erasure makes Bucciarati see a vision of his past self]], and again when [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem reverses time and makes Diavolo see images of his past selves]].
** The beginning of Traitor's Requiem, the opening for the second part of the anime, involves a door and then what looks like a man kissing somebody's hand. [[spoiler:That's the ending of Vento Aureo - where the "hand" they're kissing is Giorno's hand after he took over Passione.]]
** In the first episode of the anime, the story starts with Giorno looking at his surroundings with a light smile on his face, followed with golden sparkles flies around him. [[spoiler:After Diavolo's defeat, Giorno looking at his surroundings, this time with stern facial expression and more golden sparkles flies around him.]]
** The first song in the anime adaption's first OST is "il vento d'oro" (golden wind). The second last song in the final OST is "fine della vento aureo" (end of the golden wind), a slowed down version of the original. This is also a nod to Giorno's stand power which can speed up people's thought processes causing them to perceive the world moving in slow motion (including the song if they were listening to it).
* BossGame: The game based on ''Vento Aureo'' is nothing but 22 chapters of bosses (excluding one that involves Mista avoiding Secco and his Stand Oasis and another that is dedicated to [[spoiler:Abbaccio's death]]).
* BrickJoke: Starting from episode 2 to episode 19, the anime adaptation had Jodeci's [[IntercourseWithYou "Freek'n You"]] as the ending theme. Most anime viewers first heard the ED with some confusion, but quickly got used to it as part of the general '''FABULOUSNESS''' of the franchise. Then came Episode 19, with the infamous park bench scene with Giorno and Mista, and when the sultry R&B of the end theme hit after the scene, the true purpose of the ED was revealed. (A significant amount of the manga readers predicted this would happen, and just as the story shifted to the next arc, the ED was changed to "Modern Crusaders".)
** Early in the anime Fugo mentions that Mista damaged the car. During the "Sleeping Slaves arc" (at the end of Part 5) we see how that happened.
* BullyHunter: More subtle than most, but Giorno's dream to become the Don of Italy is so that the Mafia will once again ''protect'' the weak and innocent as they once did, rather than prey on and victimize them. Point in fact, witness his terrifying TranquilFury as he tricks a ''Capo'' into swallowing a gun for casually murdering a helpless old janitor who worked at his middle school.
* BuryYourGays: While they aren't explicitly confirmed to be homosexual, the interactions between Squalo and Tiziano are ''heavily'' implicative of them being a couple, leading to them being the perfect candidates for enforcing this trope when they're both killed off by Narancia to protect Bucciarati's team once they've gone rogue.
** There's also Sorbet and Gelato, two [[PosthumousCharacter Posthumous Characters]] who are heavily implied to be a couple.
* CallBack:
** In the anime, when [[spoiler:Polnareff]] explains the nature of the Stand Arrow, it plays a brief snippet of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2fmArRXjp8 Fists of Platinum]]" from the ''Manga/StardustCrusaders'' anime over silhouettes of the Crusaders themselves and their Stands.
** In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FH2tdw8oQWQ the final OP]], Giorno's pose as [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem resets time]] is a dead ringer for [[Manga/StardustCrusaders his father's]] most iconic one.
* CallForward:
** In the anime, during the sequence where Zucchero is tortured, the scene cuts to a stylized graphic of his head being brutalized in between clips of the dancing gang members. [[https://twitter.com/golden_wolfram/status/1063852934935527425 As explained here]], those cutaways are actually early hints at the three unrevealed stands.
** Also in the anime, the first OP and the second ED feature statues. At the base of both are spherical boulders; for anyone who has reached the end of the original manga, they may recognize these rocks as Rolling Stones, the Stand that foretold the fates of Bucciarati's group.
* CarCushion: In the ''Sleeping Slaves'' arc, Mista jumps down six stories and luckily lands on Fugo's car. To be fair, Mista knew that he wouldn't die because Rolling Stones didn't predict his death so he was free to take any risk.
* CarnivalOfKillers: The Boss's Guard Squad tasked with killing traitors of Passione is one of them. There's also the members of La Squadra who the protagonists encounter in the first half of the story.
* CastingGag:
** Creator/KenshoOno voicing Giorno for the TV Anime continues the tradition of Onos voicing [=JoJos=], following the footsteps of Creator/DaisukeOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Jotaro]]) and Creator/YukiOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Part 4 Josuke]]). In fact, Kensho sharing his surname with the latter two is why he got to voice Giorno to begin with.
** Creator/KyleMcCarley once again [[LightNovel/{{Durarara}} voices an ill-tempered gangster who is]] OlderThanTheyLook who gets stabbed in the hand with a pen.
** This isn't the first time Creator/KellenGoff voices [[Manga/MyHeroAcademia a crime boss who is also a really lousy father]].
* CentralTheme: As mentioned above in ArcWords, "resolve".
* CerebusSyndrome: Started to kick in with this part. Whereas parts 1 through 4 are traditional lighthearted shounen battle series with the occasional mature themes this is where it starts to become clear that Araki wanted to move away from Shounen Jump. This part in particular features some of the most gruesome violence in the series, antagonists who are just as sympathetic as the protagonists, many major character deaths, and characters having tragic backstories. All of these would carry over into the future parts.
* TheChosenOne: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] fancies himself being chosen and favoured by Fate itself, claiming it is his right to lord over everyone and take the Arrow for himself.
* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: The introductory story arc is told primarily from Koichi Hirose's perspective as he's robbed by Giorno, and then he comes back again a short while later playing a key part in the fight with Black Sabbath. After that, he (and his reporting to Jotaro) are never so much as mentioned again. The anime deals with this by having Koichi decide that he's learned everything about Giorno that he needs to know, and that he's going to go sightseeing for a bit before returning home and reporting to Jotaro.
* CleavageWindow: If there's a male equivalent to this trope, then Giorno and Bucciarati's outfits ([[UpToEleven as well as a bunch of other characters]]) both qualify for it.
* ClosedCircle: The fight with [[BlobMonster Notorious B.I.G]] is made scarier by the fact that the gang are all stuck on an airplane over the ocean.
* ConflictingLoyalty: Bruno Bucciarati is conflicted between his disgust of drugs and his duty towards Passione, who is dealing them in the streets. When [[spoiler:Diavolo attempts to murder his daughter, Trish, who the gang had spent most of the part protecting]], he chooses his side and revolts against the Boss.
* ContrastingSequelAntagonist: The antagonists of ''Stardust Crusaders'' and ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' were regular people/thugs who happened to be given Stand powers. As such some of them were pretty incompetent while the best ones were either smart or got lucky because they had powerful Stand abilities. In this part however the antagonists are all professional killers who by nature are smart and cunning on top of the fact that their Stand abilities are very useful.
* ContrastingSequelMainCharacter: Despite being recognized as the most morally grey of the original [=JoJos=], Giorno is the only one who goes after the main villain of his own free will, rather than the villain removing their choice by making it personal. This directly contrasts the previous protagonist, Josuke, who initially believed that Kira wasn't their problem if he wasn't a Stand User. This leaves Giorno as a wild card to the villains for almost the whole way (even at the end the BigBad sees Bucciarati as his nemesis and Giorno as just some newbie), contrary to Josuke's very strong spotlight. Thematically, this lines up with Giorno being descended from a villain, as he [[VillainsActHeroesReact acts while the other [=JoJos=] reacted]].
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: [[spoiler:All of the Hitman Team are hit with this fate after their encounters with Giorno and the gang. Meanwhile, Sorbet and Gelato became the victims of Cioccolata and Secco to warn the Hitman Team to never trying to find out the Boss's true identity.]]
* CreatorProvincialism: A few characters are seen bowing in gratitude, Mista mentions the RedStringOfFate and is superstitious about the [[FourIsDeath number four being unlucky]]. These are all drawn from Japanese culture despite the story's Italian setting. Likewise, the attitudes of the main characters towards [[DrugsAreBad drugs]] are more characteristic of yakuza than of Italian mafiosi.
* DarkerAndEdgier: While still having some of the self-aware charm of the previous parts, ''Vento Aureo'' plays itself more straight, and is a lot more brutal with its violence. There's also the fact that the main protagonists are anti-heroes who kill people, some of the villains are well-intentioned, and Araki's famous AnyOneCanDie rule is taken to an extreme.
* TheDarknessBeforeDeath: Halfway through the comic, [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati is killed by the BigBad and healed by TheProtagonist's Stand]], allowing him to keep moving forward and fight out of sheer will, until the final chapters of the comic, where [[spoiler:his blindness makes him realize that he's running out of will and strength to fight, and will be dead for real soon]].
* DeadlyRemoteControlToy: Narancia's Stand, Aerosmith, resembles a remote-controlled toy plane. It can fire bullets, drop bombs, and track enemies with its radar by monitoring their breathing.
* DefectorFromDecadence: Bucciarati had already some ConflictingLoyalty about Passione's drug business and passively let Giorno do his thing. However, when he sees how The Boss is willing to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter because she's a liability]], he immediately and openly rebels against the gang.
* DisneyAcidSequence: The anime adaptation adds trippy visuals to the infamous "torture dance" scene, presumably representing Zucchero going crazy from the pain of [[EyeScream getting his eyeball cooked by concentrated sunlight]].
* DiscOneFinalBoss: Ghiaccio is the last member of La Squadra that the protagonists face off against with his fight concluding the first half of the story.
* DoingInTheWizard: Stands, introduced as a mystic power, are now explained as an alien virus infecting worthy people and granting them power. It still doesn't explain ''why'' a virus from a meteorite gives people highly-specified psychic powers and seemingly draws them together, but some explanation is better than none.
* DramaticIrony:
** Giorno doesn't learn of his father's connection to the Joestars, even when he comes across [[spoiler:Polnareff]] in the climax. [[spoiler:Polnareff himself was stranded in Italy with no way to contact Jotaro for help, making it painfully ironic how Jotaro had Giorno investigated partly out of grief for his friends killed by Dio during his journey in Egypt.]]
** Towards the end, Bucciarati is gravely injured and deprived of most of his senses while being helped up by an enemy he thinks is Trish. He asks "her" to start a new life on his hometown once everything is done with. Previously, the real Trish was upset Bucciarati was acting too cold towards his team.
* DramaticUnmask: [[spoiler: Diavolo]], who was TheFaceless for the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'', finally and climactically drops the mask of [[spoiler: Doppio in front of Polnareff in the Colosseum of Rome.]]
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: [[spoiler: How Diavolo kills Abbacchio and Narancia]].
* DrugsAreBad: Giorno Giovanna's primary motivation in becoming the new Don of Italy is so that the new Mafia that he rules over will be one that will ''not'' sell drugs ''period'', especially to innocent children.
* DubNameChange: While it was rather minor in previous installments, this one is shaping to have the most prevalent name changes for the Stand names. The show's lawyers must've had a field day with this series.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes E to M]]
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
** When [[spoiler: Diavolo]] first appeared while shrouded in shadows, he had shorter hair and he was wearing a business suit, not unlike your typical mob boss. However, by the time he made his first physical appearance, he was given long hair and an outfit that wouldn't look out of place in a death metal concert.
** Gold Experience's early abilities don't really line up with what it's consistently shown to be able to do later on. For example, its AttackReflector ability was quickly dropped after being used once (Luca trying to kill a frog with his shovel), and its ability to give a person more life energy and cause an OutOfBodyExperience is only used in his fight with Bucciarati before going unused again (although this does make a bit of sense, since Giorno didn't have many opportunities to punch an opponent), though it is possible that the latter does still occur but isn't highlighted.
** When Bucciarati first appeared, he was much more ruthless, as he interrogated Giorno by showing him Leaky-Eye Luca's severed fingers and seemed legitimately loyal to the Boss. This is a stark contrast from the NobleDemon he's established to be after his and Giorno's fight.
* EdibleThemeNaming: Many characters in ''Vento Aureo'' are named after Italian foods. Examples include Pannacotta Fugo, Leone Abbacchio, Risotto Nero, Melone, Cioccolata, Gelato, Sorbet (which is not actually Italian, the correct word being "sorbetto"), Prosciutto, Pesci, Formaggio, and Mario Zucchero.
* ElephantInTheLivingRoom: Giorno and Bucciarati both know that [[spoiler:Bucciarati is undead after his fight with King Crimson]], but are too disturbed by the thought to tell their teammates.
* EliteMooks: The assassins deployed in Venezia (Squalo, Tiziano, and Carne) are referred to as The Boss's Elite Guard.
* ElsewhereFic: Bears less relation to the overall MythArc than the other stories of the first six parts, focusing on its own characters within its own setting. The only real relation aside from [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Jotaro and Koichi's]] presence at the beginning is that Part 5 [[spoiler:reveals more about the arrows, and how this part's BigBad is unknowingly the perpetrator of every tragedy after Part 2]] and [[spoiler:features a very prominent appearance by [[JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Polnareff]]]]. Even the most obvious connection between ''Vento Aureo'' and the actions of DIO, that Giorno is DIO's bastard son, is never properly followed up on and serves more as a [[CentralTheme thematic]] than a narrative device.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: The anime adds in a moment where Giorno is introduced stealing back a woman’s wallet from a pickpocket, showing his kindness. He then uses Gold Experience to snatch a generous helping of Lire from the wallet, showing his cunning and that he’s not above being the lesser evil.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: [[spoiler: Diavolo]] may flood Italy with drugs and be petty enough to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter for unjustified paranoia]], but even he's disgusted to send Cioccolata and Secco after the gang, risking total destruction of Rome just to get few people. [[spoiler: Diavolo]] even calls them the scum of Passione.
** He doesn't do anything to a child [[spoiler: who witnessed him transforming from Doppio to Diavolo]], instead letting him go safe and sound.
* EveryoneHasStandards:
** Bucciarati and Giorno break the ice when the latter realizes the former, despite being a mafioso whose family deals hard drugs, is not okay with said drugs being sold to teens.
** La Squadra Esecuzioni are the hitmen of Passione and won't bat an eyelash if bystanders are hit during their hits, but even they are grossed out when they find out what happened to Sorbet and Gelato.
* EveryCarIsAPinto:
** During his fight against Formaggio, Narancia blasts all the cars on the street apart with Aerosmith's bullets, detonating multiple fiery explosions to force his smaller opponent to reveal himself.
** Later, Mista shoots the engine of the motorboat Narancia is on to make it explode, propelling him onto the shore.
* EvolvingCredits:
** The second ED, Modern Crusaders, showcases all Stands shown so far, and Notorious B.I.G., Spice Girl, Metallica, Green Day & Oasis, and [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]] are included as they are introduced. By the final episode, [[spoiler:Rolling Stones bears Bucciarati's image and Gold Experience is replaced with Gold Experience Requiem.]]
** The second version of the second opening, Traitor's Requiem, shows Doppio [[spoiler:transforming into Diavolo, and once again, the main villain uses their time powers [[OnceASeason to interrupt the opening]]]], starting in Episode 34.
** In the final two episodes, the opening changes one more time to have [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem nullifying Diavolo's King Crimson while the second verse of Traitor's Requiem plays.]]
* ExtremelyShortTimespan: While most ''[=JoJo=]'' parts take place over the span of months, ''Vento Aureo'' takes place over the course of a scant ''8 days'', from the moment Giorno steals Koichi's luggage to the very end. Yes, this is the amount of time Giorno goes from being a complete newbie to Passione to [[spoiler:becoming the boss]].
* EyeCatch: Stand stats still function as these in the anime, but Vento Aureo departs slightly from the format used in the previous two parts; the eyecatches kick off with a spinning coin based off of a vintage Italian 500 lira coin, with the Stand stats featured on the blank face of it, and a segment of the main theme playing for its duration.
* TheFaceless: At four points in ''Vento Aureo'' a mysterious character whose face Araki doesn't want to reveal is seen entirely shrouded in shadow.
** Sale is the first one, being faceless while having a conversation with his partner Zucchero in the car, prior to Team Bucciarati sailing to Capri.
** Prosciutto is the second and most ludicrous example, as he is seen shrouded in shadows even though he's in the middle of a train station in broad daylight and everyone else is drawn normally. This is omitted from the anime as Prosciutto (along with the rest of the Squadra) first appeared [[AdaptationalEarlyAppearance much earlier]].
** The Boss for the entire part sans the final battle. His first fight against Bucciarati features him as a man fully hidden in the dark.
** [[spoiler: Silver Chariot Requiem]] is entirely black and its face is hidden by its hat, and is never revealed.
* FingerInTheMail: An extreme example. When the mafia's La Squadra Esecuzioni tried to look into the Boss's past, he chopped up and killed one of them and then mailed the body parts, framed in containers full of formaldehyde, as a grim warning to everyone who dares try looking into his past.
* FluffyTheTerrible: Thanks to the [[DubNameChange dub changing Stand names,]] Green Day and Oasis are renamed Green Tea and Sanctuary, which means their episodes sound more like calm, slow-paced [[BreatherEpisode breathers]] and less like a harrowing chase sequence involving two mass murdering psychopaths.
* {{Foreshadowing}}:
** Mista has a deep fear of the number four, associating it with misfortune. [[spoiler:Bucciarati dying at the hands of The Boss and then rebelling against him]] takes place on the fourth day Giorno joins the team. [[spoiler: Also, Abbachio takes one of the four pieces of cake and ends up being the first to die.]]
** The second ED shows [[spoiler:the team's and Diavolo's Stands in the order they die (or in Fugo's case, leave). From top to bottom, it starts with Purple Haze, then goes to Moody Blues, Aerosmith, Sticky Fingers, and King Crimson, culminating with Sex Pistols, Spice Girl, and Gold Experience at the top for the ones who survived. Once Chariot Requiem is introduced, we see it positioned above Moody Blues and Aerosmith, but below Sticky Fingers. Abbacchio is already dead, Narancia dies rather early during Chariot Requiem's rampage thanks to a sneak attack by King Crimson, and Bucciarati's spirit moves on after finding a way to kill Chariot Requiem once and for all. Also, it shows King Crimson's arm wrapped around Spice Girl's body, foreshadowing how Diavolo takes control of Trish's body by grabbing and manipulating her Stand.]]
** [[spoiler:Notorious B.I.G introduces the concept of a "dead stand" that has outlived its master and is thus unkillable. The penultimate enemy of the part is a stand that has outlived its master and is virtually unkillable.]]
* FourIsDeath: Ironically after the last part being LighterAndSofter part. Not only one of the main characters, Mista, literally fears this trope, but [[spoiler: Bucciarati dies at the Boss's hands in the fourth day of Giorno joining the gang]], and then [[spoiler: Diavolo manages to kill Bucciarati, Abbachio, Polnareff, and Narancia]].
* FreakyFridayFlip: Near the climax, a body swap scenario thanks to [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem. Giorno and Narancia trade bodies, Trish and Mista trade bodies and Bucciarati and Doppio trade bodies. Diavolo lies in wait as a split personality for Mista's body (occupied by Trish), and once given the chance goes after the [[EleventhHourSuperpower Stand arrow]]]].
* FunnyBackgroundEvent: While Mista walks away no worse for wear after jumping on a building and landing spine first on a car, Fugo can be seen crawling out of the wreckage.
* GeoEffects: A good handful of the enemy Stands in this part are reliant on having a terrain advantage. Man in the Mirror and Clash are useless if they don't have something to "conduct" them (mirrors for the former, liquid for the latter). Beach Boy and Notorious B.I.G, on the other hand, seriously benefit from being fought in the location they're in (The many walls and linearity of a train make it easy for Pesci to target his enemies from one end of it, while an enclosed, fast-moving plane makes it nigh impossible to escape B.I.G's handicap of only targeting moving things).
* TheGhost: The Boss is an InUniverse example, as he has erased any evidence and information related to his person, and issues orders through varying layers of proxies. No one knows anything about him, they just know he exists and is the Boss of Italy's most powerful crime syndicate.
* GiantSpider: This story uses the "[[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrunken hero]]" vs. regular-sized spider variant, as Formaggio traps Narancia (who has been affected by Formaggio's Little Feet stand) in a bottle and pits him against a normal tarantula.
* GodzillaThreshold:
** Cioccolata is this for The Boss. Cioccolata's Stand, Green Day, is an immensely destructive area-of-effect Stand much like Prosciutto's which has a theoretically infinite range. However, unlike Prosciutto who was a cold professional, Cioccolata is an AxCrazy madman and thus doesn't care about civilian casualties. He massacres an entire port town trying to kill the gang, and as the fight moves to Rome, his massacre escalates in severity.
** [[spoiler: Polnareff uses the Arrow and unleashes Chariot Requiem in Rome,]] risking everyone's souls in the process because the alternative [[spoiler: (Diavolo getting the Arrow)]] is worse.
* GoodIsNotNice: Bucciarati's group maybe your RagtagBunchOfMisfits and Bucciarati is nice enough that the townsfolk is very friendly with him top the point that old ladies ask him for help. But they won't hesitate to do anything to do what they think is right, and won't hesitate to kill anyone that stands in their way.
* {{Gorn}}: Appropriately, for the setting. The increased violence in this part lends itself to some frightening injuries, but the fight with Green Day takes the cake- the viewer is subjected to numerous examples of people rotting away ''right in plain view'', with people literally rotting away into nonexistence in some examples. None of this is censored in the original manga.
* GratuitousItalian:
** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English, Part 5 has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bucciarati and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".
** The English dub of the 2018 anime [[ForeignCussWord included a wide selection of Italian profanity]] where the Japanese dub didn't. There's even an "Italian Language Consigliere" [[note]]Paola Giovanna Cresti[[/note]] in the localization credits.
* GreaterScopeVillain: If it isn't enough that [[spoiler: Diavolo]] is the main villain of this part, he also indirectly caused the events of ''Stardust Crusaders'', ''Diamond is Unbreakable'', and ''Stone Ocean''. His discovery of the Stand Arrows is what led DIO to awaken to "The World" and create his army of Stand using minions among everything listed under this trope on the ''Stardust Crusaders'' page, and then Mr Nijimura and Yoshihiro Kira, both DIO's minions in Japan, were given the arrows, which in the former case, his elder son Keicho used in an insane rampage to find someone to end his father's suffering, and in the latter case, Yoshihiro turning his son Yoshikage into a SerialKiller who is also a MadBomber. This is all ironic seeing as how he doesn't have much physical presence in this part itself, only being the center of influence with how the story goes.
* GutPunch:
** One that occurs for both the audience and Bucciarati is when he realizes that he's suddenly only holding [[spoiler:Trish's disembodied hand]], and the boss never had good intentions with the mission he sent them on. This arguably cascades into an example that also happens to be literal when [[spoiler:Bucciarati himself is]] [[AnyoneCanDie fatally punched through the gut]], putting him on borrowed time for the rest of the story.
** The deaths of both [[spoiler:Abbacchio]] and [[spoiler:Narancia]] also apply for both the audience and the characters. In both cases, the death is tragic, sudden, and unavoidable, and happens right under the noses of the heroes. In the latter, the characters don't even have evidence of an enemy being nearby before or afterward, making it especially shocking.
* HandWave: Why did DIO let some women live after having sex with them? The narration says no one knows, which raises the question of why even mention this in the first place.
* HarmlessFreezing: Averted, as Ghiaccio's freezing power does cause frostbites and freezes limbs enough so that he can invoke LiterallyShatteredLives.
* TheHedonist: Guido Mista is described as this, living a simple life full of simple pleasures.
* HiddenInPlainSight: Doppio looks young enough to pass off as a kid. [[spoiler: So Diavolo takes his place in a gang of kids playing soccer and purposefully shoots the ball toward Abbacchio to get close to him. He was even posing as a tourist in the fight with Secco and Bucciarati, with Secco [[HostageSituation taking him hostage]] to prevent Bucciarati from killing him.]]
* HopeSpot: A couple in Bucciarati's flashback. When he was a child, his father happened upon a drug deal and was gunned down. Though he was shot 7 times the coast guard found him and he survived. The gang later tried to kill him in the hospital, but Bucciarati got the drop on them and killed the two thugs. Though his dad survived both encounters, he ultimately lived for only 5 more years, with chronic pain, on account of the damage the bullets had done to him.
* HowWeGotHere: The final chapters following [[spoiler: Diavolo's defeat]] are a side-story about Bucciarati and the gang before they met Giorno. It also features a Stand that [[spoiler: foreshadows the deaths of Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia.]]
* IceBreaker: Before it is revealed that Ghiaccio was attacking Giorno and Mista while they were driving to Venice, Mista's finger ends up breaking off his body after he touches the car window, even taking him a few moments to realize what happened.
* IDieFree: [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati tells this to Giorno from beyond the grave, saying that he freed himself from being a slave of Fate and took his own path.]]
* IfWeGetThroughThis: During the final fight of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler:Narancia]] dreams of returning to school after getting through this fight; [[spoiler:of course, he is the first casualty.]]
* ILied: A rare heroic example in ''Vento Aureo''. [[spoiler:After shooting [[AxCrazy Cioccolata]] in the head, Giorno suspects that he's still alive and says that he won't attack so long as Cioccolata doesn't move. When Cioccolata springs back into action and tries taking Giorno's friends hostage, Giorno reveals that he'd already planted what was essentially a time bomb in Cioccolata's head. Now dying for real, Cioccolata complains that Giorno broke his previous word. Giorno's response: "Know your place."]]
* InMediasRes: [[spoiler: After Diavolo is defeated and Giorno is crowned the Boss of the Passione Family, the next chapters is a flashback from Bucciarati's group before Giorno entered the group.]]
* InSeriesNickname: Zig Zagged. In the Japanese version of the anime, everyone refers to Narancia as "Naran-Chan". His name is properly pronounced in the English Dub.
* InstantDramaJustAddTracheotomy: In Venice, Narancia gets his own tongue cut off by Clash and he begins to choke, somehow. To save Narancia, Giorno performs a makeshift tracheotomy with a hollow pen to make him breathe through his throat until he can regenerate the tongue.
* {{Irony}}: [[spoiler: In episode 21, Bucciarati was killed by The boss with a GutPunch, with only Giorno saving him that he is still alive. 11 episodes later, he unknowingly returned the favor when he gave a GutPunch to Doppio, who is The Boss's split personality.]]
** Mista is terrified of 4, as he believes FourIsDeath. Not only Mista is the fourth member of Team Bucciarati, but [[spoiler: he's also the only survivor of Team Bucciarati]].
* ItHasBeenAnHonor: [[spoiler: Bucciarati thanks Giorno for having met him in Naples, before ascending to Heaven.]]
* JabbaTableManners: Polpo cannot eat a simple cracker without spilling half of it on his cheeks.
* JerkassHasAPoint: The anime had a scene of Fugo trying to convince Narancia [[spoiler: not to betray Passione, as rebellion will be met with execution by the Boss. He's sadly proven right]].
* JuggleFu: Happens at the beginning of the fight between Secco and Bucciarati. Secco throws his camera in the air, proceeds to pummel Bucciarati for long enough to make him realize his techniques and force him to flee before catching the camera.
* JumpScare: In Episode 24, after Notorious B.I.G. is thrown out the plane for the second time, Trish spots what appears to be a ball rolling around the plane's wing. She gets up to take a closer look, when the enemy Stand very suddenly slams against the window.
* KillEmAll: Compared to the idealistic ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' this is a much darker story with almost every Stand battle being a fight to the death. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia all die. Fugo leaves which means the gang is reduced to just Giorno and Mista. Returning hero Polnareff physically dies but his spirit lives on inside Coco Jumbo. Risotto's gang is wiped out completely by Bucciarati's gang. Every other named Passione member is killed, with the exception of Zucchero and depending on canon he dies as well in the ''Purple Haze Feedback'' spinoff.]]
* KlingonPromotion:
** A driving motivation of the La Squadra Esecuzioni is to find out the Boss' identity, so that they can kill him and take over his position.
** [[spoiler:Giorno himself eventually becomes the Boss of Passione by killing Diavolo.]]
* LactoseOverLiquor: When La Squadra, Passione's hitman team, goes to a restaurant, Pesci orders milk instead of alcohol or espresso. He is the most inexperienced member of the team and displays a hesitant, meek and cowardly personality.
