I literally don't remember Anne, so I guess that does fit. Wait, no, I remember now. They like, tossed her off in India or something. I wonder what that was even about, like he thought he wanted to add a loli but changed his mind because it was stupid, or wanted to make fun of people who add lolis, or just wanted a side character that wasn't a magic muscleman trying to kill the party with his mind, or what?
On that note and the topic of Santana, I actually like loose ends like that. To me it helps imply the world's credibility, like there's things going on without the heroes. I am conversely not fond of inevitably dragging everyone the main party's ever met and hasn't killed back towards them like some kind of weird gravity, either because everyone needs to be dead for closure purposes or they're really running out of ideas and need to pad it out.
That said, the series indeed gets weird with vampires and such. I think they just suffered from being made up as they went along, which worked fine at the time but then went weird when the context changed.
But yeah, all Jotaro has is "bog standard edgelord protag #999999"
Oh, and a kickass fashion sense. He has that too. His outfit is the most interesting thing about him.
So other then secretly being Charlie Brown (good grief!) he doesn't do anything for me.
So we went from Japanese batman to boring edgelord. JJBA is starting to lose me again.
In the original anime, he was almost completely blank. I was pleasantly surprised when the manga did develop him somewhat, though he's still got that neutral main character vibe a lot.
But to be fair, that might be in large part because the supporting cast was so much larger and more relevant. The first guy (Jonathan?) had Dio to glare at, a Hamon user, and a literal thug to help out somewhat. Joseph had TWO Hamon users and a robot to also sort of help out somewhat, plus more villains to glare at but not usually all at once. Jotaro had a stand user, that stand user's stand/Hamon friend who's also his grandfather and link to all of this nonsense, two frenemies, and a really large rat following him around all at the same time, often taking turns doing things and having the spotlight while fighting fairly unique, fleshed-out enemies. With all that and being unwilling or unable to go all ridiculous with him like he could/did with the side characters (and Joseph), Jotaro might have come out bland in part because there just wasn't
time to make him super memorable without being super loud (I miss you Polnareff).