Description
Jun Guevara, alias Mr. Second or Number Two, is an inmate at Arizona State Prison whose feared reputation grants him special privileges. Guards ignore his cigarette theft and line-cutting, while other inmates face lethal consequences for similar acts. His status as one of two "free men" in the prison places him uniquely alongside Biscuit Oliva.
Born in South America, Guevara was a high-seas pirate before founding his sovereign nation. His imprisonment followed an infiltration of US political figure George Bosch’s home, where he threatened Bosch’s family after the politician proposed military action against Guevara’s nation, cementing his anti-capitalist and anti-US stance.
Guevara presents as muscular, in his mid-20s to early 30s, with shoulder-length black hair often tied by a bandana. He wears the prison’s orange uniform but removes his shirt and applies dirt-based war paint in combat.
Ranked among the world’s strongest fighters—described as "one of three men alive more powerful than a machine gun"—Guevara mastered Mukakure-ryuu Ninjutsu (No-Cover Style) under his grandfather. This discipline enables bare-handed victories against armed foes and single-strike lethality. His techniques include:
- **Harite**: A sumo-style clap generating air pressure to rupture eardrums, followed by hair-needle strikes to destroy inner ear structures.
- **Ippon Ken**: A concentrated fist strike.
- **Core Hardness**: Defensive bracing against heavy impacts.
He also detects distant wind currents through enhanced senses and weaponizes his hair.
His combat feats include defeating a larger sumo wrestler with Harite, incapacitating three "Mouth" mercenaries via urine distraction and an uppercut shattering teeth, and challenging Biscuit Oliva. He withstood Oliva’s punches but lost the fight. Classified at "Town level" durability and striking strength, he damaged Oliva and survived full-power assaults.
Guevara exhibits extreme confidence, arrogance, and pride, rejecting defeat. His intelligence and leadership fueled nation-building and government outmaneuvering. Philosophically rigid, he refuses to humiliate prison security; instead of escaping through the front gate, he tunnels out to return home without undermining guards.
Narratively, Guevara embodies Cold War ideological clashes, his battles against Oliva metaphorizing capitalism-communism struggles. He exits the prison saga after defeat by tunneling to freedom.
Born in South America, Guevara was a high-seas pirate before founding his sovereign nation. His imprisonment followed an infiltration of US political figure George Bosch’s home, where he threatened Bosch’s family after the politician proposed military action against Guevara’s nation, cementing his anti-capitalist and anti-US stance.
Guevara presents as muscular, in his mid-20s to early 30s, with shoulder-length black hair often tied by a bandana. He wears the prison’s orange uniform but removes his shirt and applies dirt-based war paint in combat.
Ranked among the world’s strongest fighters—described as "one of three men alive more powerful than a machine gun"—Guevara mastered Mukakure-ryuu Ninjutsu (No-Cover Style) under his grandfather. This discipline enables bare-handed victories against armed foes and single-strike lethality. His techniques include:
- **Harite**: A sumo-style clap generating air pressure to rupture eardrums, followed by hair-needle strikes to destroy inner ear structures.
- **Ippon Ken**: A concentrated fist strike.
- **Core Hardness**: Defensive bracing against heavy impacts.
He also detects distant wind currents through enhanced senses and weaponizes his hair.
His combat feats include defeating a larger sumo wrestler with Harite, incapacitating three "Mouth" mercenaries via urine distraction and an uppercut shattering teeth, and challenging Biscuit Oliva. He withstood Oliva’s punches but lost the fight. Classified at "Town level" durability and striking strength, he damaged Oliva and survived full-power assaults.
Guevara exhibits extreme confidence, arrogance, and pride, rejecting defeat. His intelligence and leadership fueled nation-building and government outmaneuvering. Philosophically rigid, he refuses to humiliate prison security; instead of escaping through the front gate, he tunnels out to return home without undermining guards.
Narratively, Guevara embodies Cold War ideological clashes, his battles against Oliva metaphorizing capitalism-communism struggles. He exits the prison saga after defeat by tunneling to freedom.