* LifeOrLimbDecision: All over the place. Perhaps most notable for this is the White Album arc, where ''all of the combatants'' uses their own blood to gain an advantage, all in short succession; Giorno uses his blood to reveal a path through the frozen air, Mista sprays his blood to temporarily blind Ghiaccio, and Ghiaccio uses his (admittedly, already spilled) blood to prevent himself from being fully impaled on a spike.
* LineInTheSand: After Bucciarati decides to [[spoiler:go against [[TheDon Diavolo]]]], he tells his subordinates that if they aren't 100% certain about whether or not they want to follow him, they should stay behind; otherwise, they can get aboard his boat to confirm that they agree with him. [[spoiler:Narancia and Fugo both decide not to follow him, however, Narancia has a change of heart almost immediately and swims after the boat, meaning that Fugo is the only one who gets PutOnABus.]]
* LonersAreFreaks: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] is a schizophrenic man who is living alone and refuses to have relationships because he doesn't want anyone to learn anything about him.
* LuxuryPrisonSuite: Polpo inhabits a pretty luxurious prison cell decorated with paintings and has a personal fridge.
* MafiaPrincess: Trish is a subversion. Although she is the daughter of The Boss and acts like a spoiled teen used to have servants, she only learned it recently and freaks out at the idea of meeting her father as well as being the target of her father's enemies. Moreover although the Boss seems to try to care for her, he just [[spoiler: wants to kill her because she is a potential weakness]].
* ManIFeelLikeAWoman: [[spoiler:When Silver Chariot Requiem causes everyone to body-swap, Mista finds himself stuck in Trish's body and gets a bit… hands-y, though to his credit it was mostly him trying to adjust her underwear because he's not used to having it so tight or to wearing a bra in general.]]
* ManlyTears: Much like other parts in the franchise, there are times the manly heroes simply cannot stop themselves from crying. Notable examples are when Abbacchio sheds tears [[spoiler:upon meeting his former partner in the afterlife]], Bucciarati and Narancia crying over [[spoiler: Abbacchio's death]] and when both Giorno and Mista cry over [[spoiler:the death of Narancia.]]
* MatterOfLifeAndDeath: While a staple of the series, in ''Vento Aureo'', '''everyone''' is constantly fighting with the intent to kill.
* MegatonPunch: [[spoiler: King Crimson, having a very high Strength can cause much greater damage than Star Platinum, The World or Crazy Diamond's RapidFireFisticuffs by simply driving his fists in one blow. Diavolo uses this to kill his enemies quickly before they could blurt his identity out.]]
* MixAndMatchMan: Giorno Giovanna qualifies because his biological father is Dio Brando's head attached to Jonathan's body, causing several traits from both going to him.
* TheMobBossIsScarier: When Bucciarati announces his betrayal of Passione, the majority of the team is shaking in fear of The Boss' retaliation. Fortunately for Giorno and Bucciarati, only Fugo remains scared enough to stay behind.
* MundaneMacGuffinPerson: Trish Una is the recently discovered illegitimate daughter of Passione's Boss. All of the Boss' enemies want to capture and/or kill her, so she ends up under the protection of the heroes, thus driving most of the plot.
* MusicalThemeNaming:
** A continued trope. This part's theme is renowned artists of the [[TheSixties late '60s]] and [[TheSeventies early '70s]] such as Music/KingCrimson, Music/SexPistols, and Music/TheMoodyBlues along with a few contemporary rock and pop acts who were notable during publishing. Taken even further in the light novel sequel where three new Stands are introduced all of them taking their namesake from post-punk bands that first formed in the late 70's.
** Both the hero and the villain have Stands that allude to royalty (Giorno with Golden Experience by ''Prince'' and [[spoiler:Diavolo]] with ''King'' Crimson).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes N to Z]]
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: [[spoiler:Diavolo, which is Italian for ''Devil''.]] Not that anyone knows his name, though.
* NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters:
** Team Bucciarati. Unlike the rest of Passione (who are decidedly ''not'' neighborhood-friendly), Bucciarati's group is beloved by the general community, with even old people willingly going to them, a group of rogues with supernatural abilities and trouble surrounding them, for help. Bucciarati and Giorno only joined up with Passione in the first place to stop the mafia from dealing drugs, and their goal is to overthrow TheDon of Passione and insert one of their own in his place. [[spoiler: In fact, they outright openly rebel and gun for him when they learn the hard way that he is willing to kill his own daughter only because of the insane paranoid idea that she could be a clue to his identity, despite having never met the man in her life nor know anything about him. The personal targeting of an innocent and unrelated teenage girl was the last straw]].
** Giorno got into crime because of one of these. When he was a child, regularly bullied and abused, he found a man bleeding out in a patch of tall grass. The men who'd shot him asked Giorno where the man had gone, and Giorno lied, saving the injured man's life. That man was a powerful gangster in Naples, and after he recovered he made it a point to protect Giorno from a distance (his first act: having a "quick talk" with Giorno's abusive stepfather). The only person who ''ever'' treated Giorno well was in the Mafia, and that inspired him to go the same route.
* NiceJobFixingItVillain: Had [[spoiler: Diavolo confirmed Polnareff's death]] instead of [[BondVillainStupidity assuming him dead and walking away]], [[spoiler: he would have successfully killed his daughter and rest of Team Bucciarati with zero opposition, and would have continued to rule Italy in the shadows.]]
* NighInvulnerable: The Stand Notorious [=B.I.G=] cannot be killed first due to being a BlobMonster, but its user is already dead so the heroes are reduced to [[spoiler: simply tossing it into the ocean by destroying their plane.]]
* NoSell: [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem]] in a nutshell. [[spoiler:Any actions or processes attempted against Giorno are brought to zero the moment his enemies oppose him, thus every action is rendered moot. Even Diavolo's time erasing powers don't affect Gold Experience Requiem.]]
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: Lasting ''[[UpToEleven seven whole pages,]]'' Giorno's beatdown of Cioccolata is the biggest example of this trope in a franchise that made this trope a meme.
** Giorno gives another one to [[spoiler: ''Diavolo himself'']] after [[spoiler: Gold Experience Requiem evolves.]]
* NoOneSeesTheBoss: Apart from being full of Stand users, the gang Passione is unique by how secretive its Boss is. The Boss never directly interacts with his subordinates, sending proxies, using computers and leaving messages behind for his subordinates to read and obey, but otherwise no one knows what the Boss looks like. It's a very deliberate attempt from the Boss' part to make himself be seen more as a concept or an omnipotent being rather than a man who could be killed. It worked rather well, until word of his daughter came out.
* OddNameOut: Every [=JoJo's=] name begins with the letters "Jo", except '''Gio'''rno '''Gio'''vanna, mostly because the letter J does not exist in Italian.
* OffingTheOffspring: [[spoiler: The Boss wanted to kill his daughter personally so that his enemies could not use her to trace back to him.]]
* OneBulletLeft: During the fight between Mista and Sale, Mista is left with only one bullet. Proudly announcing it as if he was going to take full advantage of this one shot, Mista is, in fact, aiming to use Sex Pistols on Sale's own bullet to defeat him.
* OneHitKill:
** How [[spoiler:Diavolo]] deals with enemies, due in no small part to [[MegatonPunch King Crimson's strength]].
** The Requiem power unlocked by having someone stab the Arrow with their Stands is this. Gold Experience Requiem's power delves so much into metaphysics, even [[spoiler:Diavolo]]'s time erasure is outclassed completely.
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] is only known as "The Boss" until [[spoiler:Polnareff reveals it to the gang.]]
* OutOfBodyExperience: Being punched by Gold Experience causes one to think so fast the body cannot follow up and the consciousness can see their immobile body if it happens to visualize themselves moving into another position.
* PayEvilUntoEvil: [[spoiler: Diavolo's death loop]] represents a particularly extreme version of this trope, with an incredibly evil person being subjected to an incredibly torturous punishment for eternity.
* PietaPlagiarism: In Part 5, Giorno holds an injured Mista that way at the end of the White Album arc. Unlike other examples, the one who dies is their enemy Ghiaccio.
* PlotCoupon: In ''Vento Aureo'', the Arrow becomes a key item as it can [[spoiler: unlock Requiem Stands, said to always be able to surpass the likes of even King Crimson]].
* PragmaticAdaptation: The [=PS2=] game modified some of the Stand powers so that they would be more palatable in a straight-laced BeatEmUp genre; for example, Little Feet's shrinking activates instantaneously on Formaggio's targets, but wears off after a short period of time. It also significantly [[AdaptationDistillation pares down]] the number of fights[[note]]Zucchero, Sale, Melone, Squalo, Tizano, and Risotto aren't fought, instead showing up in the game's unlockable "Story drama" scenes and they have models viewable in the gallery[[/note]], and some of the plot points are modified to compact the story (Pericolo's assignment is given right after Giorno joins the group).
* ProfessionalKiller: La Squadra Esecuzioni, also known as the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Hitman Team]] are a rouge band of eccentric personalities that hunt down Team Bucciarati in a desperate attempt to discover the Boss's identity. [[spoiler: After Bucciarati and his team betray the organization, the boss's top bodyguards, Unità Speciale, also hunt down their group under direct orders from the boss.]]
* PsychoForHire: [[MadDoctor Cioccolata]] is an [[AxCrazy maniacal]] hitman with a HumanPet who is seen by everyone, even the boss, as a crazy, creepy psychopath. In the anime, it is implied that they were responsible for the brutal deaths of Sorbet and Gelato, which kick-starts La Squadra's motivation for hunting down the boss's identity.
* PutOnABus: [[spoiler: Following Bucciarati's betrayal of The Boss, Fugo refuses to go along with the rest of the protagonists and is dropped from the story altogether. He was originally meant to return as an enemy, but Araki felt that the heroes having to fight a former friend would be too dark.]]
* ReachingTowardsTheAudience: The first cover of ''Vento Aureo''.
* RecapEpisode: The first and (so far) only animated Part that includes ClipShow that details what happened during the course of the story. There are three episodes, each of them summarizes some events across the Part.
** ''Episode 13.5 - Inizio del Vento Aureo'': The first recap episode, it is mostly focusing on the various battles that the protagonists go through as well as the route that Team Bucciarati takes throughout Italy.
** ''Episode 21.5 - Determinazione'': The second recap episode, this episode retells each of Team Bucciarati's members' backstories as well as showing their respective resolves and reason for following Bucciarati. It also recounting current situations of the conflict between Team Bucciarati and Squadra Esecuzioni.
** ''Episode 28.5 - Determinazione'': The third and final recap episode, this episode retelss Trish Una's backstory and Team Bucciarati's mission of protecting her. It also retelling now defected Team Bucciarati's first encounter against Unita Speciale, Boss' personal bodyguard.
* RecruitedFromTheGutter: Narancia was first spotted by Fugo trying to scavenge garbage cans, but was later accepted into Passione, although Bucciarati was against it.
* RedHerring: The plotline of finding out The Boss' true identity falls into this a bit. Almost the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'' is spent with various groups trying to dig up information about his past, certain that there must be ''something'' he's hiding that would be a weakness for him. [[spoiler: Once we actually find out the Boss' identity, it turns out he really wasn't hiding any inherent weakness, nor was he anybody they would recognize. He was just ''that'' paranoid]]. What lessens this somewhat is that he ''is'' revealed to be more important in the grand scheme of things than one might assume at first glance, [[spoiler: being the one who discovered the Stand Arrows and sold them to DIO's service, and therefore being an indirect but deciding reason why Part 3 played out the way it did and why everything from Part 4 onward happened at all. His origins do trace back to the Requiem Arrow, but even he wasn't aware of its true properties until toward the end of the part]]. In other words, TheReveal of his identity wasn't actually that much of a game-changer in the context of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler: but it did have huge implications for the series as a whole]].
* RefugeInAudacity: The rest of the gang quickly learns that when Giorno does something completely weird, out there, or seemingly inexplicable, it's going to end in success. Perhaps the earliest example of this is, after fighting Bucciarati, he outright ''tells'' him he's going to [[DefeatMeansFriendship become his ally]] and it ''works.''
* ResurrectionDeathLoop: [[spoiler:Diavolo is struck by this in the final fight of Part 5. After receiving a thorough CurbStompBattle by the newly awakened Gold Experience Requiem he also begins to be affected by Requiem's 'back to zero' effect, which in his case means he constantly dies over and over, always in a different way. He can't ever escape from it, making it both this and AFateWorseThanDeath.]]
* {{Retirony}}: Right before [[spoiler:Narancia]] dies they begin talking about everything they're going to do once the Boss is defeated. [[spoiler:Wanting to get through highschool, being there for Trish, seeing Fugo again, eating some piping hot pizza and getting his life together]]. Unfortunately you seeing this trope here means that they couldn't do any of this.
* RodandReelRepurposed: Pesci's Stand, Beach Boy, is a fishing rod capable of three things: it's capable of tracking people and literally fishing them out from other rooms, it can phase through any and all objects including skin, and attacking the line simply reflects damage.
* RousingSpeech: Giorno is fond of making motivational speeches about subjects such as one's resolve or growth following/followed by a badass move.
* {{Sadist}}: Cioccolata's entire character essentially revolves around this, with him being [[MadDoctor a doctor who would intentionally put completely healthy patients under surgery and intentionally inject not enough anesthesia so that his patients wake up mid-operation.]] He joined Passione for the same reason, and has his [[ThisIsMyHuman human pet Secco]] record him killing his targets and whatever other collateral damage from his stand so that he can view their pain later.
* SceneryPorn: ''Vento Aureo'' is basically a tour through a hand-drawn version of Italy with Stand battles thrown in. The anime goes a step further by showing beautiful, panning birds-eye shots of the locations that the gang visits while narration provides a brief description of the place's history.
* ScottyTime: A downplayed example, but once Bucciarati's group reaches Sardinia, and he asks Abbachio how long it will take for Moody Blues to rewind and replay the actions of the boss's only known lover:
-->'''Abbachio''': If we're going back 15 years... It might take 8-10 minutes.\\
'''Bucciarati''': Do it in five.
* ScrewDestiny: [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem's]] use of his power is an exaggerated example. He outright admits that Epitaph's prediction of [[spoiler:Giorno's death]] is absolutely true and is "going to happen", but that he nevertheless [[RealityWarper won't let anyone reach that moment]].
* SecretTestOfCharacter: Polpo's test is this. He asks the initiates to carry a lighter for twenty-four hours, never allowing it to go out. However, the flame is incredibly weak, making it extremely difficult to keep lit for that long, as well as getting through the prison security. The secret is that re-igniting it causes his Stand to appear and stab them with an arrow, where the ''true'' test of whether they'll create a Stand or die commences. It's not so much as a test of trust, more that it's a test of strength. And as Polpo notes, if somehow, someone manages to keep the lighter on, Passione gains a regular but clever member.
* SeinfeldianConversation: Usually held around the dining table by Team Bucciarati, mostly between Mista and Narancia.
* ShadowWalker: Black Sabbath can teleport through intersecting shadows, but is otherwise unable to walk out of them.
* ShootTheMedicFirst: Tizziano and Squalo try this tactic in ''Vento Aureo''. Aware that Giorno can heal his teammates, the duo do their best to lure him into a trap alone by manipulating Narancia. They remarkably succeed, but fail to kill Giorno in time.
* ShootingAtYourOwnProjectiles
** Early in Mista's fight with Sale, Mista manages to shoot his opponent in the head. Unfortunately for Mista, Sale's Stand, Kraft Work, stops the bullet's momentum, which leaves it lodged in Sale's skull while Sale himself is otherwise unharmed and able to keep going. Mista's finishing move in that fight is to shoot a second bullet into the exact same bullet hole, causing the second shot to hit the first and drive it even deeper into Sale's brain.
** With Giorno's help, Mista shoots a metal bolt with a bullet that launches the former into the head of Ghiaccio, who is protected by his Stand White Album. Mista then fires more bullets at the bolt to knock Ghiaccio unconscious.
* ShoutOut:
** As a work centered on the Mafia, there are naturally a few shout outs to Mario Puzo's crime novel Film/TheGodfather:
*** The plot thread of Narancia contracting an eye infection after losing his mother and wandering the streets, only to have it healed after being "adopted" into Bucciarati's gang and then being angrily told to continue his education is note-for-note ''identical'' to that of Tom Hagen, the informally-adopted Irish on and lawyer of the Corleone Family.
*** Gelato choking to death swallowing the towel stuffed in his mouth as he watched his lover Sorbet hacked to pieces alive by Cioccolata is identical to how a victim of a double-murder committed by Luca Brazi, the Corleone Head Enforcer and hitman, died watching his friend dismembered limb-by-limb with a fire-axe.
*** The final panels with the hand-kissing in a sign of loyalty to [[spoiler: the new Don, Giorno Giovanna]] while Mista observes in the distance, much like the iconic final scene of the first movie with Don Michael Corleone having a hand-kissing and Kay observes.
** The way Sorbet's body was hacked into pieces and preserved in cases filled with formaldehyde is likely inspired by [[https://damienhirst.com/artworks/catalogue?category=23&p=0 some of Damien Hirst's artworks]], in which he preserves animal bodies (sometimes chopped into pieces) in formaldehyde solution; the most famous of them being [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Physical_Impossibility_of_Death_in_the_Mind_of_Someone_Living "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"]].
* SlidingScaleOfVillainEffectiveness: Doesn't exist in this part as every antagonist is smart (except Zucchero and Sale), comes equipped with a powerful Stand ability, and a good majority of them come close to emerging victorious.
* SpaghettiAndGondolas: Downplayed. Like in ''Battle Tendency'', Rome and Venice are still the most prominent cities shown in the series, with ''Vento Aureo's'' greatest plot twists occurring there, but Araki made an effort to feature other places such as Pompeii; Naples; or Capri, Sardegna; Naples being his favorite Italian city. The countryside is also featured at one point.
* SpannerInTheWorks: [[spoiler:Polnareff]]. He discovers the method of [[spoiler:awakening Requiem]], something The Boss nor any other Stand User was aware even existed, and ultimately decided to share this information with the heroes to help them defeat The Boss.
* SpellMyNameWithAnS: Prone to this, even more so than other ''[=JoJo=]'' parts, due to the complexities of taking Italian names that had already been transliterated into Japanese and then rendering them into English. Bucciarati is an excellent example: no one is really sure if he's supposed to be named "Bruno Buccellati" (a logical approximation of his first name, and a [[ThemeNaming last name taken from an Italian fashion designer]]), "[[JapaneseRanguage Blono/Brono]] Bucciarati" (an ''accurate'' transliteration of his Japanese name), or some combination of the two. Not even Shueisha, Lucky Land, or Araki are quite sure, considering how both variations appear in the 25th anniversary ''JOJOVELLER'' art book. Even the name of the part itself is subject to some debate, with ''Vento Aureo'' being the more dominant term over the years due to the official use in Japanese media and most English releases favoring it. However, with the debut of the anime, ''Golden Wind'' has become more popular.
* SpoilerOpening:
** As with previous adaptations, the first opening "Fighting Gold" has some subtle hints about the events of the story, meant more for attentive fans than giving away a twist. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Narancia, and Abbachio's body silhouettes become black, unlike the other members of Passione, and in the pentultimate shot, they are all framed on the right side of the screen, making a subtle reference at their deaths]]. On a less subtle level, "Fighting Gold" also prominently features Trish, who wasn't previously shown in promotional material and didn't appear in the manga until her debut 29 chapters in.
*** In addition, a silhouette of [[spoiler:Bucciarati carved out of Rolling Stones]] can be seen in the background of the opening shot.
** The second opening "Uragirimono no Requiem" ("Traitor's Requiem") is even less subtle than the first in spoiling the second half of the story. The very ''first'' scene of the opening [[spoiler:is the very ''end'' of the series, when Giorno is made Boss of Passione.]] Other plot points spoiled include [[spoiler:Trish's stand Spice Girl (as well as her role as a fighter), Vinegar Doppio and his fight with Risotto, and parts of the final battle, including Giorno claiming the Stand Arrow, although Gold Experience Requiem isn't shown.]]
* SpontaneousChoreography: The infamous dance Narancia, Mista and Fugo join in on while torturing Zucchero features this, especially in the anime.
* StealthPun: TheHero of Part 5 is Dio's bastard son, and the BigBad is named [[spoiler:Diavolo]]. In other words, [[spoiler:[[BilingualBonus the son of God is fighting the Devil]]]].
* StevenUlyssesPerhero: Many of the musical references in the Stand names aren't just for show in this part. Sex Pistols can manipulate bullets, Aerosmith is an airplane, Little Feet makes things little, Beach Boy is a fishing rod, Talking Head prevents its victim from speaking correctly, and so on.
* StrongFamilyResemblance: A pretty perverted example with Trish and her ArchnemesisDad [[spoiler: Diavolo]]. Both of them have purple hair, and have a preference for {{Stripperific}} clothing. Also, both [[spoiler: King Crimson and Spice Girl]] have rather similar looking Stand designs. [[spoiler: Ironically, this familial resemblance is exactly what causes Diavolo to go after her, fearing her Stand abilities can be linked of his own.]]
* SupportingProtagonist: Giorno may be the eponymous Jojo (or [=GioGio=]) of the part, and is instrumental in a massive amount of fights, either through his actions or what he's figured out, but after joining Bucciarati's gang, he mostly passively goes along with what the rest of the group is doing plotwise.
* SuperMode: Essentially what the "Requiem" effect is the arrow has on Stands. A Stand struck by the arrow and which proves worthy receives a dramatic upgrade in which their old power is cast away (except in the case of Gold Experience, whose life-giving ability powered up after transforming) and they get a StoryBreakerPower which delves into the metaphysical.
* TheManyDeathsOfYou: [[spoiler:Diavolo is forced to live through many scenario in which he dies, unable to do anything about it because his death is set back to 0: the point right before he dies.]]
* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: Cioccolata's death is one of most brutal in the series, even if compared to the main villain's. Before the barrage, Cioccolata's been shot with a bullet to the head. Such bullet is transformed by Gold Experience into a stag beetle which proceeds to destroy his brain from inside out. Every single punch Gold Experience delivers afterward has expanding and delaying effects, putting him in lasting pain and suffering before he's thrown down a tall building and crashes full-speed into a garbage truck for combustible wastes.
* ThisIsMyHuman: Secco is the feral human pet for Cioccolata that speaks only in grunts and obeys his master's every command. Cioccolata even coddles him similar to how one would with a dog and gives him treats in the form of sugar cubes. He breaks this dog-like behavior, however, once learning of Cioccolata's death.
* ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman: When Zucchero attacks Bucciarati's team on their boat with Soft Machine, making everyone disappear after he basically deflates them like a balloon, Abbacchio's Moody Blues comes in handy as its power to mimic past events is perfect for investigating Zucchero's powers.
* TongueTied: The Stand Talking Head has this as its power. Crosses with CanNotSpitItOut as Narancia desperately tries to figure out a way to circumvent its ability and warn the others about a different enemy Stand.
* ToThePain: Formaggio uses his Stand Little Feet to [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrink down Narancia]] and trap him in a glass bottle along with a venomous spider (who appears to be a GiantSpider from his perspective). Formaggio then proceeds to describe, in detail, what the experience of being eaten by a spider would be like: first, he'd be injected with a paralyzing venom, then with digestive enzymes that would slowly liquefy his insides while keeping him conscious, until the spider is able to slurp him up. Thankfully, Narancia manages to fight off the spider (using a glass shard as an improvised shiv) and escape before getting bitten.
* TraintopBattle: The ''Grateful Dead'' arc features a battle inside an express train.
* TransformationSequence: One happens when Doppio lets [[spoiler:Diavolo]] take the reins of their shared body, which grows more muscular and the face changes completely alongside the hair.
* TranslationConvention: It's implied that everyone's speaking Italian instead of whatever language the viewer is watching in, as, in the first arc of the story, Giorno will compliment Koichi's fluent Italian.
* TrickBullet:
** Giorno gives Mista bullets that transform into trees to fire at Ghiaccio to knock him off their car and unfreeze it. The bullets themselves aren't special, but the heat from them is necessary for Gold Experience to sprout life in the sub-zero temperatures.
** When fighting Cioccolata, Giorno modifies some bullets that transform into a tree for Mista to fire at Cioccolata's helicopter to ensnare it. Later Giorno uses another bullet to transform into another tree to prevent him from falling, and kicks a section of its branch for it to later transform back into a bullet to fire itself into Cioccolata's head. Later, said bullet transforms into a beetle that burrows out of his head.
* TheUnfought: While Risotto Nero fights Doppio, he never fights the protagonists directly and [[spoiler: Narancia killing him was both an accident and a coincidence at the same time.]]
* {{Unperson}}: The Boss intentionally pulled this on himself due to having a near psychopathic obsession with his own anonymity. No one in Passione (and likely the entire world) knows his name or what he looks like due to his systematic erasure of anything that could lead back to him or his identity, and he only gives orders through a complex series of proxies and go-betweens that he is not above killing to preserve said anonymity if it is required.
* ViceCity: Naples at the beginning of the part is presented as a corrupt town where the mob is more feared by the police, and said police is also near totally corrupt or ineffective.
* VillainOfTheWeek: Much like ''Stardust Crusaders'', each new arc introduces a new villain for the protagonists. There's the two rival mobsters encountered before the protagonists meet Trish, the eight members of La Squadra who are the primary antagonists of the first half, and The Boss' five personal assassins who take over La Squadra's role in the second half. At least, for La Squadra Esecuzioni, the battles are tied into one another because the mere fact that one of the assassins manages to find the group forces them to move out immediately, pursued by the rest of La Squadra.
* WalkingWasteland: In ''Vento Aureo'', Purple Haze and Green Day can release respectively a flesh eating virus and a mold with exponential growth which can both kill people in seconds, infect victims indiscriminately and at high speed, and are able to kill the entire population of a city in minutes.
* WeAllLiveInAmerica:
** The main characters are [[TheMafia Italian gangsters]] who [[HonorAmongThieves despise the drug trade]]. Such beliefs are commonly attributed to {{Yakuza}}, but aren't generally associated with organized crimes much of anywhere else.
** While doing math, Narancia draws a ''[[{{Henohenomoheji}} henohenomoheji]]'' on the side of his paper (which is made of Japanese characters).
** Guido Mista has a deep superstitious fear of [[FourIsDeath number four]], as if he were Japanese. Italians actually fear seventeen the most. The InUniverse explanation is that his tetraphobia originates from his neighbor being attacked by a kitten who was born in a litter of four, which is a rather weak justification.
* WeHardlyKnewYe: Sorbet and Gelato, who was only shown in one panel and are hinted to be lovers just before they [[spoiler: are shown to be killed by Cioccolata and Secco.]] Meanwhile, Carne just appeared in one scene before he was killed by Mista, to the point that his name is [[AllInTheManual only revealed in the manual.]] Hell, Notorious B.I.G. is more well known than him.
* WhamLine: While recapping how he accidentally let [[spoiler:Polnareff]] live, [[spoiler:Diavolo]] reveals just how important he is to events after Part 2.
-->'''[[spoiler:Diavolo]]''': An old woman [[spoiler: named Enya who had 2 right hands]] told me she'd tell me how [[spoiler:the arrow]] worked in return for shooting some. I figured one will be more than enough, so [[spoiler: I sold the other five for a handsome sum]].
* WhamShot: The last panel of "Green Day and Oasis, part 12" which reveals that [[spoiler:the third party the gang is meeting at the Coliseum is none other than Jean-Pierre Polnareff.]]
* WholeCostumeReference: The colored version of the manga made an [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/jjba/images/1/12/Oldjanitor.png unnamed janitor]] wear [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]] clothing. Brown shoes, blue overalls, red long sleeved shirt and a red cap. Only thing missing was the white gloves.
* YouAllMeetInAnInn: In ''Vento Aureo'', Bucciarati's gang introduction features all the characters participating in a SeinfeldianConversation in a restaurant.
[[/folder]]
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->''"Arrivederci."''
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to:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/golden_wind_promo.png]]
[[caption-width-right:350:[[ThemeMusicPowerUp I, Giorno Giovanna,]] [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters have a dream that I know is just.]]]]

