Doggy Style

"I'll break you apart with my wires."

- Rai Mamezuku

Doggy Style (ドギー・スタイル) is the Stand of Rai Mamezuku, featured in the eighth part of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, JoJolion. This mechanical Stand allows Mamezuku to unravel his body into strips.

Appearance
Doggy Style takes the form of a humanoid with an elongated and almost featureless face, save for 6 small eyes and beanpod-shaped protrusions from the sides of its head. It has a heart-shaped torso, whisk-shaped appendages for arms and the kanji for "bean" (豆) written on its shoulders within a circle.

Skin Peeling
Doggy Style's full capabilities are currently unknown; however, its primary ability allows Mamezuku to "peel" his own body like an apple, unraveling his appendages into "wire rope" that he can control and manipulate.

Mamezuku first uses it while on an to retrieve a strawberry from a bush several feet below. The most advanced usage of this ability is when Mamezuku forms his entire arm into a makeshift crossbow, from which he fires a fork using his mouth. Mamezuku can also send his rope fast enough to give it cutting power. He notably cut a garden of Locacaca plants this way. He can also form his finger into a tight, seemingly sharp cone shape, which he can then extend to attack in a stabbing motion.

Mamezuku is also able to completely unravel himself, as shown when he feigns death from Poor Tom's Ozon Baby. He seems to be able to unravel every part of his body besides his eyes and teeth, making it look like he had been crushed to death.

Spin
In his dying moments, Mamezuku reveals to the technique of the Spin. He demonstrates this with Doggy Style by unraveling his hand and spinning the thread rapidly. The extent of Mamezuku's experience with the spin is unknown, as it may simply be a demonstration of the principle of "spinning" and not a Spin technique.

Trivia

 * In a 2013 interview for 's SWITCH Interview: Tatsujin-tachi with composer, Hirohiko Araki discussed how music has influenced JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, and revealed 's album  is in his music collection, which he listened to when writing Vento Aureo and its gangster protagonists.
 * The intergration of both dog and bean motifs in the stand's design could be a subtle reference to the popular japanese merchandise franchise .