Diavolo/Personality and Relationships
Diavolo
Diavolo has an aggressive and ruthless personality, highly disliking anyone seeing his true face, and will relentlessly hunt and kill those who do. He is willing to kill his own family and risk civilian lives to prevent his identity being discovered, and attempts to kill his own daughter to stop himself being discovered.
His strong will to overcome his past lead him to creating one of the most powerful organized crime syndicates in Italy, and to keep his position as boss and identity secret Diavolo tortures and murders without mercy or discrimination. As boss of Passione he is highly respected, as Passione is outwardly a just organization dedicated to removing drugs from the streets of Italy. This is, however, all just a front for Diavolo's real plan to make his own drugs (made by Massimo Volpe) the only product on the market. Buccellati had also initially believed Passione to be doing good, and so felt a great sense of betrayal when this news was revealed to him.
Diavolo is unforgiving of those conspiring against him, probably believing himself to be without fault, and has been shown to treat his subordinates cruelly if suspected of defection. He is even willing to put innocent lives at risk to achieve his goals and secure his identity.
Like other main antagonists in the series, he uses the prefix I or Me (この, kono) to announce his name in a sign of superiority over others, often boasting that he is the Emperor and the one chosen by the arrow.
His personality is split so completely that when Silver Chariot Requiem switches everyone's souls, Diavolo and Doppio adopt different bodies: Doppio in Buccellati's body, and Diavolo in Guido Mista's.
Doppio
While Doppio at first appears to be fairly clueless and harmless, he is not unable to look after himself. He has a friendly personality which should not be mistaken for naivety as he proves that he is a lot smarter and more resourceful than he looks. He is faithful to Diavolo and seems to be willing to do anything to help him.
During his fight with Risotto he proves himself to be loyal to Diavolo, almost to the point of stupidity, as he refuses to escape when told so he can find out his enemy's secret and weakness. While at first terrified of what was happening, Doppio uses what resources he has and defeats Risotto with almost no intervention from Diavolo himself.
He is seemingly unaware of their co-inhabitance and appears to consider himself Diavolo's underboss, as Diavolo only contacts him directly. Just before Diavolo takes control, Doppio claims his head hurts and warns people to keep away or stop touching him. After Diavolo has taken care any problems (i.e. killed the person asking about his identity), Doppio regains control once more, entirely oblivious to what transpired, and returns to what he was doing.
As he dies, Doppio's last thoughts are of his boss. He remains faithful until the end and smiles, saying that if Diavolo is going with them he'll surely win and asks Diavolo to call him, remarking that he feels lonely.
While some may ague that Diavolo is the more dominant of the two, it appears that he is merely the more ruthless as Doppio appears to be in control of their body more often than not, taking advice and orders where needed.
Relationships
Enemies
- Giorno Giovanna:
- Bruno Buccellati:
- Narancia Ghirga:
- Leone Abbacchio:
- Pannacotta Fugo:
- Guido Mista:
- La Squadra di Esecuzion:
References