->''"You see, I'm planning to beat your boss, and take back this city for the people. To rid this city of drug dealing and child abusing mafiosi... I have no other choice but to become a mafioso myself."''
-->-- '''Giorno Giovanna'''

''Vento Aureo'' (黄金の風, lit. ''Golden Wind''), is part 5 of the long-running ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' series. It is preceded by ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Diamond is Unbreakable]]'' and followed by ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean Stone Ocean]]''. This part's original run on Magazine/ShonenJump went from 1995 to 1999.

Set in 2001, ''Vento Aureo'' stars Giorno Giovanna, the son of DIO who was conceived with Jonathan Joestar's body after his resurrection in the 1980s. Having inherited both the righteousness of the Joestars and the ruthless ambitions of DIO, following a massive crime wave in Italy, he seeks to take over TheMafia in order to turn it into an organization for good instead of crime. After a brief scuffle with a Stand-using mafia assassin named Bruno Bucciarati, the two realize that they share a common goal, and so Bucciarati allows Giorno to join his squadron of Stand-using gangsters, which also includes Leone Abbacchio, Guido Mista, Narancia Ghirga, and Pannacotta Fugo.

Giorno and Bucciarati's secret goal of overthrowing The Boss gets complicated when they receive an order to guard The Boss's daughter, Trish Una, from other members of the mob who want to take her hostage to take the mob for themselves. What follows is a road trip throughout all of Italy, fending off attacks from rival mobsters and culminating in a final confrontation with The Boss himself.

The events of the story were adapted by Creator/{{Capcom}} into a 2002 BeatEmUp for the UsefulNotes/PlayStation2. An international release was announced under the title ''[=GioGio=]'s Bizarre Adventure'' but was cancelled [[note]]Due to copyright issues involving Stand names (Mainly Music/{{Prince}} and "Gold Experience") and the obscurity of the series in global markets at the time[[/note]]. In October of 2018, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-M8ncaolysg a fan-translation patch into English was released for the game]]. Giorno and all members of Bucciarati's gang (barring Abbacchio) have been consistent fighters in the Creator/CyberConnect2 fighting games, ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureAllStarBattle'' and ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureEyesOfHeaven''.

Two {{light novel}}s have been released that feature stories based on ''Vento Aureo''. The first, ''Golden Heart, Golden Ring'', was released in 2001. It was written by Shotaro Miya and Gichi Otsuka, with illustrations by Araki, and features a story shortly after the first encounter with the Boss, and the apparent betrayal of one of the team members. The second light novel ''LightNovel/PurpleHazeFeedback'' was released as part of the series 25th anniversary celebrations in 2011. Written by Kouhei Kadono with illustrations provided by Araki, it is set after the events of ''Vento Aureo'' and follows Pannacota Fugo as he deals with the aftermath of decisions made in ''Vento Aureo''. However, as with other light novels created for the series, it has not been released outside of Japan and is generally treated as OptionalCanon.

On June 21, 2018, an anime adaptation by Creator/DavidProduction was announced, about 2 years after the same studio finished airing ''Diamond is Unbreakable''. The first episode premiered in Japan on July 5th, 2018. Following that, the entire 39-episode anime aired in Japan from October 5, 2018 to July 28, 2019, with a simulcast on Website/{{Crunchyroll}}. The English dub of the anime aired on Creator/{{Toonami}} from October 26, 2019 to October 24, 2020.
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!!How on Earth do all these tropes work, it makes no-- '''[[MemeticMutation IT JUST WORKS]]'''.

