Boku no Rhythm wo Kiitekure

Boku no Rhythm wo Kiitekure (ボクのリズムを聴いてくれ) is the Stand of Oyecomova, featured in Steel Ball Run.

Appearance
Boku no Rhythm wo Kiitekure resembles a with two round discs on the sides of its head. It wears a large, tattered pink cloak. As a result, its presumed body is unseen but two arms with the same stitch motif are visible.

Its design was based on native African artwork.

This Stand is purple in the colored manga.

Abilities
Boku no Rhythm wo Kiitekure's bomb ability makes it very dangerous to face directly, as anything around Oyecomova becomes a potential trap.

Contact bombs
Boku no Rhythm wo Kiitekure has the ability to insert small bombs into practically any medium Oyecomova touches.

The bombs take the form of small pins topped with clocks that affix themselves to any surface, not just solid matter. It's been shown that the pins can be placed on almost anything, including Oyecomova's skin, other people, water, animals, dirt, and even cigarette smoke.

After a while, the highly-sensitive pins are set off when they spring into the air and explode with great force, a couple of bombs being able to inflict significant damage on a building. The only way to stop the bombs is to stop them from springing. However, even if the pins were to be held down by hand, which would severely hamper the fighting ability of most, intense sweating from combat would cause them to ultimately slip loose.

The Stand can place as many pins as it wants, shown when it managed to put one pin on every bee of a swarm. The bombs also make its user essentially untouchable, as grabbing him or striking him would riddle the attacker with pins.

Trivia

 * Boku no Rhythm wo Kiitekure's ability to turn anything the user touches into bombs is similar to the base-power of Killer Queen.
 * The Stand's name was revealed in the JOJOVELLER artbook.


 * The Stand's name translates literally to "Listen to My Rhythm" from Japanese into English from the original Spanish song 's lyrics: "oye como va, mi ritmo (...)". However, due to the Stand's musical reference namesake not being in English beforehand, nor Japanese, the Stand's offcial name is therefore attributed to its Japanese translation, unlike almost all other Stands.