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Tropes # to D]]
* AbortedArc: Fugo was supposed to be revealed as the Boss's mole within Bucciarati's team and would have betrayed them at one point. However, Araki felt that it would be too depressing to actually portray a FaceHeelTurn so he decided to just let him quit the team without reappearing.
* AccidentalPervert:
** When the group is going to the train station by van, a sudden stop makes Fugo stumble and fall face-first onto Trish's chest. Mista then proceeds to pull a second-hand SuspiciouslySpecificDenial ("He's sorry! He totally didn't use the sudden stop as an excuse to feel your boobs or look up your skirt!"), until Fugo yells "[[DiggingYourselfDeeper Quit saying things that make it sound worse!]]"
** When Mista in Trish's body has to scratch under her skirt due to her garments being too tight, Trish (in Mista's body) understandably gets very angry and thinks that Mista was touching himself.
* ActorAllusion: Cioccolata, whose hair is green, just like his Stand Green Day, is voiced by Creator/AtsushiMiyauchi, who is the official Japanese dub voice of [[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk]] in the ''Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse''. Extra points Green Day is also big and sports a muscled body like Hulk.
** The English dub retains the same kind of allusion with Bill Butts, who is a bodybuilder on the side of being a voice actor.
* AdaptationalEarlyAppearance: A number of characters show up much earlier in the anime than in the manga. Most notably is La Squadra, whose members only reveal themselves in their arcs while initially they're only framed in shadow. In the anime their debut has them interact as a group and shows off each member's personality. In addition Sorbet's death is shown and his killer is revealed as [[spoiler:Ciocclata and Secco]].
* AdaptationExpansion:
** Downplayed example, but the Playstation 2 videogame adaptation recontextualized Giorno's scene with all the [=JoJos=] after defeating Black Sabbath as the game's AttractMode intro since Koichi isn't in this version. This allowed them to add Jonathan Joestar to the images of past [=JoJos=] above Giorno, since otherwise Jonathan is not included in either the manga or anime since, from a narrative point of view, Koichi never met him and nobody ever told him about Jonathan.
** The first episode of the anime spends some extra time showing the crime wave in Naples, as well as original scenes where Giorno steals back a wallet from a pickpocket and returns it kindly its proprietor, only for him to snatch two bank notes for himself, and Leaky-Eye Luca shaking down a man for doing business in his territory, which is how he found out about Giorno.
** The second episode expands on Giorno's backstory, and gives a little characterization to the gangster he helped in his childhood; cruel but just, he killed a father who was selling drugs to children, and didn't bat an eyelid when his victim's son threatened to shoot him in grief. It also shows what Giorno looked like as an adolescent and teenager before he got his blond hair.
** Abbachio's backstory in the manga never explained how he actually ''joined'' Passione after his partner's death, so the anime added two short original scenes where Bucciarati visits Abbachio's apartment and asks him to join the gang. It also canonizes a fan theory that Abbachio became TheAlcoholic after being fired from the police force.
** La Squadra Esecuzioni gets expanded on quite a bit with episode 10 establishing their personalities much earlier than in the manga and even show them performing an assassination. Even Sorbet and Gelato's deaths are expanded upon, showing the silhouettes of Cioccolata and Secco with the former doing the killing and the latter filming it.
** The manga did not elaborate much on Pannacotta Fugo's backstory, other than him being accepted into a university at a young age only to be kicked out after beating a professor with an encyclopedia. In the anime, Fugo was being sexually harassed by the teacher, which is why he lashed out at him. The assault resulted in him being abandoned by his family, becoming a thief to survive, and being caught during a dine-and-dash only for Bucciarati to come to his aid and invite him to join the gang. ''LightNovel/PurpleHazeFeedback'' gives a different account of the event, where the motive for the assault was that Fugo was being criticized for letting his grandmother's death affect his grades.
** Episode 12 has a post-credit scene of Risotto coming across a dead body at a train station and finding a burnt photograph. [[spoiler:The corpse is Pericolo's after he relayed the instructions for Bucciarati's gang to head to Venice and killed himself. This scene explains how La Squadra knew how the gang were heading to Venice]], though first-time viewers would not understand the context.
** In Episode 35 [[spoiler: right after Narancia's death, Fugo is seen returning to Naples and wandering near their restaurant, only to stop and look further, as if sensing Narancia's passing]].
* AdaptedOut: To keep the focus of the game on Giorno and his journey, as well as their minimal roles to begin with, Koichi and Jotaro are nowhere to be seen in the [=PS2=] game. They have an audio drama in the game's OST at least.
* AerithAndBob: a [[DownplayedTrope downplayed]] and truly bizarre example, but characters in this part tend to have full names in which one half will be realistic (Guido, Leone), and the other will be a [[EdibleThemeNaming silly reference to food]] (Pannacotta, Narancia).
* AfterlifeWelcome: When [[spoiler:Abbacchio]] dies, the scene changes to him sitting outside a cafe and meeting a police officer. Said police officer turns out to be [[spoiler:his old deceased partner]] who tells him that he's dead when he tries getting on a nearby bus to get back to the others.
* AnachronismStew: In the anime, during Mista's flashback (which is presumably set in the year 2000) a cinema is shown with posters of ''Film/TheMartian'' (2015), ''Film/WarHorse'' (2011) and ''Film/TheDarkKnight'' (2008).
* AnIcePerson: Ghiaccio's stand, White Album, allows him to freeze the area around him to extremely low temperatures, to the point of being able to freeze the air around him. His stand also comes with it's own [[AnIceSuit ice suit]].
* AnIceSuit: As stated above, Ghiaccio's White Album allows him to make an extremely durable suit of ice that allows him to avoid being frozen to death by his own stand. It even comes with [[RollerbladeGood ice skates, which he can use to skate on non-ice surfaces]].
* AnimationBump: While the anime is well animated in general, the scene where King Crimson's ability is revealed in full ramps up the quality several notches to jaw-dropping levels.
* AntiHero: All of the protagonists are {{Pragmatic Hero}}es since they are gangsters and have no reservations about killing their enemies.
* AntiVillain: La Squadra whose goals are to take out The Boss in vengeance for their deceased allies.
* AnyoneCanDie: One of the most brutal parts in this regard. Aside from the minor antagonists working for Passione, and the members of La Squadra, [[spoiler: Abbacchio, Narancia, and Bucciarati end up being the biggest losses on the protagonist's side. And even returning characters aren't safe--Jean-Pierre Polnareff from Part 3 returns only to be fatally impaled by King Crimson soon after (though his spirit ''does'' survive within Coco Jumbo)]]
* ArcWords: "Resolve" (or "Kakugo" in Japanese). Often associated with and symbolic of Giorno, but is shared with his comrades and enemies alike as the story goes. Can be used in both noun and verb form, but generally translates to something with the effect of readiness to do something dangerous and/or costly without a second thought. Has also been translated as "preparedness", "consciousness", "determination", etc, leading to the catch-all word being [[LostInTranslation watered down through the different contexts]].
* ArchnemesisDad: Trish joins the fight against her scumbag of a father, who not only is a ruthless mob boss, but also tried to kill her.
* ArtisticLicenseBiology
** While some studies show that women can have lower body temperatures, the difference is negligible. That being said, Trish shouldn't be aging that slowly from The Grateful Dead with only a few wrinkles compared to the rest of the gang's shriveled up bodies.
** Risotto Nero's Stand Metallica can create objects such as razors, nails, or scissors out of the iron in one's blood. In reality, the human body only contains about 4 grams of iron, absolutely not enough for scissors. A few razors or nails would actually be plausible, however.
* ArtShift: In the anime, Jotaro's photograph of the Crusaders is done in Part 3's style, since the Part 3 anime features the scene of the picture being taken. [[spoiler:Polnareff's flashback to the group visiting the Giza Pyramids is also done in a similar way; though not as evident, the Crusaders have the clearly defined musculature of Part 3's artstyle. Whereas the flashback of Jotaro and Polnareff deciding to track the Stand Arrows have them in Part 5's art style.]]
* AscendedMeme:
** Robert Fripp acknowledged the "it just works" meme in a Facebook post.
** Phillip Reich's [[https://youtu.be/-vCw1tMAn0A announcement]] as the English voice of Giorno is based on the "Coda" memes.
* AssassinOutclassin: Whereas many antagonistic Stand users are specifically sent to kill the heroes, La Squadra Esecuzioni are professional assassins. All but one are defeated by the gang, though.
* AssholeVictim: The woman targeted by Melone on the stopped train for Babyface to bear a child assassin to hunt down Team Bucciarati made her debut by [[RichBitch showing a snobbish contempt for her fellow passengers,]] and when Melone left, she intended to [[FrivolousLawsuit sue the train company despite the staff being as respectful and helpful as they could to her, ESPECIALLY after what all the passengers just went through.]] That being said, not only was her scene with Babyface framed in a way that looked liked it '''raped''' her, Junior disintegrated her shortly after pissing down her neck.
* BadPowersGoodPeople: Fugo's [[PoisonousPerson Stand power]] is so lethal and disgusting that even his friends are creeped out by it. However, he's still one of the good guys, [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters sort of]].
* TheBerserker: Fugo, and by extension his Stand Purple Haze, are this. Fugo has a legendarily short temper and has stabbed or beaten Narancia on more than one occasion for ''screwing up a math problem'', and Purple Haze is one of the few Stands shown to have a personality outside of that which its User ascribes to it because it's ''that consistently pissed off.''
* BilingualBonus: Since this part takes place in Italy, Italian phrases come up now and then; The Boss' messages to his capos and Giorno's subconscious writing on the plane, for a couple of examples. In the anime, they are fully shown on screen, so those who know the language could just read it from there. However, it gets subverted because the characters will just read it out loud in Japanese, making its contents more readily available for the audience.
* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Diavolo is sent to an infinite amount of deaths by Gold Experience Requiem's power at the end of the story and Giorno was able to become the Boss. But it came at the cost of Abbacchio, Naranchia and Bucciarati's lives.]]
* BloodIron: Risotto's Stand, Metallica, is capable of manipulating iron, including the iron present in the blood of a person. Being an Mafia assassin, his methods aren't pleasant to watch; those unfortunate enough to be within Metallica's range will find themselves coughing out ''razor blades'' from their throats, and will discover all sorts of sharp, nasty objects protruding from their face and neck. This way, Risotto can eventually cause his victims to die of suffocation by robbing them of the iron needed to transport precious oxygen, to the point their blood turns ''yellow''.
* BloodierAndGorier: While ''[=JoJo=]'' is quite a gory series especially for a shonen, ''Vento Aureo'' is even gorier and more violent than previous parts. Especially because there's very little censoring in the anime. The "King Crimson vs. Metallica" arc in particular is full of gruesome wounds. The more serious shift in body horror can also be attributed to Giorno possessing healing abilities as to heal said gruesome injuries.
* BlueMeansCold: Ghiacco, whose name means "ice" in Italian, has blue hair and his Stand White Album can freeze things and control ice.
* BodyHorror:
** Purple Haze ''melts'' his victims down after finishing with them, as [[spoiler: Illuso]] can attest to.
** Risotto Nero's Metallica does this in spades. [[spoiler: Not only did he use Doppio's own iron to attack him, but also Doppio's blood turned yellow due to lack of iron in his body, ''making him unable to breathe''. If Diavolo didn't trick Narancia into shooting Risotto, the Boss and Doppio would have died a gruesome death]].
** Cioccolata's Green Day [[spoiler: dissolves people if the mold generated by it is fast enough. And also, Cioccolata can ''sever'' his body parts in order to levitate while using his mold to prevent blood loss.]]
** [[spoiler:Bucciarati's flesh began to melt as Secco's stand ability is to turn everything to mud. It got to the point where his fingers bent so hard it broke when he touched his face and we can see the bone of his finger.]]
** The mutations that [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]] forces on living things around him include extra eyes and heads, weird insectoid limbs and horrifying unidentifiable lumps.
* BondOneLiner: Some of the heroes have a cool one-liner after their {{Kiai}}:
--> '''Bucciarati (after defeating Pesci) and Trish (after defeating Notorious B.I.G.)''': Arrivedeci. (Farewell)
--> '''Narancia (after defeating Squalo)''': Volare via. (Go flying)
* BondVillainStupidity: How [[spoiler: Polnareff lives long enough to contact Team Bucciarati even with Diavolo giving him a CurbStompBattle]].
* BookDumb: Narancia may not be able to make a simple multiplication, but he is still a resourceful Stand user.
* BookEnds:
** Giorno's first Stand duel is against Bucciarati, and he uses Gold Experience's life shot ability to accelerate his opponent's senses and give him an OutOfBodyExperience. This happens again at the halfway point of the story when [[spoiler:Diavolo's time erasure makes Bucciarati see a vision of his past self]], and again when [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem reverses time and makes Diavolo see images of his past selves]].
** The beginning of Traitor's Requiem, the opening for the second part of the anime, involves a door and then what looks like a man kissing somebody's hand. [[spoiler:That's the ending of Vento Aureo - where the "hand" they're kissing is Giorno's hand after he took over Passione.]]
** In the first episode of the anime, the story starts with Giorno looking at his surroundings with a light smile on his face, followed with golden sparkles flies around him. [[spoiler:After Diavolo's defeat, Giorno looking at his surroundings, this time with stern facial expression and more golden sparkles flies around him.]]
** The first song in the anime adaption's first OST is "il vento d'oro" (golden wind). The second last song in the final OST is "fine della vento aureo" (end of the golden wind), a slowed down version of the original. This is also a nod to Giorno's stand power which can speed up people's thought processes causing them to perceive the world moving in slow motion (including the song if they were listening to it).
* BossGame: The game based on ''Vento Aureo'' is nothing but 22 chapters of bosses (excluding one that involves Mista avoiding Secco and his Stand Oasis and another that is dedicated to [[spoiler:Abbaccio's death]]).
* BrickJoke: Starting from episode 2 to episode 19, the anime adaptation had Jodeci's [[IntercourseWithYou "Freek'n You"]] as the ending theme. Most anime viewers first heard the ED with some confusion, but quickly got used to it as part of the general '''FABULOUSNESS''' of the franchise. Then came Episode 19, with the infamous park bench scene with Giorno and Mista, and when the sultry R&B of the end theme hit after the scene, the true purpose of the ED was revealed. (A significant amount of the manga readers predicted this would happen, and just as the story shifted to the next arc, the ED was changed to "Modern Crusaders".)
** Early in the anime Fugo mentions that Mista damaged the car. During the "Sleeping Slaves arc" (at the end of Part 5) we see how that happened.
* BullyHunter: More subtle than most, but Giorno's dream to become the Don of Italy is so that the Mafia will once again ''protect'' the weak and innocent as they once did, rather than prey on and victimize them. Point in fact, witness his terrifying TranquilFury as he tricks a ''Capo'' into swallowing a gun for casually murdering a helpless old janitor who worked at his middle school.
* BuryYourGays: While they aren't explicitly confirmed to be homosexual, the interactions between Squalo and Tiziano are ''heavily'' implicative of them being a couple, leading to them being the perfect candidates for enforcing this trope when they're both killed off by Narancia to protect Bucciarati's team once they've gone rogue.
** There's also Sorbet and Gelato, two [[PosthumousCharacter Posthumous Characters]] who are heavily implied to be a couple.
* CallBack:
** In the anime, when [[spoiler:Polnareff]] explains the nature of the Stand Arrow, it plays a brief snippet of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2fmArRXjp8 Fists of Platinum]]" from the ''Manga/StardustCrusaders'' anime over silhouettes of the Crusaders themselves and their Stands.
** In [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FH2tdw8oQWQ the final OP]], Giorno's pose as [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem resets time]] is a dead ringer for [[Manga/StardustCrusaders his father's]] most iconic one.
* CallForward:
** In the anime, during the sequence where Zucchero is tortured, the scene cuts to a stylized graphic of his head being brutalized in between clips of the dancing gang members. [[https://twitter.com/golden_wolfram/status/1063852934935527425 As explained here]], those cutaways are actually early hints at the three unrevealed stands.
** Also in the anime, the first OP and the second ED feature statues. At the base of both are spherical boulders; for anyone who has reached the end of the original manga, they may recognize these rocks as Rolling Stones, the Stand that foretold the fates of Bucciarati's group.
* CarCushion: In the ''Sleeping Slaves'' arc, Mista jumps down six stories and luckily lands on Fugo's car. To be fair, Mista knew that he wouldn't die because Rolling Stones didn't predict his death so he was free to take any risk.
* CarnivalOfKillers: The Boss's Guard Squad tasked with killing traitors of Passione is one of them. There's also the members of La Squadra who the protagonists encounter in the first half of the story.
* CastingGag:
** Creator/KenshoOno voicing Giorno for the TV Anime continues the tradition of Onos voicing [=JoJos=], following the footsteps of Creator/DaisukeOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Jotaro]]) and Creator/YukiOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Part 4 Josuke]]). In fact, Kensho sharing his surname with the latter two is why he got to voice Giorno to begin with.
** Creator/KyleMcCarley once again [[LightNovel/{{Durarara}} voices an ill-tempered gangster who is]] OlderThanTheyLook who gets stabbed in the hand with a pen.
** This isn't the first time Creator/KellenGoff voices [[Manga/MyHeroAcademia a crime boss who is also a really lousy father]].
* CentralTheme: As mentioned above in ArcWords, "resolve".
* CerebusSyndrome: Started to kick in with this part. Whereas parts 1 through 4 are traditional lighthearted shounen battle series with the occasional mature themes this is where it starts to become clear that Araki wanted to move away from Shounen Jump. This part in particular features some of the most gruesome violence in the series, antagonists who are just as sympathetic as the protagonists, many major character deaths, and characters having tragic backstories. All of these would carry over into the future parts.
* TheChosenOne: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] fancies himself being chosen and favoured by Fate itself, claiming it is his right to lord over everyone and take the Arrow for himself.
* ChuckCunninghamSyndrome: The introductory story arc is told primarily from Koichi Hirose's perspective as he's robbed by Giorno, and then he comes back again a short while later playing a key part in the fight with Black Sabbath. After that, he (and his reporting to Jotaro) are never so much as mentioned again. The anime deals with this by having Koichi decide that he's learned everything about Giorno that he needs to know, and that he's going to go sightseeing for a bit before returning home and reporting to Jotaro.
* CleavageWindow: If there's a male equivalent to this trope, then Giorno and Bucciarati's outfits ([[UpToEleven as well as a bunch of other characters]]) both qualify for it.
* ClosedCircle: The fight with [[BlobMonster Notorious B.I.G]] is made scarier by the fact that the gang are all stuck on an airplane over the ocean.
* ConflictingLoyalty: Bruno Bucciarati is conflicted between his disgust of drugs and his duty towards Passione, who is dealing them in the streets. When [[spoiler:Diavolo attempts to murder his daughter, Trish, who the gang had spent most of the part protecting]], he chooses his side and revolts against the Boss.
* ContrastingSequelAntagonist: The antagonists of ''Stardust Crusaders'' and ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' were regular people/thugs who happened to be given Stand powers. As such some of them were pretty incompetent while the best ones were either smart or got lucky because they had powerful Stand abilities. In this part however the antagonists are all professional killers who by nature are smart and cunning on top of the fact that their Stand abilities are very useful.
* ContrastingSequelMainCharacter: Despite being recognized as the most morally grey of the original [=JoJos=], Giorno is the only one who goes after the main villain of his own free will, rather than the villain removing their choice by making it personal. This directly contrasts the previous protagonist, Josuke, who initially believed that Kira wasn't their problem if he wasn't a Stand User. This leaves Giorno as a wild card to the villains for almost the whole way (even at the end the BigBad sees Bucciarati as his nemesis and Giorno as just some newbie), contrary to Josuke's very strong spotlight. Thematically, this lines up with Giorno being descended from a villain, as he [[VillainsActHeroesReact acts while the other [=JoJos=] reacted]].
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: [[spoiler:All of the Hitman Team are hit with this fate after their encounters with Giorno and the gang. Meanwhile, Sorbet and Gelato became the victims of Cioccolata and Secco to warn the Hitman Team to never trying to find out the Boss's true identity.]]
* CreatorProvincialism: A few characters are seen bowing in gratitude, Mista mentions the RedStringOfFate and is superstitious about the [[FourIsDeath number four being unlucky]]. These are all drawn from Japanese culture despite the story's Italian setting. Likewise, the attitudes of the main characters towards [[DrugsAreBad drugs]] are more characteristic of yakuza than of Italian mafiosi.
* DarkerAndEdgier: While still having some of the self-aware charm of the previous parts, ''Vento Aureo'' plays itself more straight, and is a lot more brutal with its violence. There's also the fact that the main protagonists are anti-heroes who kill people, some of the villains are well-intentioned, and Araki's famous AnyOneCanDie rule is taken to an extreme.
* TheDarknessBeforeDeath: Halfway through the comic, [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati is killed by the BigBad and healed by TheProtagonist's Stand]], allowing him to keep moving forward and fight out of sheer will, until the final chapters of the comic, where [[spoiler:his blindness makes him realize that he's running out of will and strength to fight, and will be dead for real soon]].
* DeadlyRemoteControlToy: Narancia's Stand, Aerosmith, resembles a remote-controlled toy plane. It can fire bullets, drop bombs, and track enemies with its radar by monitoring their breathing.
* DefectorFromDecadence: Bucciarati had already some ConflictingLoyalty about Passione's drug business and passively let Giorno do his thing. However, when he sees how The Boss is willing to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter because she's a liability]], he immediately and openly rebels against the gang.
* DisneyAcidSequence: The anime adaptation adds trippy visuals to the infamous "torture dance" scene, presumably representing Zucchero going crazy from the pain of [[EyeScream getting his eyeball cooked by concentrated sunlight]].
* DiscOneFinalBoss: Ghiaccio is the last member of La Squadra that the protagonists face off against with his fight concluding the first half of the story.
* DoingInTheWizard: Stands, introduced as a mystic power, are now explained as an alien virus infecting worthy people and granting them power. It still doesn't explain ''why'' a virus from a meteorite gives people highly-specified psychic powers and seemingly draws them together, but some explanation is better than none.
* DramaticIrony:
** Giorno doesn't learn of his father's connection to the Joestars, even when he comes across [[spoiler:Polnareff]] in the climax. [[spoiler:Polnareff himself was stranded in Italy with no way to contact Jotaro for help, making it painfully ironic how Jotaro had Giorno investigated partly out of grief for his friends killed by Dio during his journey in Egypt.]]
** Towards the end, Bucciarati is gravely injured and deprived of most of his senses while being helped up by an enemy he thinks is Trish. He asks "her" to start a new life on his hometown once everything is done with. Previously, the real Trish was upset Bucciarati was acting too cold towards his team.
* DramaticUnmask: [[spoiler: Diavolo]], who was TheFaceless for the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'', finally and climactically drops the mask of [[spoiler: Doppio in front of Polnareff in the Colosseum of Rome.]]
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: [[spoiler: How Diavolo kills Abbacchio and Narancia]].
* DrugsAreBad: Giorno Giovanna's primary motivation in becoming the new Don of Italy is so that the new Mafia that he rules over will be one that will ''not'' sell drugs ''period'', especially to innocent children.
* DubNameChange: While it was rather minor in previous installments, this one is shaping to have the most prevalent name changes for the Stand names. The show's lawyers must've had a field day with this series.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes E to M]]
* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
** When [[spoiler: Diavolo]] first appeared while shrouded in shadows, he had shorter hair and he was wearing a business suit, not unlike your typical mob boss. However, by the time he made his first physical appearance, he was given long hair and an outfit that wouldn't look out of place in a death metal concert.
** Gold Experience's early abilities don't really line up with what it's consistently shown to be able to do later on. For example, its AttackReflector ability was quickly dropped after being used once (Luca trying to kill a frog with his shovel), and its ability to give a person more life energy and cause an OutOfBodyExperience is only used in his fight with Bucciarati before going unused again (although this does make a bit of sense, since Giorno didn't have many opportunities to punch an opponent), though it is possible that the latter does still occur but isn't highlighted.
** When Bucciarati first appeared, he was much more ruthless, as he interrogated Giorno by showing him Leaky-Eye Luca's severed fingers and seemed legitimately loyal to the Boss. This is a stark contrast from the NobleDemon he's established to be after his and Giorno's fight.
* EdibleThemeNaming: Many characters in ''Vento Aureo'' are named after Italian foods. Examples include Pannacotta Fugo, Leone Abbacchio, Risotto Nero, Melone, Cioccolata, Gelato, Sorbet (which is not actually Italian, the correct word being "sorbetto"), Prosciutto, Pesci, Formaggio, and Mario Zucchero.
* ElephantInTheLivingRoom: Giorno and Bucciarati both know that [[spoiler:Bucciarati is undead after his fight with King Crimson]], but are too disturbed by the thought to tell their teammates.
* EliteMooks: The assassins deployed in Venezia (Squalo, Tiziano, and Carne) are referred to as The Boss's Elite Guard.
* ElsewhereFic: Bears less relation to the overall MythArc than the other stories of the first six parts, focusing on its own characters within its own setting. The only real relation aside from [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Jotaro and Koichi's]] presence at the beginning is that Part 5 [[spoiler:reveals more about the arrows, and how this part's BigBad is unknowingly the perpetrator of every tragedy after Part 2]] and [[spoiler:features a very prominent appearance by [[JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Polnareff]]]]. Even the most obvious connection between ''Vento Aureo'' and the actions of DIO, that Giorno is DIO's bastard son, is never properly followed up on and serves more as a [[CentralTheme thematic]] than a narrative device.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: The anime adds in a moment where Giorno is introduced stealing back a woman’s wallet from a pickpocket, showing his kindness. He then uses Gold Experience to snatch a generous helping of Lire from the wallet, showing his cunning and that he’s not above being the lesser evil.
* EvenEvilHasStandards: [[spoiler: Diavolo]] may flood Italy with drugs and be petty enough to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter for unjustified paranoia]], but even he's disgusted to send Cioccolata and Secco after the gang, risking total destruction of Rome just to get few people. [[spoiler: Diavolo]] even calls them the scum of Passione.
** He doesn't do anything to a child [[spoiler: who witnessed him transforming from Doppio to Diavolo]], instead letting him go safe and sound.
* EveryoneHasStandards:
** Bucciarati and Giorno break the ice when the latter realizes the former, despite being a mafioso whose family deals hard drugs, is not okay with said drugs being sold to teens.
** La Squadra Esecuzioni are the hitmen of Passione and won't bat an eyelash if bystanders are hit during their hits, but even they are grossed out when they find out what happened to Sorbet and Gelato.
* EveryCarIsAPinto:
** During his fight against Formaggio, Narancia blasts all the cars on the street apart with Aerosmith's bullets, detonating multiple fiery explosions to force his smaller opponent to reveal himself.
** Later, Mista shoots the engine of the motorboat Narancia is on to make it explode, propelling him onto the shore.
* EvolvingCredits:
** The second ED, Modern Crusaders, showcases all Stands shown so far, and Notorious B.I.G., Spice Girl, Metallica, Green Day & Oasis, and [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]] are included as they are introduced. By the final episode, [[spoiler:Rolling Stones bears Bucciarati's image and Gold Experience is replaced with Gold Experience Requiem.]]
** The second version of the second opening, Traitor's Requiem, shows Doppio [[spoiler:transforming into Diavolo, and once again, the main villain uses their time powers [[OnceASeason to interrupt the opening]]]], starting in Episode 34.
** In the final two episodes, the opening changes one more time to have [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem nullifying Diavolo's King Crimson while the second verse of Traitor's Requiem plays.]]
* ExtremelyShortTimespan: While most ''[=JoJo=]'' parts take place over the span of months, ''Vento Aureo'' takes place over the course of a scant ''8 days'', from the moment Giorno steals Koichi's luggage to the very end. Yes, this is the amount of time Giorno goes from being a complete newbie to Passione to [[spoiler:becoming the boss]].
* EyeCatch: Stand stats still function as these in the anime, but Vento Aureo departs slightly from the format used in the previous two parts; the eyecatches kick off with a spinning coin based off of a vintage Italian 500 lira coin, with the Stand stats featured on the blank face of it, and a segment of the main theme playing for its duration.
* TheFaceless: At four points in ''Vento Aureo'' a mysterious character whose face Araki doesn't want to reveal is seen entirely shrouded in shadow.
** Sale is the first one, being faceless while having a conversation with his partner Zucchero in the car, prior to Team Bucciarati sailing to Capri.
** Prosciutto is the second and most ludicrous example, as he is seen shrouded in shadows even though he's in the middle of a train station in broad daylight and everyone else is drawn normally. This is omitted from the anime as Prosciutto (along with the rest of the Squadra) first appeared [[AdaptationalEarlyAppearance much earlier]].
** The Boss for the entire part sans the final battle. His first fight against Bucciarati features him as a man fully hidden in the dark.
** [[spoiler: Silver Chariot Requiem]] is entirely black and its face is hidden by its hat, and is never revealed.
* FingerInTheMail: An extreme example. When the mafia's La Squadra Esecuzioni tried to look into the Boss's past, he chopped up and killed one of them and then mailed the body parts, framed in containers full of formaldehyde, as a grim warning to everyone who dares try looking into his past.
* FluffyTheTerrible: Thanks to the [[DubNameChange dub changing Stand names,]] Green Day and Oasis are renamed Green Tea and Sanctuary, which means their episodes sound more like calm, slow-paced [[BreatherEpisode breathers]] and less like a harrowing chase sequence involving two mass murdering psychopaths.
* {{Foreshadowing}}:
** Mista has a deep fear of the number four, associating it with misfortune. [[spoiler:Bucciarati dying at the hands of The Boss and then rebelling against him]] takes place on the fourth day Giorno joins the team. [[spoiler: Also, Abbachio takes one of the four pieces of cake and ends up being the first to die.]]
** The second ED shows [[spoiler:the team's and Diavolo's Stands in the order they die (or in Fugo's case, leave). From top to bottom, it starts with Purple Haze, then goes to Moody Blues, Aerosmith, Sticky Fingers, and King Crimson, culminating with Sex Pistols, Spice Girl, and Gold Experience at the top for the ones who survived. Once Chariot Requiem is introduced, we see it positioned above Moody Blues and Aerosmith, but below Sticky Fingers. Abbacchio is already dead, Narancia dies rather early during Chariot Requiem's rampage thanks to a sneak attack by King Crimson, and Bucciarati's spirit moves on after finding a way to kill Chariot Requiem once and for all. Also, it shows King Crimson's arm wrapped around Spice Girl's body, foreshadowing how Diavolo takes control of Trish's body by grabbing and manipulating her Stand.]]
** [[spoiler:Notorious B.I.G introduces the concept of a "dead stand" that has outlived its master and is thus unkillable. The penultimate enemy of the part is a stand that has outlived its master and is virtually unkillable.]]
* FourIsDeath: Ironically after the last part being LighterAndSofter part. Not only one of the main characters, Mista, literally fears this trope, but [[spoiler: Bucciarati dies at the Boss's hands in the fourth day of Giorno joining the gang]], and then [[spoiler: Diavolo manages to kill Bucciarati, Abbachio, Polnareff, and Narancia]].
* FreakyFridayFlip: Near the climax, a body swap scenario thanks to [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem. Giorno and Narancia trade bodies, Trish and Mista trade bodies and Bucciarati and Doppio trade bodies. Diavolo lies in wait as a split personality for Mista's body (occupied by Trish), and once given the chance goes after the [[EleventhHourSuperpower Stand arrow]]]].
* FunnyBackgroundEvent: While Mista walks away no worse for wear after jumping on a building and landing spine first on a car, Fugo can be seen crawling out of the wreckage.
* GeoEffects: A good handful of the enemy Stands in this part are reliant on having a terrain advantage. Man in the Mirror and Clash are useless if they don't have something to "conduct" them (mirrors for the former, liquid for the latter). Beach Boy and Notorious B.I.G, on the other hand, seriously benefit from being fought in the location they're in (The many walls and linearity of a train make it easy for Pesci to target his enemies from one end of it, while an enclosed, fast-moving plane makes it nigh impossible to escape B.I.G's handicap of only targeting moving things).
* TheGhost: The Boss is an InUniverse example, as he has erased any evidence and information related to his person, and issues orders through varying layers of proxies. No one knows anything about him, they just know he exists and is the Boss of Italy's most powerful crime syndicate.
* GiantSpider: This story uses the "[[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrunken hero]]" vs. regular-sized spider variant, as Formaggio traps Narancia (who has been affected by Formaggio's Little Feet stand) in a bottle and pits him against a normal tarantula.
* GodzillaThreshold:
** Cioccolata is this for The Boss. Cioccolata's Stand, Green Day, is an immensely destructive area-of-effect Stand much like Prosciutto's which has a theoretically infinite range. However, unlike Prosciutto who was a cold professional, Cioccolata is an AxCrazy madman and thus doesn't care about civilian casualties. He massacres an entire port town trying to kill the gang, and as the fight moves to Rome, his massacre escalates in severity.
** [[spoiler: Polnareff uses the Arrow and unleashes Chariot Requiem in Rome,]] risking everyone's souls in the process because the alternative [[spoiler: (Diavolo getting the Arrow)]] is worse.
* GoodIsNotNice: Bucciarati's group maybe your RagtagBunchOfMisfits and Bucciarati is nice enough that the townsfolk is very friendly with him top the point that old ladies ask him for help. But they won't hesitate to do anything to do what they think is right, and won't hesitate to kill anyone that stands in their way.
* {{Gorn}}: Appropriately, for the setting. The increased violence in this part lends itself to some frightening injuries, but the fight with Green Day takes the cake- the viewer is subjected to numerous examples of people rotting away ''right in plain view'', with people literally rotting away into nonexistence in some examples. None of this is censored in the original manga.
* GratuitousItalian:
** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English, Part 5 has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bucciarati and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".
** The English dub of the 2018 anime [[ForeignCussWord included a wide selection of Italian profanity]] where the Japanese dub didn't. There's even an "Italian Language Consigliere" [[note]]Paola Giovanna Cresti[[/note]] in the localization credits.
* GreaterScopeVillain: If it isn't enough that [[spoiler: Diavolo]] is the main villain of this part, he also indirectly caused the events of ''Stardust Crusaders'', ''Diamond is Unbreakable'', and ''Stone Ocean''. His discovery of the Stand Arrows is what led DIO to awaken to "The World" and create his army of Stand using minions among everything listed under this trope on the ''Stardust Crusaders'' page, and then Mr Nijimura and Yoshihiro Kira, both DIO's minions in Japan, were given the arrows, which in the former case, his elder son Keicho used in an insane rampage to find someone to end his father's suffering, and in the latter case, Yoshihiro turning his son Yoshikage into a SerialKiller who is also a MadBomber. This is all ironic seeing as how he doesn't have much physical presence in this part itself, only being the center of influence with how the story goes.
* GutPunch:
** One that occurs for both the audience and Bucciarati is when he realizes that he's suddenly only holding [[spoiler:Trish's disembodied hand]], and the boss never had good intentions with the mission he sent them on. This arguably cascades into an example that also happens to be literal when [[spoiler:Bucciarati himself is]] [[AnyoneCanDie fatally punched through the gut]], putting him on borrowed time for the rest of the story.
** The deaths of both [[spoiler:Abbacchio]] and [[spoiler:Narancia]] also apply for both the audience and the characters. In both cases, the death is tragic, sudden, and unavoidable, and happens right under the noses of the heroes. In the latter, the characters don't even have evidence of an enemy being nearby before or afterward, making it especially shocking.
* HandWave: Why did DIO let some women live after having sex with them? The narration says no one knows, which raises the question of why even mention this in the first place.
* HarmlessFreezing: Averted, as Ghiaccio's freezing power does cause frostbites and freezes limbs enough so that he can invoke LiterallyShatteredLives.
* TheHedonist: Guido Mista is described as this, living a simple life full of simple pleasures.
* HiddenInPlainSight: Doppio looks young enough to pass off as a kid. [[spoiler: So Diavolo takes his place in a gang of kids playing soccer and purposefully shoots the ball toward Abbacchio to get close to him. He was even posing as a tourist in the fight with Secco and Bucciarati, with Secco [[HostageSituation taking him hostage]] to prevent Bucciarati from killing him.]]
* HopeSpot: A couple in Bucciarati's flashback. When he was a child, his father happened upon a drug deal and was gunned down. Though he was shot 7 times the coast guard found him and he survived. The gang later tried to kill him in the hospital, but Bucciarati got the drop on them and killed the two thugs. Though his dad survived both encounters, he ultimately lived for only 5 more years, with chronic pain, on account of the damage the bullets had done to him.
* HowWeGotHere: The final chapters following [[spoiler: Diavolo's defeat]] are a side-story about Bucciarati and the gang before they met Giorno. It also features a Stand that [[spoiler: foreshadows the deaths of Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia.]]
* IceBreaker: Before it is revealed that Ghiaccio was attacking Giorno and Mista while they were driving to Venice, Mista's finger ends up breaking off his body after he touches the car window, even taking him a few moments to realize what happened.
* IDieFree: [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati tells this to Giorno from beyond the grave, saying that he freed himself from being a slave of Fate and took his own path.]]
* IfWeGetThroughThis: During the final fight of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler:Narancia]] dreams of returning to school after getting through this fight; [[spoiler:of course, he is the first casualty.]]
* ILied: A rare heroic example in ''Vento Aureo''. [[spoiler:After shooting [[AxCrazy Cioccolata]] in the head, Giorno suspects that he's still alive and says that he won't attack so long as Cioccolata doesn't move. When Cioccolata springs back into action and tries taking Giorno's friends hostage, Giorno reveals that he'd already planted what was essentially a time bomb in Cioccolata's head. Now dying for real, Cioccolata complains that Giorno broke his previous word. Giorno's response: "Know your place."]]
* InMediasRes: [[spoiler: After Diavolo is defeated and Giorno is crowned the Boss of the Passione Family, the next chapters is a flashback from Bucciarati's group before Giorno entered the group.]]
* InSeriesNickname: Zig Zagged. In the Japanese version of the anime, everyone refers to Narancia as "Naran-Chan". His name is properly pronounced in the English Dub.
* InstantDramaJustAddTracheotomy: In Venice, Narancia gets his own tongue cut off by Clash and he begins to choke, somehow. To save Narancia, Giorno performs a makeshift tracheotomy with a hollow pen to make him breathe through his throat until he can regenerate the tongue.
* {{Irony}}: [[spoiler: In episode 21, Bucciarati was killed by The boss with a GutPunch, with only Giorno saving him that he is still alive. 11 episodes later, he unknowingly returned the favor when he gave a GutPunch to Doppio, who is The Boss's split personality.]]
** Mista is terrified of 4, as he believes FourIsDeath. Not only Mista is the fourth member of Team Bucciarati, but [[spoiler: he's also the only survivor of Team Bucciarati]].
* ItHasBeenAnHonor: [[spoiler: Bucciarati thanks Giorno for having met him in Naples, before ascending to Heaven.]]
* JabbaTableManners: Polpo cannot eat a simple cracker without spilling half of it on his cheeks.
* JerkassHasAPoint: The anime had a scene of Fugo trying to convince Narancia [[spoiler: not to betray Passione, as rebellion will be met with execution by the Boss. He's sadly proven right]].
* JuggleFu: Happens at the beginning of the fight between Secco and Bucciarati. Secco throws his camera in the air, proceeds to pummel Bucciarati for long enough to make him realize his techniques and force him to flee before catching the camera.
* JumpScare: In Episode 24, after Notorious B.I.G. is thrown out the plane for the second time, Trish spots what appears to be a ball rolling around the plane's wing. She gets up to take a closer look, when the enemy Stand very suddenly slams against the window.
* KillEmAll: Compared to the idealistic ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' this is a much darker story with almost every Stand battle being a fight to the death. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia all die. Fugo leaves which means the gang is reduced to just Giorno and Mista. Returning hero Polnareff physically dies but his spirit lives on inside Coco Jumbo. Risotto's gang is wiped out completely by Bucciarati's gang. Every other named Passione member is killed, with the exception of Zucchero and depending on canon he dies as well in the ''Purple Haze Feedback'' spinoff.]]
* KlingonPromotion:
** A driving motivation of the La Squadra Esecuzioni is to find out the Boss' identity, so that they can kill him and take over his position.
** [[spoiler:Giorno himself eventually becomes the Boss of Passione by killing Diavolo.]]
* LactoseOverLiquor: When La Squadra, Passione's hitman team, goes to a restaurant, Pesci orders milk instead of alcohol or espresso. He is the most inexperienced member of the team and displays a hesitant, meek and cowardly personality.
* LifeOrLimbDecision: All over the place. Perhaps most notable for this is the White Album arc, where ''all of the combatants'' uses their own blood to gain an advantage, all in short succession; Giorno uses his blood to reveal a path through the frozen air, Mista sprays his blood to temporarily blind Ghiaccio, and Ghiaccio uses his (admittedly, already spilled) blood to prevent himself from being fully impaled on a spike.
* LineInTheSand: After Bucciarati decides to [[spoiler:go against [[TheDon Diavolo]]]], he tells his subordinates that if they aren't 100% certain about whether or not they want to follow him, they should stay behind; otherwise, they can get aboard his boat to confirm that they agree with him. [[spoiler:Narancia and Fugo both decide not to follow him, however, Narancia has a change of heart almost immediately and swims after the boat, meaning that Fugo is the only one who gets PutOnABus.]]
* LonersAreFreaks: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] is a schizophrenic man who is living alone and refuses to have relationships because he doesn't want anyone to learn anything about him.
* LuxuryPrisonSuite: Polpo inhabits a pretty luxurious prison cell decorated with paintings and has a personal fridge.
* MafiaPrincess: Trish is a subversion. Although she is the daughter of The Boss and acts like a spoiled teen used to have servants, she only learned it recently and freaks out at the idea of meeting her father as well as being the target of her father's enemies. Moreover although the Boss seems to try to care for her, he just [[spoiler: wants to kill her because she is a potential weakness]].
* ManIFeelLikeAWoman: [[spoiler:When Silver Chariot Requiem causes everyone to body-swap, Mista finds himself stuck in Trish's body and gets a bit… hands-y, though to his credit it was mostly him trying to adjust her underwear because he's not used to having it so tight or to wearing a bra in general.]]
* ManlyTears: Much like other parts in the franchise, there are times the manly heroes simply cannot stop themselves from crying. Notable examples are when Abbacchio sheds tears [[spoiler:upon meeting his former partner in the afterlife]], Bucciarati and Narancia crying over [[spoiler: Abbacchio's death]] and when both Giorno and Mista cry over [[spoiler:the death of Narancia.]]
* MatterOfLifeAndDeath: While a staple of the series, in ''Vento Aureo'', '''everyone''' is constantly fighting with the intent to kill.
* MegatonPunch: [[spoiler: King Crimson, having a very high Strength can cause much greater damage than Star Platinum, The World or Crazy Diamond's RapidFireFisticuffs by simply driving his fists in one blow. Diavolo uses this to kill his enemies quickly before they could blurt his identity out.]]
* MixAndMatchMan: Giorno Giovanna qualifies because his biological father is Dio Brando's head attached to Jonathan's body, causing several traits from both going to him.
* TheMobBossIsScarier: When Bucciarati announces his betrayal of Passione, the majority of the team is shaking in fear of The Boss' retaliation. Fortunately for Giorno and Bucciarati, only Fugo remains scared enough to stay behind.
* MundaneMacGuffinPerson: Trish Una is the recently discovered illegitimate daughter of Passione's Boss. All of the Boss' enemies want to capture and/or kill her, so she ends up under the protection of the heroes, thus driving most of the plot.
* MusicalThemeNaming:
** A continued trope. This part's theme is renowned artists of the [[TheSixties late '60s]] and [[TheSeventies early '70s]] such as Music/KingCrimson, Music/SexPistols, and Music/TheMoodyBlues along with a few contemporary rock and pop acts who were notable during publishing. Taken even further in the light novel sequel where three new Stands are introduced all of them taking their namesake from post-punk bands that first formed in the late 70's.
** Both the hero and the villain have Stands that allude to royalty (Giorno with Golden Experience by ''Prince'' and [[spoiler:Diavolo]] with ''King'' Crimson).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tropes N to Z]]
* NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast: [[spoiler:Diavolo, which is Italian for ''Devil''.]] Not that anyone knows his name, though.
* NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters:
** Team Bucciarati. Unlike the rest of Passione (who are decidedly ''not'' neighborhood-friendly), Bucciarati's group is beloved by the general community, with even old people willingly going to them, a group of rogues with supernatural abilities and trouble surrounding them, for help. Bucciarati and Giorno only joined up with Passione in the first place to stop the mafia from dealing drugs, and their goal is to overthrow TheDon of Passione and insert one of their own in his place. [[spoiler: In fact, they outright openly rebel and gun for him when they learn the hard way that he is willing to kill his own daughter only because of the insane paranoid idea that she could be a clue to his identity, despite having never met the man in her life nor know anything about him. The personal targeting of an innocent and unrelated teenage girl was the last straw]].
** Giorno got into crime because of one of these. When he was a child, regularly bullied and abused, he found a man bleeding out in a patch of tall grass. The men who'd shot him asked Giorno where the man had gone, and Giorno lied, saving the injured man's life. That man was a powerful gangster in Naples, and after he recovered he made it a point to protect Giorno from a distance (his first act: having a "quick talk" with Giorno's abusive stepfather). The only person who ''ever'' treated Giorno well was in the Mafia, and that inspired him to go the same route.
* NiceJobFixingItVillain: Had [[spoiler: Diavolo confirmed Polnareff's death]] instead of [[BondVillainStupidity assuming him dead and walking away]], [[spoiler: he would have successfully killed his daughter and rest of Team Bucciarati with zero opposition, and would have continued to rule Italy in the shadows.]]
* NighInvulnerable: The Stand Notorious [=B.I.G=] cannot be killed first due to being a BlobMonster, but its user is already dead so the heroes are reduced to [[spoiler: simply tossing it into the ocean by destroying their plane.]]
* NoSell: [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem]] in a nutshell. [[spoiler:Any actions or processes attempted against Giorno are brought to zero the moment his enemies oppose him, thus every action is rendered moot. Even Diavolo's time erasing powers don't affect Gold Experience Requiem.]]
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: Lasting ''[[UpToEleven seven whole pages,]]'' Giorno's beatdown of Cioccolata is the biggest example of this trope in a franchise that made this trope a meme.
** Giorno gives another one to [[spoiler: ''Diavolo himself'']] after [[spoiler: Gold Experience Requiem evolves.]]
* NoOneSeesTheBoss: Apart from being full of Stand users, the gang Passione is unique by how secretive its Boss is. The Boss never directly interacts with his subordinates, sending proxies, using computers and leaving messages behind for his subordinates to read and obey, but otherwise no one knows what the Boss looks like. It's a very deliberate attempt from the Boss' part to make himself be seen more as a concept or an omnipotent being rather than a man who could be killed. It worked rather well, until word of his daughter came out.
* OddNameOut: Every [=JoJo's=] name begins with the letters "Jo", except '''Gio'''rno '''Gio'''vanna, mostly because the letter J does not exist in Italian.
* OffingTheOffspring: [[spoiler: The Boss wanted to kill his daughter personally so that his enemies could not use her to trace back to him.]]
* OneBulletLeft: During the fight between Mista and Sale, Mista is left with only one bullet. Proudly announcing it as if he was going to take full advantage of this one shot, Mista is, in fact, aiming to use Sex Pistols on Sale's own bullet to defeat him.
* OneHitKill:
** How [[spoiler:Diavolo]] deals with enemies, due in no small part to [[MegatonPunch King Crimson's strength]].
** The Requiem power unlocked by having someone stab the Arrow with their Stands is this. Gold Experience Requiem's power delves so much into metaphysics, even [[spoiler:Diavolo]]'s time erasure is outclassed completely.
* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: [[spoiler:Diavolo]] is only known as "The Boss" until [[spoiler:Polnareff reveals it to the gang.]]
* OutOfBodyExperience: Being punched by Gold Experience causes one to think so fast the body cannot follow up and the consciousness can see their immobile body if it happens to visualize themselves moving into another position.
* PayEvilUntoEvil: [[spoiler: Diavolo's death loop]] represents a particularly extreme version of this trope, with an incredibly evil person being subjected to an incredibly torturous punishment for eternity.
* PietaPlagiarism: In Part 5, Giorno holds an injured Mista that way at the end of the White Album arc. Unlike other examples, the one who dies is their enemy Ghiaccio.
* PlotCoupon: In ''Vento Aureo'', the Arrow becomes a key item as it can [[spoiler: unlock Requiem Stands, said to always be able to surpass the likes of even King Crimson]].
* PragmaticAdaptation: The [=PS2=] game modified some of the Stand powers so that they would be more palatable in a straight-laced BeatEmUp genre; for example, Little Feet's shrinking activates instantaneously on Formaggio's targets, but wears off after a short period of time. It also significantly [[AdaptationDistillation pares down]] the number of fights[[note]]Zucchero, Sale, Melone, Squalo, Tizano, and Risotto aren't fought, instead showing up in the game's unlockable "Story drama" scenes and they have models viewable in the gallery[[/note]], and some of the plot points are modified to compact the story (Pericolo's assignment is given right after Giorno joins the group).
* ProfessionalKiller: La Squadra Esecuzioni, also known as the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Hitman Team]] are a rouge band of eccentric personalities that hunt down Team Bucciarati in a desperate attempt to discover the Boss's identity. [[spoiler: After Bucciarati and his team betray the organization, the boss's top bodyguards, Unità Speciale, also hunt down their group under direct orders from the boss.]]
* PsychoForHire: [[MadDoctor Cioccolata]] is an [[AxCrazy maniacal]] hitman with a HumanPet who is seen by everyone, even the boss, as a crazy, creepy psychopath. In the anime, it is implied that they were responsible for the brutal deaths of Sorbet and Gelato, which kick-starts La Squadra's motivation for hunting down the boss's identity.
* PutOnABus: [[spoiler: Following Bucciarati's betrayal of The Boss, Fugo refuses to go along with the rest of the protagonists and is dropped from the story altogether. He was originally meant to return as an enemy, but Araki felt that the heroes having to fight a former friend would be too dark.]]
* ReachingTowardsTheAudience: The first cover of ''Vento Aureo''.
* RecapEpisode: The first and (so far) only animated Part that includes ClipShow that details what happened during the course of the story. There are three episodes, each of them summarizes some events across the Part.
** ''Episode 13.5 - Inizio del Vento Aureo'': The first recap episode, it is mostly focusing on the various battles that the protagonists go through as well as the route that Team Bucciarati takes throughout Italy.
** ''Episode 21.5 - Determinazione'': The second recap episode, this episode retells each of Team Bucciarati's members' backstories as well as showing their respective resolves and reason for following Bucciarati. It also recounting current situations of the conflict between Team Bucciarati and Squadra Esecuzioni.
** ''Episode 28.5 - Determinazione'': The third and final recap episode, this episode retelss Trish Una's backstory and Team Bucciarati's mission of protecting her. It also retelling now defected Team Bucciarati's first encounter against Unita Speciale, Boss' personal bodyguard.
* RecruitedFromTheGutter: Narancia was first spotted by Fugo trying to scavenge garbage cans, but was later accepted into Passione, although Bucciarati was against it.
* RedHerring: The plotline of finding out The Boss' true identity falls into this a bit. Almost the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'' is spent with various groups trying to dig up information about his past, certain that there must be ''something'' he's hiding that would be a weakness for him. [[spoiler: Once we actually find out the Boss' identity, it turns out he really wasn't hiding any inherent weakness, nor was he anybody they would recognize. He was just ''that'' paranoid]]. What lessens this somewhat is that he ''is'' revealed to be more important in the grand scheme of things than one might assume at first glance, [[spoiler: being the one who discovered the Stand Arrows and sold them to DIO's service, and therefore being an indirect but deciding reason why Part 3 played out the way it did and why everything from Part 4 onward happened at all. His origins do trace back to the Requiem Arrow, but even he wasn't aware of its true properties until toward the end of the part]]. In other words, TheReveal of his identity wasn't actually that much of a game-changer in the context of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler: but it did have huge implications for the series as a whole]].
* RefugeInAudacity: The rest of the gang quickly learns that when Giorno does something completely weird, out there, or seemingly inexplicable, it's going to end in success. Perhaps the earliest example of this is, after fighting Bucciarati, he outright ''tells'' him he's going to [[DefeatMeansFriendship become his ally]] and it ''works.''
* ResurrectionDeathLoop: [[spoiler:Diavolo is struck by this in the final fight of Part 5. After receiving a thorough CurbStompBattle by the newly awakened Gold Experience Requiem he also begins to be affected by Requiem's 'back to zero' effect, which in his case means he constantly dies over and over, always in a different way. He can't ever escape from it, making it both this and AFateWorseThanDeath.]]
* {{Retirony}}: Right before [[spoiler:Narancia]] dies they begin talking about everything they're going to do once the Boss is defeated. [[spoiler:Wanting to get through highschool, being there for Trish, seeing Fugo again, eating some piping hot pizza and getting his life together]]. Unfortunately you seeing this trope here means that they couldn't do any of this.
* RodandReelRepurposed: Pesci's Stand, Beach Boy, is a fishing rod capable of three things: it's capable of tracking people and literally fishing them out from other rooms, it can phase through any and all objects including skin, and attacking the line simply reflects damage.
* RousingSpeech: Giorno is fond of making motivational speeches about subjects such as one's resolve or growth following/followed by a badass move.
* {{Sadist}}: Cioccolata's entire character essentially revolves around this, with him being [[MadDoctor a doctor who would intentionally put completely healthy patients under surgery and intentionally inject not enough anesthesia so that his patients wake up mid-operation.]] He joined Passione for the same reason, and has his [[ThisIsMyHuman human pet Secco]] record him killing his targets and whatever other collateral damage from his stand so that he can view their pain later.
* SceneryPorn: ''Vento Aureo'' is basically a tour through a hand-drawn version of Italy with Stand battles thrown in. The anime goes a step further by showing beautiful, panning birds-eye shots of the locations that the gang visits while narration provides a brief description of the place's history.
* ScottyTime: A downplayed example, but once Bucciarati's group reaches Sardinia, and he asks Abbachio how long it will take for Moody Blues to rewind and replay the actions of the boss's only known lover:
-->'''Abbachio''': If we're going back 15 years... It might take 8-10 minutes.\\
'''Bucciarati''': Do it in five.
* ScrewDestiny: [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem's]] use of his power is an exaggerated example. He outright admits that Epitaph's prediction of [[spoiler:Giorno's death]] is absolutely true and is "going to happen", but that he nevertheless [[RealityWarper won't let anyone reach that moment]].
* SecretTestOfCharacter: Polpo's test is this. He asks the initiates to carry a lighter for twenty-four hours, never allowing it to go out. However, the flame is incredibly weak, making it extremely difficult to keep lit for that long, as well as getting through the prison security. The secret is that re-igniting it causes his Stand to appear and stab them with an arrow, where the ''true'' test of whether they'll create a Stand or die commences. It's not so much as a test of trust, more that it's a test of strength. And as Polpo notes, if somehow, someone manages to keep the lighter on, Passione gains a regular but clever member.
* SeinfeldianConversation: Usually held around the dining table by Team Bucciarati, mostly between Mista and Narancia.
* ShadowWalker: Black Sabbath can teleport through intersecting shadows, but is otherwise unable to walk out of them.
* ShootTheMedicFirst: Tizziano and Squalo try this tactic in ''Vento Aureo''. Aware that Giorno can heal his teammates, the duo do their best to lure him into a trap alone by manipulating Narancia. They remarkably succeed, but fail to kill Giorno in time.
* ShootingAtYourOwnProjectiles
** Early in Mista's fight with Sale, Mista manages to shoot his opponent in the head. Unfortunately for Mista, Sale's Stand, Kraft Work, stops the bullet's momentum, which leaves it lodged in Sale's skull while Sale himself is otherwise unharmed and able to keep going. Mista's finishing move in that fight is to shoot a second bullet into the exact same bullet hole, causing the second shot to hit the first and drive it even deeper into Sale's brain.
** With Giorno's help, Mista shoots a metal bolt with a bullet that launches the former into the head of Ghiaccio, who is protected by his Stand White Album. Mista then fires more bullets at the bolt to knock Ghiaccio unconscious.
* ShoutOut:
** As a work centered on the Mafia, there are naturally a few shout outs to Mario Puzo's crime novel Film/TheGodfather:
*** The plot thread of Narancia contracting an eye infection after losing his mother and wandering the streets, only to have it healed after being "adopted" into Bucciarati's gang and then being angrily told to continue his education is note-for-note ''identical'' to that of Tom Hagen, the informally-adopted Irish on and lawyer of the Corleone Family.
*** Gelato choking to death swallowing the towel stuffed in his mouth as he watched his lover Sorbet hacked to pieces alive by Cioccolata is identical to how a victim of a double-murder committed by Luca Brazi, the Corleone Head Enforcer and hitman, died watching his friend dismembered limb-by-limb with a fire-axe.
*** The final panels with the hand-kissing in a sign of loyalty to [[spoiler: the new Don, Giorno Giovanna]] while Mista observes in the distance, much like the iconic final scene of the first movie with Don Michael Corleone having a hand-kissing and Kay observes.
** The way Sorbet's body was hacked into pieces and preserved in cases filled with formaldehyde is likely inspired by [[https://damienhirst.com/artworks/catalogue?category=23&p=0 some of Damien Hirst's artworks]], in which he preserves animal bodies (sometimes chopped into pieces) in formaldehyde solution; the most famous of them being [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Physical_Impossibility_of_Death_in_the_Mind_of_Someone_Living "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"]].
* SlidingScaleOfVillainEffectiveness: Doesn't exist in this part as every antagonist is smart (except Zucchero and Sale), comes equipped with a powerful Stand ability, and a good majority of them come close to emerging victorious.
* SpaghettiAndGondolas: Downplayed. Like in ''Battle Tendency'', Rome and Venice are still the most prominent cities shown in the series, with ''Vento Aureo's'' greatest plot twists occurring there, but Araki made an effort to feature other places such as Pompeii; Naples; or Capri, Sardegna; Naples being his favorite Italian city. The countryside is also featured at one point.
* SpannerInTheWorks: [[spoiler:Polnareff]]. He discovers the method of [[spoiler:awakening Requiem]], something The Boss nor any other Stand User was aware even existed, and ultimately decided to share this information with the heroes to help them defeat The Boss.
* SpellMyNameWithAnS: Prone to this, even more so than other ''[=JoJo=]'' parts, due to the complexities of taking Italian names that had already been transliterated into Japanese and then rendering them into English. Bucciarati is an excellent example: no one is really sure if he's supposed to be named "Bruno Buccellati" (a logical approximation of his first name, and a [[ThemeNaming last name taken from an Italian fashion designer]]), "[[JapaneseRanguage Blono/Brono]] Bucciarati" (an ''accurate'' transliteration of his Japanese name), or some combination of the two. Not even Shueisha, Lucky Land, or Araki are quite sure, considering how both variations appear in the 25th anniversary ''JOJOVELLER'' art book. Even the name of the part itself is subject to some debate, with ''Vento Aureo'' being the more dominant term over the years due to the official use in Japanese media and most English releases favoring it. However, with the debut of the anime, ''Golden Wind'' has become more popular.
* SpoilerOpening:
** As with previous adaptations, the first opening "Fighting Gold" has some subtle hints about the events of the story, meant more for attentive fans than giving away a twist. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Narancia, and Abbachio's body silhouettes become black, unlike the other members of Passione, and in the pentultimate shot, they are all framed on the right side of the screen, making a subtle reference at their deaths]]. On a less subtle level, "Fighting Gold" also prominently features Trish, who wasn't previously shown in promotional material and didn't appear in the manga until her debut 29 chapters in.
*** In addition, a silhouette of [[spoiler:Bucciarati carved out of Rolling Stones]] can be seen in the background of the opening shot.
** The second opening "Uragirimono no Requiem" ("Traitor's Requiem") is even less subtle than the first in spoiling the second half of the story. The very ''first'' scene of the opening [[spoiler:is the very ''end'' of the series, when Giorno is made Boss of Passione.]] Other plot points spoiled include [[spoiler:Trish's stand Spice Girl (as well as her role as a fighter), Vinegar Doppio and his fight with Risotto, and parts of the final battle, including Giorno claiming the Stand Arrow, although Gold Experience Requiem isn't shown.]]
* SpontaneousChoreography: The infamous dance Narancia, Mista and Fugo join in on while torturing Zucchero features this, especially in the anime.
* StealthPun: TheHero of Part 5 is Dio's bastard son, and the BigBad is named [[spoiler:Diavolo]]. In other words, [[spoiler:[[BilingualBonus the son of God is fighting the Devil]]]].
* StevenUlyssesPerhero: Many of the musical references in the Stand names aren't just for show in this part. Sex Pistols can manipulate bullets, Aerosmith is an airplane, Little Feet makes things little, Beach Boy is a fishing rod, Talking Head prevents its victim from speaking correctly, and so on.
* StrongFamilyResemblance: A pretty perverted example with Trish and her ArchnemesisDad [[spoiler: Diavolo]]. Both of them have purple hair, and have a preference for {{Stripperific}} clothing. Also, both [[spoiler: King Crimson and Spice Girl]] have rather similar looking Stand designs. [[spoiler: Ironically, this familial resemblance is exactly what causes Diavolo to go after her, fearing her Stand abilities can be linked of his own.]]
* SupportingProtagonist: Giorno may be the eponymous Jojo (or [=GioGio=]) of the part, and is instrumental in a massive amount of fights, either through his actions or what he's figured out, but after joining Bucciarati's gang, he mostly passively goes along with what the rest of the group is doing plotwise.
* SuperMode: Essentially what the "Requiem" effect is the arrow has on Stands. A Stand struck by the arrow and which proves worthy receives a dramatic upgrade in which their old power is cast away (except in the case of Gold Experience, whose life-giving ability powered up after transforming) and they get a StoryBreakerPower which delves into the metaphysical.
* TheManyDeathsOfYou: [[spoiler:Diavolo is forced to live through many scenario in which he dies, unable to do anything about it because his death is set back to 0: the point right before he dies.]]
* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: Cioccolata's death is one of most brutal in the series, even if compared to the main villain's. Before the barrage, Cioccolata's been shot with a bullet to the head. Such bullet is transformed by Gold Experience into a stag beetle which proceeds to destroy his brain from inside out. Every single punch Gold Experience delivers afterward has expanding and delaying effects, putting him in lasting pain and suffering before he's thrown down a tall building and crashes full-speed into a garbage truck for combustible wastes.
* ThisIsMyHuman: Secco is the feral human pet for Cioccolata that speaks only in grunts and obeys his master's every command. Cioccolata even coddles him similar to how one would with a dog and gives him treats in the form of sugar cubes. He breaks this dog-like behavior, however, once learning of Cioccolata's death.
* ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman: When Zucchero attacks Bucciarati's team on their boat with Soft Machine, making everyone disappear after he basically deflates them like a balloon, Abbacchio's Moody Blues comes in handy as its power to mimic past events is perfect for investigating Zucchero's powers.
* TongueTied: The Stand Talking Head has this as its power. Crosses with CanNotSpitItOut as Narancia desperately tries to figure out a way to circumvent its ability and warn the others about a different enemy Stand.
* ToThePain: Formaggio uses his Stand Little Feet to [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrink down Narancia]] and trap him in a glass bottle along with a venomous spider (who appears to be a GiantSpider from his perspective). Formaggio then proceeds to describe, in detail, what the experience of being eaten by a spider would be like: first, he'd be injected with a paralyzing venom, then with digestive enzymes that would slowly liquefy his insides while keeping him conscious, until the spider is able to slurp him up. Thankfully, Narancia manages to fight off the spider (using a glass shard as an improvised shiv) and escape before getting bitten.
* TraintopBattle: The ''Grateful Dead'' arc features a battle inside an express train.
* TransformationSequence: One happens when Doppio lets [[spoiler:Diavolo]] take the reins of their shared body, which grows more muscular and the face changes completely alongside the hair.
* TranslationConvention: It's implied that everyone's speaking Italian instead of whatever language the viewer is watching in, as, in the first arc of the story, Giorno will compliment Koichi's fluent Italian.
* TrickBullet:
** Giorno gives Mista bullets that transform into trees to fire at Ghiaccio to knock him off their car and unfreeze it. The bullets themselves aren't special, but the heat from them is necessary for Gold Experience to sprout life in the sub-zero temperatures.
** When fighting Cioccolata, Giorno modifies some bullets that transform into a tree for Mista to fire at Cioccolata's helicopter to ensnare it. Later Giorno uses another bullet to transform into another tree to prevent him from falling, and kicks a section of its branch for it to later transform back into a bullet to fire itself into Cioccolata's head. Later, said bullet transforms into a beetle that burrows out of his head.
* TheUnfought: While Risotto Nero fights Doppio, he never fights the protagonists directly and [[spoiler: Narancia killing him was both an accident and a coincidence at the same time.]]
* {{Unperson}}: The Boss intentionally pulled this on himself due to having a near psychopathic obsession with his own anonymity. No one in Passione (and likely the entire world) knows his name or what he looks like due to his systematic erasure of anything that could lead back to him or his identity, and he only gives orders through a complex series of proxies and go-betweens that he is not above killing to preserve said anonymity if it is required.
* ViceCity: Naples at the beginning of the part is presented as a corrupt town where the mob is more feared by the police, and said police is also near totally corrupt or ineffective.
* VillainOfTheWeek: Much like ''Stardust Crusaders'', each new arc introduces a new villain for the protagonists. There's the two rival mobsters encountered before the protagonists meet Trish, the eight members of La Squadra who are the primary antagonists of the first half, and The Boss' five personal assassins who take over La Squadra's role in the second half. At least, for La Squadra Esecuzioni, the battles are tied into one another because the mere fact that one of the assassins manages to find the group forces them to move out immediately, pursued by the rest of La Squadra.
* WalkingWasteland: In ''Vento Aureo'', Purple Haze and Green Day can release respectively a flesh eating virus and a mold with exponential growth which can both kill people in seconds, infect victims indiscriminately and at high speed, and are able to kill the entire population of a city in minutes.
* WeAllLiveInAmerica:
** The main characters are [[TheMafia Italian gangsters]] who [[HonorAmongThieves despise the drug trade]]. Such beliefs are commonly attributed to {{Yakuza}}, but aren't generally associated with organized crimes much of anywhere else.
** While doing math, Narancia draws a ''[[{{Henohenomoheji}} henohenomoheji]]'' on the side of his paper (which is made of Japanese characters).
** Guido Mista has a deep superstitious fear of [[FourIsDeath number four]], as if he were Japanese. Italians actually fear seventeen the most. The InUniverse explanation is that his tetraphobia originates from his neighbor being attacked by a kitten who was born in a litter of four, which is a rather weak justification.
* WeHardlyKnewYe: Sorbet and Gelato, who was only shown in one panel and are hinted to be lovers just before they [[spoiler: are shown to be killed by Cioccolata and Secco.]] Meanwhile, Carne just appeared in one scene before he was killed by Mista, to the point that his name is [[AllInTheManual only revealed in the manual.]] Hell, Notorious B.I.G. is more well known than him.
* WhamLine: While recapping how he accidentally let [[spoiler:Polnareff]] live, [[spoiler:Diavolo]] reveals just how important he is to events after Part 2.
-->'''[[spoiler:Diavolo]]''': An old woman [[spoiler: named Enya who had 2 right hands]] told me she'd tell me how [[spoiler:the arrow]] worked in return for shooting some. I figured one will be more than enough, so [[spoiler: I sold the other five for a handsome sum]].
* WhamShot: The last panel of "Green Day and Oasis, part 12" which reveals that [[spoiler:the third party the gang is meeting at the Coliseum is none other than Jean-Pierre Polnareff.]]
* WholeCostumeReference: The colored version of the manga made an [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/jjba/images/1/12/Oldjanitor.png unnamed janitor]] wear [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]] clothing. Brown shoes, blue overalls, red long sleeved shirt and a red cap. Only thing missing was the white gloves.
* YouAllMeetInAnInn: In ''Vento Aureo'', Bucciarati's gang introduction features all the characters participating in a SeinfeldianConversation in a restaurant.
[[/folder]]
----
->''"Arrivederci."''
----
[[redirect:Headscratchers/JoJosBizarreAdventureGoldenWind]]
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* LactoseOverLiquor: When La Squadra, Passione's hitman team, goes to a restaurant, Pesci orders milk instead of alcohol or espresso. He is the most inexperienced member of the team and displays a hesitant, meek and cowardly personality.
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* DeadlyRemoteControlToy: Narancia's Stand, Aerosmith, resembles a remote-controlled toy plane. It can fire bullets, drop bombs, and track enemies with its radar by monitoring their breathing.
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** The reason why Creator/KenshoOno was picked as Giorno for the TV Anime was because the previous two [=JoJos=] were voiced by Creator/DaisukeOno and Creator/YukiOno, both of which have the surname Ono.

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** The reason why Creator/KenshoOno was picked as voicing Giorno for the TV Anime was because continues the previous two [=JoJos=] were voiced by tradition of Onos voicing [=JoJos=], following the footsteps of Creator/DaisukeOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders Jotaro]]) and Creator/YukiOno, both of which have the Creator/YukiOno ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable Part 4 Josuke]]). In fact, Kensho sharing his surname Ono.with the latter two is why he got to voice Giorno to begin with.
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** The way Sorbet's body was hacked into pieces and preserved in cases filled with formaldehyde is likely inspired by [[https://damienhirst.com/artworks/catalogue?category=23&p=0 some of Damien Hirst's artworks]], in which he preserves animal bodies (sometimes chopped into pieces) in formalin solution; the most famous of them being [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Physical_Impossibility_of_Death_in_the_Mind_of_Someone_Living "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"]].

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** The way Sorbet's body was hacked into pieces and preserved in cases filled with formaldehyde is likely inspired by [[https://damienhirst.com/artworks/catalogue?category=23&p=0 some of Damien Hirst's artworks]], in which he preserves animal bodies (sometimes chopped into pieces) in formalin formaldehyde solution; the most famous of them being [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Physical_Impossibility_of_Death_in_the_Mind_of_Someone_Living "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"]].
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** The way Sorbet's body was hacked into pieces and preserved in cases filled with formaldehyde is likely inspired by [[https://damienhirst.com/artworks/catalogue?category=23&p=0 some of Damien Hirst's works]], in which he preserves animal bodies (sometimes chopped into pieces) in formalin solution; the most famous of them being [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Physical_Impossibility_of_Death_in_the_Mind_of_Someone_Living "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"]].

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** The way Sorbet's body was hacked into pieces and preserved in cases filled with formaldehyde is likely inspired by [[https://damienhirst.com/artworks/catalogue?category=23&p=0 some of Damien Hirst's works]], artworks]], in which he preserves animal bodies (sometimes chopped into pieces) in formalin solution; the most famous of them being [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Physical_Impossibility_of_Death_in_the_Mind_of_Someone_Living "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"]].

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* ShoutOut: As a work centered on the Mafia, there are naturally a few shout outs to Mario Puzo's crime novel Film/TheGodfather
** The plot thread of Narancia contracting an eye infection after losing his mother and wandering the streets, only to have it healed after being "adopted" into Bucciarati's gang and then being angrily told to continue his education is note-for-note ''identical'' to that of Tom Hagen, the informally-adopted Irish on and lawyer of the Corleone Family.
** Gelato choking to death swallowing the towel stuffed in his mouth as he watched his lover Sorbet hacked to pieces alive by Cioccolata is identical to how a victim of a double-murder committed by Luca Brazi, the Corleone Head Enforcer and hitman, died watching his friend dismembered limb-by-limb with a fire-axe.
** The final panels with the hand-kissing in a sign of loyalty to [[spoiler: the new Don, Giorno Giovanna]] while Mista observes in the distance, much like the iconic final scene of the first movie with Don Michael Corleone having a hand-kissing and Kay observes.

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* ShoutOut: ShoutOut:
**
As a work centered on the Mafia, there are naturally a few shout outs to Mario Puzo's crime novel Film/TheGodfather
**
Film/TheGodfather:
***
The plot thread of Narancia contracting an eye infection after losing his mother and wandering the streets, only to have it healed after being "adopted" into Bucciarati's gang and then being angrily told to continue his education is note-for-note ''identical'' to that of Tom Hagen, the informally-adopted Irish on and lawyer of the Corleone Family.
** *** Gelato choking to death swallowing the towel stuffed in his mouth as he watched his lover Sorbet hacked to pieces alive by Cioccolata is identical to how a victim of a double-murder committed by Luca Brazi, the Corleone Head Enforcer and hitman, died watching his friend dismembered limb-by-limb with a fire-axe.
** *** The final panels with the hand-kissing in a sign of loyalty to [[spoiler: the new Don, Giorno Giovanna]] while Mista observes in the distance, much like the iconic final scene of the first movie with Don Michael Corleone having a hand-kissing and Kay observes.observes.
** The way Sorbet's body was hacked into pieces and preserved in cases filled with formaldehyde is likely inspired by [[https://damienhirst.com/artworks/catalogue?category=23&p=0 some of Damien Hirst's works]], in which he preserves animal bodies (sometimes chopped into pieces) in formalin solution; the most famous of them being [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Physical_Impossibility_of_Death_in_the_Mind_of_Someone_Living "The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living"]].



* SpaghettiAndGondolas: Like in ''Battle Tendency'', Rome and Venice are still the most prominent cities shown in the series, with ''Vento Aureo's'' greatest plot twists occurring there, but Araki made an effort to feature other places such as Pompeii, Naples or Capri, Sardegna, Naples being his favorite Italian city. The countryside is also featured at one point.

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* SpaghettiAndGondolas: Downplayed. Like in ''Battle Tendency'', Rome and Venice are still the most prominent cities shown in the series, with ''Vento Aureo's'' greatest plot twists occurring there, but Araki made an effort to feature other places such as Pompeii, Naples Pompeii; Naples; or Capri, Sardegna, Sardegna; Naples being his favorite Italian city. The countryside is also featured at one point.
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** There's also Sorbet and Gelato, two [[PosthumousCharacter Posthumous Characters]] who are heavily implied to be a couple.
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** The first song in the anime adaption's first OST is "il vento d'oro" (golden wind). The second last song in the final OST is "fine della vento aureo" (end of the golden wind), a slowed down version of the original. This is also a nod to Giorno's stand power which can speed up people's thought processes causing them to perceive the world moving in slow motion (including the song if they were listening to it).
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You're not supposed to change trope names like that.


* [[WeAllLiveInAmerica We All Live In Japan]]:

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* [[WeAllLiveInAmerica We All Live In Japan]]:WeAllLiveInAmerica:
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* VillainOfTheWeek: Much like ''Stardust Crusaders'' each new arc introduces a new villain for the protagonists. There's the two rival mobsters encountered before the protagonists meet Trish, the eight members of La Squadra who are the primary antagonists of the first half, and The Boss' five personal assassins who take over La Squadra's role in the second half. At least, for La Squadra Esecuzioni, the battles are tied into one another because the mere fact that one of the assassins manages to find the group forces them to move out immediately, pursued by the rest of La Squadra.

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* VillainOfTheWeek: Much like ''Stardust Crusaders'' Crusaders'', each new arc introduces a new villain for the protagonists. There's the two rival mobsters encountered before the protagonists meet Trish, the eight members of La Squadra who are the primary antagonists of the first half, and The Boss' five personal assassins who take over La Squadra's role in the second half. At least, for La Squadra Esecuzioni, the battles are tied into one another because the mere fact that one of the assassins manages to find the group forces them to move out immediately, pursued by the rest of La Squadra.



* WeAllLiveInAmerica:

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* WeAllLiveInAmerica:[[WeAllLiveInAmerica We All Live In Japan]]:



-->'''[[spoiler:Diavolo]]''': An old woman [[spoiler: named Enyaba who had 2 right hands]] told me she'd tell me how [[spoiler:the arrow]] worked in return for shooting some. I figured one will be more than enough, so [[spoiler: I sold the other five for a handsome sum]].

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-->'''[[spoiler:Diavolo]]''': An old woman [[spoiler: named Enyaba Enya who had 2 right hands]] told me she'd tell me how [[spoiler:the arrow]] worked in return for shooting some. I figured one will be more than enough, so [[spoiler: I sold the other five for a handsome sum]].



* WholeCostumeReference: The colored version made an [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/jjba/images/1/12/Oldjanitor.png unnamed janitor]] wear [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]] clothing. Brown shoes, blue overalls, red long sleeved shirt and a red cap. Only thing missing was the white gloves.

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* WholeCostumeReference: The colored version of the manga made an [[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/jjba/images/1/12/Oldjanitor.png unnamed janitor]] wear [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]] clothing. Brown shoes, blue overalls, red long sleeved shirt and a red cap. Only thing missing was the white gloves.
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** Gold Experience's early abilities don't really line up with what it's consistently shown to be able to do later on. For example, its AttackReflector ability was quickly dropped after being used once (Luca trying to kill a frog with his shovel), and its ability to give a person more life energy and cause an OutOfBodyExperience is only used in his fight with Bucciarati before going unused again (although this does make a bit of sense, since Giorno didn't have many opportunities to punch an opponent).

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** Gold Experience's early abilities don't really line up with what it's consistently shown to be able to do later on. For example, its AttackReflector ability was quickly dropped after being used once (Luca trying to kill a frog with his shovel), and its ability to give a person more life energy and cause an OutOfBodyExperience is only used in his fight with Bucciarati before going unused again (although this does make a bit of sense, since Giorno didn't have many opportunities to punch an opponent).opponent), though it is possible that the latter does still occur but isn't highlighted.
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Mid teens.


* WouldHurtAChild: To showcase the ruthlessness of Passione, no enemy has any reservation about attacking or trying to kill the younger members of Bucciarati's team (Giorno and Trish are 15, Fugo is 16, and Narancia is 17).
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** Risotto Nero's Metallica does this in spades. [[spoiler: Not only did he use Doppio's own iron to attack him, but also Doppio turned yellow due to lack of iron in his body, ''making him unable to breathe'', with even Risotto spelling Doppio isn't for long. If Diavolo didn't trick Narancia into shooting Risotto, the Boss and Doppio would have died a gruesome death]].

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** Risotto Nero's Metallica does this in spades. [[spoiler: Not only did he use Doppio's own iron to attack him, but also Doppio Doppio's blood turned yellow due to lack of iron in his body, ''making him unable to breathe'', with even Risotto spelling Doppio isn't for long.breathe''. If Diavolo didn't trick Narancia into shooting Risotto, the Boss and Doppio would have died a gruesome death]].
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* BlueMeansCold: Ghiacco, whose name means "ice" in Latin, has blue hair and his Stand White Album can freeze things and control ice.

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* BlueMeansCold: Ghiacco, whose name means "ice" in Latin, Italian, has blue hair and his Stand White Album can freeze things and control ice.

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** In the final episode, the opening changes one more time to have [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem nullifying Diavolo's King Crimson while the second verse of Traitor's Requiem plays.]]

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** In the final episode, two episodes, the opening changes one more time to have [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem nullifying Diavolo's King Crimson while the second verse of Traitor's Requiem plays.]]


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* MegatonPunch: [[spoiler: King Crimson, having a very high Strength can cause much greater damage than Star Platinum, The World or Crazy Diamond's RapidFireFisticuffs by simply driving his fists in one blow. Diavolo uses this to kill his enemies quickly before they could blurt his identity out.]]

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** Downplayed example, but the Playstation 2 videogame adaptation added Jonathan Joestar to Giorno's scene with all the [=JoJos=] after defeating Black Sabbath. Jonathan is not included in either the manga or anime since, from a narrative point of view, Koichi never met him.

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** Downplayed example, but the Playstation 2 videogame adaptation added Jonathan Joestar to recontextualized Giorno's scene with all the [=JoJos=] after defeating Black Sabbath. Sabbath as the game's AttractMode intro since Koichi isn't in this version. This allowed them to add Jonathan Joestar to the images of past [=JoJos=] above Giorno, since otherwise Jonathan is not included in either the manga or anime since, from a narrative point of view, Koichi never met him.him and nobody ever told him about Jonathan.



* AdaptedOut: To keep the focus of the game on Giorno and his journey, as well as their minimal roles to begin with, Koichi and Jotaro are nowhere to be seen in the [=PS2=] game. They have an audio drama in the game's OST at least.



* PragmaticAdaptation: The [=PS2=] game modified some of the Stand powers so that they would be more palatable in a straight-laced BeatEmUp genre; for example, Little Feet's shrinking activates instantaneously on Formaggio's targets, but wears off after a short period of time. It also significantly [[AdaptationDistillation pares down]] the number of fights[[note]]Zucchero, Sale, Melone, Squalo, Tizano, and Risotto aren't fought, though some of their character models are present in the game files[[/note]], and some of the plot points are modified to compact the story (Pericolo's assignment is given right after Giorno joins the group).

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* PragmaticAdaptation: The [=PS2=] game modified some of the Stand powers so that they would be more palatable in a straight-laced BeatEmUp genre; for example, Little Feet's shrinking activates instantaneously on Formaggio's targets, but wears off after a short period of time. It also significantly [[AdaptationDistillation pares down]] the number of fights[[note]]Zucchero, Sale, Melone, Squalo, Tizano, and Risotto aren't fought, though some of their character instead showing up in the game's unlockable "Story drama" scenes and they have models are present viewable in the game files[[/note]], gallery[[/note]], and some of the plot points are modified to compact the story (Pericolo's assignment is given right after Giorno joins the group).
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* EdibleThemeNaming: Many characters in ''Vento Aureo'' are named after Italian foods. Examples include Pannacotta Fugo, Abbacchio Leone, Risotto Nero, Melone, Cioccolata, Gelato, Sorbet (which is not actually Italian, the correct word being "sorbetto"), Prosciutto, Pesci, Formaggio, and Mario Zucchero.

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* EdibleThemeNaming: Many characters in ''Vento Aureo'' are named after Italian foods. Examples include Pannacotta Fugo, Abbacchio Leone, Leone Abbacchio, Risotto Nero, Melone, Cioccolata, Gelato, Sorbet (which is not actually Italian, the correct word being "sorbetto"), Prosciutto, Pesci, Formaggio, and Mario Zucchero.



** The second ED shows [[spoiler:the team's and Diavolo's Stands in the order they die (or in Fugo's case, leave). From top to bottom, it starts with Purple Haze, then goes to Moody Blues, Aerosmith, Sticky Fingers, and King Crimson, culminating with Sex Pistols, Spice Girl, and Gold Experience at the top for the ones who survived. Once Chariot Requiem is introduced, we see it positioned above Moody Blues and Aerosmith, but below Sticky Fingers. Abacchio is already dead, Narancia dies rather early during Chariot Requiem's rampage thanks to a sneak attack by King Crimson, and Bucciarati's spirit moves on after finding a way to kill Chariot Requiem once and for all. Also, it shows King Crimson's arm wrapped around Spice Girl's body, foreshadowing how Diavolo takes control of Trish's body by grabbing and manipulating her Stand.]]

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** The second ED shows [[spoiler:the team's and Diavolo's Stands in the order they die (or in Fugo's case, leave). From top to bottom, it starts with Purple Haze, then goes to Moody Blues, Aerosmith, Sticky Fingers, and King Crimson, culminating with Sex Pistols, Spice Girl, and Gold Experience at the top for the ones who survived. Once Chariot Requiem is introduced, we see it positioned above Moody Blues and Aerosmith, but below Sticky Fingers. Abacchio Abbacchio is already dead, Narancia dies rather early during Chariot Requiem's rampage thanks to a sneak attack by King Crimson, and Bucciarati's spirit moves on after finding a way to kill Chariot Requiem once and for all. Also, it shows King Crimson's arm wrapped around Spice Girl's body, foreshadowing how Diavolo takes control of Trish's body by grabbing and manipulating her Stand.]]



* HiddenInPlainSight: Doppio looks young enough to pass off as a kid. [[spoiler: So Diavolo takes his place in a gang of kids playing soccer and purposefully shoots the ball toward Abacchio to get close to him. He was even posing as a tourist in the fight with Secco and Bucciarati, with Secco [[HostageSituation taking him hostage]] to prevent Bucciarati from killing him.]]

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* HiddenInPlainSight: Doppio looks young enough to pass off as a kid. [[spoiler: So Diavolo takes his place in a gang of kids playing soccer and purposefully shoots the ball toward Abacchio Abbacchio to get close to him. He was even posing as a tourist in the fight with Secco and Bucciarati, with Secco [[HostageSituation taking him hostage]] to prevent Bucciarati from killing him.]]
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* ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman: When the Zucchero attacks Bucciarati's team on their boat with a mysterious power able to make everyone disappear, Leone Abbacchio's Moody Blue comes in handy as its power to mimic past events is perfect for investigating Zucchero's powers.

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* ThisLooksLikeAJobForAquaman: When the Zucchero attacks Bucciarati's team on their boat with a mysterious power able to make Soft Machine, making everyone disappear, Leone disappear after he basically deflates them like a balloon, Abbacchio's Moody Blue Blues comes in handy as its power to mimic past events is perfect for investigating Zucchero's powers.



* ToThePain: Formaggio uses his Stand, Little Feet, to [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrink down Narancia]] and trap him in a glass bottle along with a venomous spider (who appears to be a GiantSpider from his perspective). Formaggio then proceeds to describe, in detail, what the experience of being eaten by a spider would be like: first, he'd be injected with a paralyzing venom, then with digestive enzymes that would slowly liquefy his insides while keeping him conscious, until the spider is able to slurp him up. Thankfully, Narancia manages to fight off the spider (using a glass shard as an improvised shiv) and escape before getting bitten.

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* ToThePain: Formaggio uses his Stand, Stand Little Feet, Feet to [[IncredibleShrinkingMan shrink down Narancia]] and trap him in a glass bottle along with a venomous spider (who appears to be a GiantSpider from his perspective). Formaggio then proceeds to describe, in detail, what the experience of being eaten by a spider would be like: first, he'd be injected with a paralyzing venom, then with digestive enzymes that would slowly liquefy his insides while keeping him conscious, until the spider is able to slurp him up. Thankfully, Narancia manages to fight off the spider (using a glass shard as an improvised shiv) and escape before getting bitten.
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** As with previous adaptations, the first opening ''Fighting Gold'' has some subtle hints about the events of the story, meant more for attentive fans than giving away a twist.[[spoiler:Bucciarati, Narancia, and Abbachio's body silhouettes become black, unlike the other members of Passione, and in the pentultimate shot, they are all framed on the right side of the screen, making a subtle reference at their deaths]]. On a less subtle level, ''Fighting Gold'' also prominently features Trish, who wasn't previously shown in promotional material and didn't appear in the manga until her debut 29 chapters in.

to:

** As with previous adaptations, the first opening ''Fighting Gold'' "Fighting Gold" has some subtle hints about the events of the story, meant more for attentive fans than giving away a twist.twist. [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Narancia, and Abbachio's body silhouettes become black, unlike the other members of Passione, and in the pentultimate shot, they are all framed on the right side of the screen, making a subtle reference at their deaths]]. On a less subtle level, ''Fighting Gold'' "Fighting Gold" also prominently features Trish, who wasn't previously shown in promotional material and didn't appear in the manga until her debut 29 chapters in.



** The second opening ''Traitor's Requiem'' is even less subtle than the first in spoiling the second half of the story. The very ''first'' scene of the opening [[spoiler:is the very ''end'' of the series, when Giorno is made Boss of Passione.]] Other plot points spoiled include [[spoiler:Trish's stand Spice Girl (as well as her role as a fighter), Vinegar Doppio and his fight with Risotto, and parts of the final battle, including Giorno claiming the Stand Arrow, although Gold Experience Requiem isn't shown.]]

to:

** The second opening ''Traitor's Requiem'' "Uragirimono no Requiem" ("Traitor's Requiem") is even less subtle than the first in spoiling the second half of the story. The very ''first'' scene of the opening [[spoiler:is the very ''end'' of the series, when Giorno is made Boss of Passione.]] Other plot points spoiled include [[spoiler:Trish's stand Spice Girl (as well as her role as a fighter), Vinegar Doppio and his fight with Risotto, and parts of the final battle, including Giorno claiming the Stand Arrow, although Gold Experience Requiem isn't shown.]]
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** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bucciarati and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".

to:

** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English English, Part 5 has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bucciarati and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".

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Caption Reverted per discussion thread.


[[caption-width-right:350:''Fight with me, there's no hope but try. Won't give up, it's my destiny, Don't care Don't you ever give me mercy, When my life is gone with the wind. Will a prayer vanish into dust? Hell no, Starting over, Golden Wind!'']]

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[[caption-width-right:350:''Fight with me, there's no hope but try. Won't give up, it's my destiny, Don't care Don't you ever give me mercy, When my life [[caption-width-right:350:[[ThemeMusicPowerUp I, Giorno Giovanna,]] [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters have a dream that I know is gone with the wind. Will a prayer vanish into dust? Hell no, Starting over, Golden Wind!'']]
just.]]]]



Set in 2001, ''Vento Aureo'' stars Giorno Giovanna, the son of DIO who was conceived with Jonathan Joestar's body after his resurrection in the 1980s. Having inherited both the righteousness of the Joestars and the ruthless ambitions of DIO, following a massive crime wave in Italy, he seeks to take over TheMafia in order to turn it into an organization for good instead of crime. After a brief scuffle with a Stand-using mafia assassin named Bruno Bucciarati, the two realize that they share a common goal, and so Bucciarati allows Giorno to join his squadron of stand-using gangsters, which also includes Leone Abbacchio, Guido Mista, Narancia Ghirga, and Pannacotta Fugo.

Giorno and Bucciarati's secret goal of overthrowing the boss gets complicated when they receive an order to guard the boss's daughter, Trish Una, from other members of the mob who want to take her hostage to take the mob for themselves. What follows is a road trip throughout all of Italy, fending off attacks from rival mobsters and culminating in a final confrontation with the boss himself.

to:

Set in 2001, ''Vento Aureo'' stars Giorno Giovanna, the son of DIO who was conceived with Jonathan Joestar's body after his resurrection in the 1980s. Having inherited both the righteousness of the Joestars and the ruthless ambitions of DIO, following a massive crime wave in Italy, he seeks to take over TheMafia in order to turn it into an organization for good instead of crime. After a brief scuffle with a Stand-using mafia assassin named Bruno Bucciarati, the two realize that they share a common goal, and so Bucciarati allows Giorno to join his squadron of stand-using Stand-using gangsters, which also includes Leone Abbacchio, Guido Mista, Narancia Ghirga, and Pannacotta Fugo.

Giorno and Bucciarati's secret goal of overthrowing the boss The Boss gets complicated when they receive an order to guard the boss's The Boss's daughter, Trish Una, from other members of the mob who want to take her hostage to take the mob for themselves. What follows is a road trip throughout all of Italy, fending off attacks from rival mobsters and culminating in a final confrontation with the boss The Boss himself.



* FreakyFridayFlip: The climax of the part is a body swap scenario thanks to [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]]. Giorno and Narancia trade bodies, Trish and Mista trade bodies and Bucciarati and Doppio trade bodies. [[spoiler:Diavolo lies in wait as a split personality for Mista's body (occupied by Trish), and once given the chance goes after the [[EleventhHourSuperpower stand arrow]].]]

to:

* FreakyFridayFlip: The climax of Near the part is climax, a body swap scenario thanks to [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]].Requiem. Giorno and Narancia trade bodies, Trish and Mista trade bodies and Bucciarati and Doppio trade bodies. [[spoiler:Diavolo Diavolo lies in wait as a split personality for Mista's body (occupied by Trish), and once given the chance goes after the [[EleventhHourSuperpower stand arrow]].]]Stand arrow]]]].



** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventurePhantomBlood ファントムブラッド]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders スターダストクルセイダース]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean ストーンオーシャン]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureJoJolion ジョジョリオン]]) or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureBattleTendency 戦闘潮流]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable ダイヤモンドは砕けない]]), 黄金の風 has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bucciarati and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".

to:

** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventurePhantomBlood ファントムブラッド]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders スターダストクルセイダース]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean ストーンオーシャン]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureJoJolion ジョジョリオン]]) or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureBattleTendency 戦闘潮流]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable ダイヤモンドは砕けない]]), 黄金の風 has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bucciarati and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".



* NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters: Team Bucciarati. Unlike the rest of Passione (who are decidedly ''not'' neighborhood-friendly), Bucciarati's group is beloved by the general community, with even old people willingly going to them, a group of rogues with supernatural abilities and trouble surrounding them, for help. Bucciarati and Giorno only joined up with Passione in the first place to stop the mafia from dealing drugs, and their goal is to overthrow TheDon of Passione and insert one of their own in his place. [[spoiler: In fact, they outright openly rebel and gun for him when they learn the hard way that he is willing to kill his own daughter only because of the insane paranoid idea that she could be a clue to his identity, despite having never met the man in her life nor know anything about him. The personal targeting of an innocent and unrelated teenage girl was the last straw]].

to:

* NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters: NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters:
**
Team Bucciarati. Unlike the rest of Passione (who are decidedly ''not'' neighborhood-friendly), Bucciarati's group is beloved by the general community, with even old people willingly going to them, a group of rogues with supernatural abilities and trouble surrounding them, for help. Bucciarati and Giorno only joined up with Passione in the first place to stop the mafia from dealing drugs, and their goal is to overthrow TheDon of Passione and insert one of their own in his place. [[spoiler: In fact, they outright openly rebel and gun for him when they learn the hard way that he is willing to kill his own daughter only because of the insane paranoid idea that she could be a clue to his identity, despite having never met the man in her life nor know anything about him. The personal targeting of an innocent and unrelated teenage girl was the last straw]].



* PayEvilUntoEvil: [[DeconstructedTrope Deconstructed]]. [[spoiler: Diavolo's death loop]] represents a particularly extreme version of this trope, with an incredibly evil person being subjected to an incredibly torturous punishment. So torturous, in fact, that it actually causes some people to think that this is just too much for [[spoiler: Diavolo]], instead offering Cioccolata as a better candidate for a death loop.

to:

* PayEvilUntoEvil: [[DeconstructedTrope Deconstructed]]. [[spoiler: Diavolo's death loop]] represents a particularly extreme version of this trope, with an incredibly evil person being subjected to an incredibly torturous punishment. So torturous, in fact, that it actually causes some people to think that this is just too much punishment for [[spoiler: Diavolo]], instead offering Cioccolata as a better candidate for a death loop.eternity.



* ResurrectionDeathLoop: [[spoiler:Diavolo is struck by this in the final fight of Part 5. After receiving a thorough CurbStompBattle by the newly awakened Gold Experience Requiem he also begins to be affected by Requiem's 'back to zero' effect, which in his case means he constantly dies over and over, always in a different way. Nobody else notices it, and he can't ever escape from it, making it both this and AFateWorseThanDeath.]]

to:

* ResurrectionDeathLoop: [[spoiler:Diavolo is struck by this in the final fight of Part 5. After receiving a thorough CurbStompBattle by the newly awakened Gold Experience Requiem he also begins to be affected by Requiem's 'back to zero' effect, which in his case means he constantly dies over and over, always in a different way. Nobody else notices it, and he He can't ever escape from it, making it both this and AFateWorseThanDeath.]]



* ScrewDestiny: In this case, perhaps MindScrew Destiny. [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem's]] use of his power is an exaggerated example. He outright admits that Epitaph's prediction of [[spoiler:Giorno's death]] is absolutely true and is "going to happen", but that he nevertheless [[RealityWarper won't let anyone reach that moment]].

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* ScrewDestiny: In this case, perhaps MindScrew Destiny. [[spoiler:Gold Experience Requiem's]] use of his power is an exaggerated example. He outright admits that Epitaph's prediction of [[spoiler:Giorno's death]] is absolutely true and is "going to happen", but that he nevertheless [[RealityWarper won't let anyone reach that moment]].


Added DiffLines:

* SpannerInTheWorks: [[spoiler:Polnareff]]. He discovers the method of [[spoiler:awakening Requiem]], something The Boss nor any other Stand User was aware even existed, and ultimately decided to share this information with the heroes to help them defeat The Boss.

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The events of the story were adapted by Creator/{{Capcom}} into a 2002 BeatEmUp for the UsefulNotes/PlayStation2. An international release was announced under the title ''[=GioGio=]'s Bizarre Adventure'' but was cancelled [[note]]Due to copyright issues involving Stand names (Mainly Music/{{Prince}} and "Gold Experience") and the obscurity of the series in global markets at the time[[/note]]. In October of 2018, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-M8ncaolysg a fan-translation patch into English was released for the game]]. Giorno and all members of Bruno's gang (barring Abbacchio) have been consistent fighters in the Creator/CyberConnect2 fighting games, ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureAllStarBattle'' and ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureEyesOfHeaven''.

to:

The events of the story were adapted by Creator/{{Capcom}} into a 2002 BeatEmUp for the UsefulNotes/PlayStation2. An international release was announced under the title ''[=GioGio=]'s Bizarre Adventure'' but was cancelled [[note]]Due to copyright issues involving Stand names (Mainly Music/{{Prince}} and "Gold Experience") and the obscurity of the series in global markets at the time[[/note]]. In October of 2018, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-M8ncaolysg a fan-translation patch into English was released for the game]]. Giorno and all members of Bruno's Bucciarati's gang (barring Abbacchio) have been consistent fighters in the Creator/CyberConnect2 fighting games, ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureAllStarBattle'' and ''VideoGame/JoJosBizarreAdventureEyesOfHeaven''.



** Abbachio's backstory in the manga never explained how he actually ''joined'' Passione after his partner's death, so the anime added two short original scenes where Bruno visits Abbachio's apartment and asks him to join the gang. It also canonizes a fan theory that Abbachio became TheAlcoholic after being fired from the police force.

to:

** Abbachio's backstory in the manga never explained how he actually ''joined'' Passione after his partner's death, so the anime added two short original scenes where Bruno Bucciarati visits Abbachio's apartment and asks him to join the gang. It also canonizes a fan theory that Abbachio became TheAlcoholic after being fired from the police force.



* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Diavolo is sent to an infinite amount of deaths by Gold Experience Requiem's power at the end of the story and Giorno was able to become the Boss. But it came at the cost of Abbacchio, Naranchia and Bruno's lives.]]

to:

* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler: Diavolo is sent to an infinite amount of deaths by Gold Experience Requiem's power at the end of the story and Giorno was able to become the Boss. But it came at the cost of Abbacchio, Naranchia and Bruno's Bucciarati's lives.]]



** [[spoiler: Bruno's flesh began to melt as Secco's stand ability is to turn everything to mud. It got to the point where his fingers bent so hard it broke when he touched his face and we can see the bone of his finger.]]

to:

** [[spoiler: Bruno's [[spoiler:Bucciarati's flesh began to melt as Secco's stand ability is to turn everything to mud. It got to the point where his fingers bent so hard it broke when he touched his face and we can see the bone of his finger.]]



--> '''Bruno (after defeating Pesci) and Trish (after defeating Notorious B.I.G.)''': Arrivedeci. (Farewell)

to:

--> '''Bruno '''Bucciarati (after defeating Pesci) and Trish (after defeating Notorious B.I.G.)''': Arrivedeci. (Farewell)



* CleavageWindow: If there's a male equivalent to this trope, then Giorno and Bruno's outfits ([[UpToEleven as well as a bunch of other characters]]) both qualify for it.

to:

* CleavageWindow: If there's a male equivalent to this trope, then Giorno and Bruno's Bucciarati's outfits ([[UpToEleven as well as a bunch of other characters]]) both qualify for it.



* ContrastingSequelMainCharacter: Despite being recognized as the most morally grey of the original [=JoJos=], Giorno is the only one who goes after the main villain of his own free will, rather than the villain removing their choice by making it personal. This directly contrasts the previous protagonist, Josuke, who initially believed that Kira wasn't their problem if he wasn't a Stand User. This leaves Giorno as a wild card to the villains for almost the whole way (even at the end the BigBad sees Bruno as his nemesis and Giorno as just some newbie), contrary to Josuke's very strong spotlight. Thematically, this lines up with Giorno being descended from a villain, as he [[VillainsActHeroesReact acts while the other [=JoJos=] reacted]].
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: [[spoiler: All of the Hitman Team are hit with this fate after their encounters with Giorno and the gang. Meanwhile, Sorbet and Gelato became the victims of Cioccolata and Secco to warn the Hitman Team to never trying to find out the Boss's true identity.]]

to:

* ContrastingSequelMainCharacter: Despite being recognized as the most morally grey of the original [=JoJos=], Giorno is the only one who goes after the main villain of his own free will, rather than the villain removing their choice by making it personal. This directly contrasts the previous protagonist, Josuke, who initially believed that Kira wasn't their problem if he wasn't a Stand User. This leaves Giorno as a wild card to the villains for almost the whole way (even at the end the BigBad sees Bruno Bucciarati as his nemesis and Giorno as just some newbie), contrary to Josuke's very strong spotlight. Thematically, this lines up with Giorno being descended from a villain, as he [[VillainsActHeroesReact acts while the other [=JoJos=] reacted]].
* CruelAndUnusualDeath: [[spoiler: All [[spoiler:All of the Hitman Team are hit with this fate after their encounters with Giorno and the gang. Meanwhile, Sorbet and Gelato became the victims of Cioccolata and Secco to warn the Hitman Team to never trying to find out the Boss's true identity.]]



* TheDarknessBeforeDeath: Halfway through the comic, [[spoiler:Bruno Buccelatti is killed by the BigBad and healed by TheProtagonist's Stand]], allowing him to keep moving forward and fight out of sheer will, until the final chapters of the comic, where [[spoiler:his blindness makes him realize that he's running out of will and strength to fight, and will be dead for real soon]].
* DeadAllAlong: [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati after his first meeting with Diavolo. In a bit of a twist, it's noticed by several characters that he doesn't have a pulse or temperature, and this is used to stop a Stand User once.]]
* DefeatMeansFriendship: Giorno defeats Bruno but spares his life, and when Bruno wants to know why, Giorno basically answers "Because you're a good person."
* DefectorFromDecadence: Bruno had already some ConflictingLoyalty about Passione's drug business and passively let Giorno do his thing. However, when he sees how The Boss is willing to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter because she's a liability]], he immediately and openly rebels against the gang.
* {{Deuteragonist}}: Bruno is one to Giorno's protagonist role. While the events of the part are seen from Giorno's perspective most of the time, Bruno is his closest ally, best friend, and the person he shares his vision with. In addition, Bruno plays a major role in several arcs and is often much more central to the fight than Giorno is, who himself usually takes a backseat supporting role due to his powers as TheMedic. Notably, it's not Giorno who first encounters The Boss's stand, but Bruno. Due to Giorno's own SupportingProtagonist status, in fact, some outright argue that Bruno really is ''the'' protagonist of the part.

to:

* TheDarknessBeforeDeath: Halfway through the comic, [[spoiler:Bruno Buccelatti Bucciarati is killed by the BigBad and healed by TheProtagonist's Stand]], allowing him to keep moving forward and fight out of sheer will, until the final chapters of the comic, where [[spoiler:his blindness makes him realize that he's running out of will and strength to fight, and will be dead for real soon]].
* DeadAllAlong: [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati after his first meeting with Diavolo. In a bit of a twist, it's noticed by several characters that he doesn't have a pulse or temperature, and this is used to stop a Stand User once.]]
* DefeatMeansFriendship: Giorno defeats Bruno but spares his life, and when Bruno wants to know why, Giorno basically answers "Because you're a good person."
*
DefectorFromDecadence: Bruno Bucciarati had already some ConflictingLoyalty about Passione's drug business and passively let Giorno do his thing. However, when he sees how The Boss is willing to [[spoiler: murder his own daughter because she's a liability]], he immediately and openly rebels against the gang.
* {{Deuteragonist}}: Bruno is one to Giorno's protagonist role. While the events of the part are seen from Giorno's perspective most of the time, Bruno is his closest ally, best friend, and the person he shares his vision with. In addition, Bruno plays a major role in several arcs and is often much more central to the fight than Giorno is, who himself usually takes a backseat supporting role due to his powers as TheMedic. Notably, it's not Giorno who first encounters The Boss's stand, but Bruno. Due to Giorno's own SupportingProtagonist status, in fact, some outright argue that Bruno really is ''the'' protagonist of the part.
gang.



** Towards the end, Bruno is gravely injured and deprived of most of his senses while being helped up by an enemy he thinks is Trish. He asks "her" to start a new life on his hometown once everything is done with. Previously, the real Trish was upset Bruno was acting too cold towards his team.

to:

** Towards the end, Bruno Bucciarati is gravely injured and deprived of most of his senses while being helped up by an enemy he thinks is Trish. He asks "her" to start a new life on his hometown once everything is done with. Previously, the real Trish was upset Bruno Bucciarati was acting too cold towards his team.



** Gold Experience's early abilities don't really line up with what it's consistently shown to be able to do later on. For example, its AttackReflector ability was quickly dropped after being used once (Luca trying to kill a frog with his shovel), and its ability to give a person more life energy and cause an OutOfBodyExperience is only used in his fight with Bruno before going unused again (although this does make a bit of sense, since Giorno didn't have many opportunities to punch an opponent).
** When Bruno first appeared, he was much more ruthless, as he interrogated Giorno by showing him Leaky-Eye Luca's severed fingers and seemed legitimately loyal to the Boss. This is a stark contrast from the NobleDemon he's established to be after his and Giorno's fight.

to:

** Gold Experience's early abilities don't really line up with what it's consistently shown to be able to do later on. For example, its AttackReflector ability was quickly dropped after being used once (Luca trying to kill a frog with his shovel), and its ability to give a person more life energy and cause an OutOfBodyExperience is only used in his fight with Bruno Bucciarati before going unused again (although this does make a bit of sense, since Giorno didn't have many opportunities to punch an opponent).
** When Bruno Bucciarati first appeared, he was much more ruthless, as he interrogated Giorno by showing him Leaky-Eye Luca's severed fingers and seemed legitimately loyal to the Boss. This is a stark contrast from the NobleDemon he's established to be after his and Giorno's fight.



* ElephantInTheLivingRoom: Giorno and Bruno both know that [[spoiler:Bruno is undead after his fight with King Crimson]], but are too disturbed by the thought to tell their teammates.

to:

* ElephantInTheLivingRoom: Giorno and Bruno Bucciarati both know that [[spoiler:Bruno [[spoiler:Bucciarati is undead after his fight with King Crimson]], but are too disturbed by the thought to tell their teammates.



** Bruno and Giorno break the ice when the latter realizes the former, despite being a mafioso whose family deals hard drugs, is not okay with said drugs being sold to teens.

to:

** Bruno Bucciarati and Giorno break the ice when the latter realizes the former, despite being a mafioso whose family deals hard drugs, is not okay with said drugs being sold to teens.



** Sale is the first one, being faceless while having a conversation with his partner Zucchero in the car, prior to Team Buccellati sailing to Capri.

to:

** Sale is the first one, being faceless while having a conversation with his partner Zucchero in the car, prior to Team Buccellati Bucciarati sailing to Capri.



** The Boss for the entire part sans the final battle. His first fight against Bruno features him as a man fully hidden in the dark.

to:

** The Boss for the entire part sans the final battle. His first fight against Bruno Bucciarati features him as a man fully hidden in the dark.



** Mista has a deep fear of the number four, associating it with misfortune. [[spoiler: Bruno dying at the hands of The Boss and then rebelling against him]] takes place on the fourth day Giorno joins the team. [[spoiler: Also, Abbachio takes one of the four pieces of cake and ends up being the first to die.]]
** The second ED shows [[spoiler:the team's and Diavolo's Stands in the order they die (or in Fugo's case, leave). From top to bottom, it starts with Purple Haze, then goes to Moody Blues, Aerosmith, Sticky Fingers, and King Crimson, culminating with Sex Pistols, Spice Girl, and Gold Experience at the top for the ones who survived. Once Chariot Requiem is introduced, we see it positioned above Moody Blues and Aerosmith, but below Sticky Fingers. Abacchio is already dead, Narancia dies rather early during Chariot Requiem's rampage thanks to a sneak attack by King Crimson, and Bruno's spirit moves on after finding a way to kill Chariot Requiem once and for all. Also, it shows King Crimson's arm wrapped around Spice Girl's body, foreshadowing how Diavolo takes control of Trish's body by grabbing and manipulating her Stand.]]

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** Mista has a deep fear of the number four, associating it with misfortune. [[spoiler: Bruno [[spoiler:Bucciarati dying at the hands of The Boss and then rebelling against him]] takes place on the fourth day Giorno joins the team. [[spoiler: Also, Abbachio takes one of the four pieces of cake and ends up being the first to die.]]
** The second ED shows [[spoiler:the team's and Diavolo's Stands in the order they die (or in Fugo's case, leave). From top to bottom, it starts with Purple Haze, then goes to Moody Blues, Aerosmith, Sticky Fingers, and King Crimson, culminating with Sex Pistols, Spice Girl, and Gold Experience at the top for the ones who survived. Once Chariot Requiem is introduced, we see it positioned above Moody Blues and Aerosmith, but below Sticky Fingers. Abacchio is already dead, Narancia dies rather early during Chariot Requiem's rampage thanks to a sneak attack by King Crimson, and Bruno's Bucciarati's spirit moves on after finding a way to kill Chariot Requiem once and for all. Also, it shows King Crimson's arm wrapped around Spice Girl's body, foreshadowing how Diavolo takes control of Trish's body by grabbing and manipulating her Stand.]]



* FreakyFridayFlip: The climax of the part is a body swap scenario thanks to [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]]. Giorno and Narancia trade bodies, Trish and Mista trade bodies and Bruno and Doppio trade bodies. [[spoiler:Diavolo lies in wait as a split personality for Mista's body (occupied by Trish), and once given the chance goes after the [[EleventhHourSuperpower stand arrow]].]]

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* FreakyFridayFlip: The climax of the part is a body swap scenario thanks to [[spoiler:Silver Chariot Requiem]]. Giorno and Narancia trade bodies, Trish and Mista trade bodies and Bruno Bucciarati and Doppio trade bodies. [[spoiler:Diavolo lies in wait as a split personality for Mista's body (occupied by Trish), and once given the chance goes after the [[EleventhHourSuperpower stand arrow]].]]



* GoodIsNotNice: Bucciarati's group maybe your RagtagBunchOfMisfits and Bruno is nice enough that the townsfolk is very friendly with him top the point that old ladies ask him for help. But they won't hesitate to do anything to do what they think is right, and won't hesitate to kill anyone that stands in their way.

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* GoodIsNotNice: Bucciarati's group maybe your RagtagBunchOfMisfits and Bruno Bucciarati is nice enough that the townsfolk is very friendly with him top the point that old ladies ask him for help. But they won't hesitate to do anything to do what they think is right, and won't hesitate to kill anyone that stands in their way.



** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventurePhantomBlood ファントムブラッド]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders スターダストクルセイダース]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean ストーンオーシャン]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureJoJolion ジョジョリオン]]) or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureBattleTendency 戦闘潮流]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable ダイヤモンドは砕けない]]), 黄金の風 has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bruno and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".

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** Unlike other ''[=JoJo=]'' arcs that already have GratuitousEnglish titles originally parsed in [[UsefulNotes/JapaneseWritingSystem katakana]] ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventurePhantomBlood ファントムブラッド]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStardustCrusaders スターダストクルセイダース]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureStoneOcean ストーンオーシャン]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureJoJolion ジョジョリオン]]) or translations from more kanji-laden titles into English ([[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureBattleTendency 戦闘潮流]], [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureDiamondIsUnbreakable ダイヤモンドは砕けない]]), 黄金の風 has always been presented in Italian as "Vento Aureo" and never as "Golden Wind" for Japanese- or English-speaking audiences, until the 2018 anime at least.[[note]]For whatever reason, the official French translations chose "Golden Wind" (in English mind you) as the subtitle for Part 5.[[/note]] To that extent, they even "change" the translated name of the manga to ''Le bizzarre avventure di [=GioGio=] Parte 5: Vento Aureo'', with Gs replacing Js on covers and other pieces of art. This also works its way into the dialogue on occasion, most notably with Melone's CatchPhrase, "''Di molto!''", as well as Bruno Bucciarati and Narancia's {{Kiai}}s "Ari Ari Ari Ari Ari Arrivederci" and "Vola Vola Vola Vola Vola Volare Via".



** One that occurs for both the audience and Bruno is when he realizes that he's suddenly only holding [[spoiler:Trish's disembodied hand]], and the boss never had good intentions with the mission he sent them on. This arguably cascades into an example that also happens to be literal when [[spoiler:Bruno himself is]] [[AnyoneCanDie fatally punched through the gut]], putting him on borrowed time for the rest of the story.

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** One that occurs for both the audience and Bruno Bucciarati is when he realizes that he's suddenly only holding [[spoiler:Trish's disembodied hand]], and the boss never had good intentions with the mission he sent them on. This arguably cascades into an example that also happens to be literal when [[spoiler:Bruno [[spoiler:Bucciarati himself is]] [[AnyoneCanDie fatally punched through the gut]], putting him on borrowed time for the rest of the story.



* HiddenInPlainSight: Doppio looks young enough to pass off as a kid. [[spoiler: So Diavolo takes his place in a gang of kids playing soccer and purposefully shoots the ball toward Abacchio to get close to him. He was even posing as a tourist in the fight with Secco and Bucciarati, with Secco [[HostageSituation taking him hostage]] to prevent Bruno from killing him.]]
* HopeSpot: A couple in Bruno's flashback. When he was a child, his father happened upon a drug deal and was gunned down. Though he was shot 7 times the coast guard found him and he survived. The gang later tried to kill him in the hospital, but Bruno got the drop on them and killed the two thugs. Though his dad survived both encounters, he ultimately lived for only 5 more years, with chronic pain, on account of the damage the bullets had done to him.
* HowWeGotHere: The final chapters following [[spoiler: Diavolo's defeat]] are a side-story about Bruno and the gang before they met Giorno. It also features a Stand that [[spoiler: foreshadows the deaths of Bruno, Abbacchio, and Narancia.]]

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* HiddenInPlainSight: Doppio looks young enough to pass off as a kid. [[spoiler: So Diavolo takes his place in a gang of kids playing soccer and purposefully shoots the ball toward Abacchio to get close to him. He was even posing as a tourist in the fight with Secco and Bucciarati, with Secco [[HostageSituation taking him hostage]] to prevent Bruno Bucciarati from killing him.]]
* HopeSpot: A couple in Bruno's Bucciarati's flashback. When he was a child, his father happened upon a drug deal and was gunned down. Though he was shot 7 times the coast guard found him and he survived. The gang later tried to kill him in the hospital, but Bruno Bucciarati got the drop on them and killed the two thugs. Though his dad survived both encounters, he ultimately lived for only 5 more years, with chronic pain, on account of the damage the bullets had done to him.
* HowWeGotHere: The final chapters following [[spoiler: Diavolo's defeat]] are a side-story about Bruno Bucciarati and the gang before they met Giorno. It also features a Stand that [[spoiler: foreshadows the deaths of Bruno, Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia.]]



* IDieFree: [[spoiler: Bruno Bucciarati tells this to Giorno from beyond the grave, saying that he freed himself from being a slave of Fate and took his own path.]]

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* IDieFree: [[spoiler: Bruno [[spoiler:Bruno Bucciarati tells this to Giorno from beyond the grave, saying that he freed himself from being a slave of Fate and took his own path.]]



* {{Irony}}: [[spoiler: In episode 21, Bruno was killed by The boss with a GutPunch, with only Giorno saving him that he is still alive. 11 episodes later, he unknowingly returned the favor when he gave a GutPunch to Doppio, who is The Boss's split personality.]]

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* {{Irony}}: [[spoiler: In episode 21, Bruno Bucciarati was killed by The boss with a GutPunch, with only Giorno saving him that he is still alive. 11 episodes later, he unknowingly returned the favor when he gave a GutPunch to Doppio, who is The Boss's split personality.]]



* KillEmAll: Compared to the idealistic ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' this is a much darker story with almost every Stand battle being a fight to the death. [[spoiler:Bruno, Abbacchio, and Narancia all die. Fugo leaves which means the gang is reduced to just Giorno and Mista. Returning hero Polnareff physically dies but his spirit lives on inside Coco Jumbo. Risotto's gang is wiped out completely by Bruno's gang. Every other named Passione member is killed, with the exception of Zucchero and depending on canon he dies as well in the ''Purple Haze Feedback'' spinoff.]]

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* KillEmAll: Compared to the idealistic ''Diamond is Unbreakable'' this is a much darker story with almost every Stand battle being a fight to the death. [[spoiler:Bruno, [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Abbacchio, and Narancia all die. Fugo leaves which means the gang is reduced to just Giorno and Mista. Returning hero Polnareff physically dies but his spirit lives on inside Coco Jumbo. Risotto's gang is wiped out completely by Bruno's Bucciarati's gang. Every other named Passione member is killed, with the exception of Zucchero and depending on canon he dies as well in the ''Purple Haze Feedback'' spinoff.]]



* TheMobBossIsScarier: When Bruno announces his betrayal of Passione, the majority of the team is shaking in fear of The Boss' retaliation. Fortunately for Giorno and Bruno, only Fugo remains scared enough to stay behind.

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* TheMobBossIsScarier: When Bruno Bucciarati announces his betrayal of Passione, the majority of the team is shaking in fear of The Boss' retaliation. Fortunately for Giorno and Bruno, Bucciarati, only Fugo remains scared enough to stay behind.



* RecruitedFromTheGutter: Narancia was first spotted by Fugo trying to scavenge garbage cans, but was later accepted into Passione, although Bruno was against it.

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* RecruitedFromTheGutter: Narancia was first spotted by Fugo trying to scavenge garbage cans, but was later accepted into Passione, although Bruno Bucciarati was against it.



** As with previous adaptations, the first opening ''Fighting Gold'' has some subtle hints about the events of the story, meant more for attentive fans than giving away a twist.[[spoiler: Bruno, Narancia, and Abbachio's body silhouettes become black, unlike the other members of Passione, and in the pentultimate shot, they are all framed on the right side of the screen, making a subtle reference at their deaths]]. On a less subtle level, ''Fighting Gold'' also prominently features Trish, who wasn't previously shown in promotional material and didn't appear in the manga until her debut 29 chapters in.
*** In addition, a silhouette of [[spoiler: Bruno carved out of Rolling Stones]] can be seen in the background of the opening shot.

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** As with previous adaptations, the first opening ''Fighting Gold'' has some subtle hints about the events of the story, meant more for attentive fans than giving away a twist.[[spoiler: Bruno, [[spoiler:Bucciarati, Narancia, and Abbachio's body silhouettes become black, unlike the other members of Passione, and in the pentultimate shot, they are all framed on the right side of the screen, making a subtle reference at their deaths]]. On a less subtle level, ''Fighting Gold'' also prominently features Trish, who wasn't previously shown in promotional material and didn't appear in the manga until her debut 29 chapters in.
*** In addition, a silhouette of [[spoiler: Bruno [[spoiler:Bucciarati carved out of Rolling Stones]] can be seen in the background of the opening shot.



* SupportingProtagonist: Giorno may be the eponymous Jojo (or [=GioGio=]) of the part, and is instrumental in a massive amount of fights, either through his actions or what he's figured out, but after joining Bruno's gang, he mostly passively goes along with what the rest of the group is doing plotwise.

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* SupportingProtagonist: Giorno may be the eponymous Jojo (or [=GioGio=]) of the part, and is instrumental in a massive amount of fights, either through his actions or what he's figured out, but after joining Bruno's Bucciarati's gang, he mostly passively goes along with what the rest of the group is doing plotwise.
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* RedHerring: The plotline of finding out The Boss' true identity falls into this a bit. Almost the entirety of ''Vento Aureo'' is spent with various groups trying to dig up information about his past, certain that there must be ''something'' he's hiding that would be a weakness for him. [[spoiler: Once we actually find out the Boss' identity, it turns out he really wasn't hiding any inherent weakness, nor was he anybody they would recognize. He was just ''that'' paranoid]]. What lessens this somewhat is that he ''is'' revealed to be more important in the grand scheme of things than one might assume at first glance, [[spoiler: being the one who discovered the Stand Arrows and sold them to DIO's service, and therefore being an indirect but deciding reason why Part 3 played out the way it did and why everything from Part 4 onward happened at all. His origins do trace back to the Requiem Arrow, but even he wasn't aware of its true properties until toward the end of the part]]. In other words, TheReveal of his identity wasn't actually that much of a game-changer in the context of ''Vento Aureo'', [[spoiler: but it did have huge implications for the series as a whole]].
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[[caption-width-right:350:[[ThemeMusicPowerUp I, Giorno Giovanna,]] [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters have a dream that]] [[DrugsAreBad I know is just.]]]]

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[[caption-width-right:350:[[ThemeMusicPowerUp I, Giorno Giovanna,]] [[NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters have a dream that]] [[DrugsAreBad I know [[caption-width-right:350:''Fight with me, there's no hope but try. Won't give up, it's my destiny, Don't care Don't you ever give me mercy, When my life is just.]]]]
gone with the wind. Will a prayer vanish into dust? Hell no, Starting over, Golden Wind!'']]

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