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Ame Ame no Mi

Character

Appearing solely in a film, this Logia power lets its eater make, steer, and turn into candy syrup. Gasparde, villain of the fourth movie, shifts between sticky and rock-hard forms with it, but a dusting of flour peels away his intangibility.

Type: Logia
Meaning: Candy
Weakness: Flour
Japanese Name: アメアメの実
First Appearance: Movie 4 (Dead End Adventure)
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Overview

Confined to the fourth movie and thus non-canon, this Logia fruit centers on a green syrup that its user both spawns and directs. The Japanese name springs from ame, the word for candy, while the Treasure Cruise game instead tags it the Candy-Candy Fruit. Its reading is drawn apart from the homophone meaning rain, which differs in both stress and kanji. Sweet though it looks, the syrup cannot be eaten, a fact Luffy learned when he tried and failed to hold Gasparde inside his mouth. Unusually for a Logia, its element is manufactured rather than a force of nature.

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Mechanics

The gift lets its bearer flip his body between clinging syrup and set-solid candy, catching or swallowing blades and fists so that anyone who strikes him gets stuck fast and hands over an opening to be pounded. Going liquid also lets attacks slide harmlessly through him, though his grip on the power is incomplete, so a sudden ambush can still hurt. Where most Logia users lose hold of their element once it changes state, Gasparde keeps command of his syrup whether solid or half-liquid, perhaps because the stuff stiffens on its own as time passes. For offense he favors an approach akin to the Toge Toge no Mi, growing hardened syrup spikes to run foes through or coating himself in them and hurling forward to skewer, which doubles as a warning against counterattacks. He has likewise aped Luffy's rubbery stretch, extending his arms to lengthen a syrup lance and to sling his own body ahead. The power's telltale weakness is flour, which robs the user of his stickiness on contact and lays him open to plain physical hits.

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Notable Users

Gasparde, the lead antagonist of the film Dead End Adventure, is the only person to hold the fruit, and he leans on it mainly to fight. Attackers who strike him get bound in his syrupy mass, whereupon he beats them down with his sizeable strength. The ability draws several later comparisons. It lines up closely with Charlotte Katakuri's Mochi Mochi no Mi, since each yields a thick, confection-named material that loses its cling under a certain substance and each user stretches his limbs to copy the Gomu Gomu no Mi. It also parallels the candy-shaping Pero Pero no Mi.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Who has the Ame Ame no Mi?

The Ame Ame no Mi belongs to Gasparde, the lead antagonist of the non-canon film Dead End Adventure. He is the only character shown to hold this Devil Fruit.

What does the Ame Ame no Mi do?

The Ame Ame no Mi is a Logia type Devil Fruit that lets its user create, control, and transform into a sticky green candy syrup. The user can shift between a clinging liquid form and a set solid candy form, letting attacks either stick fast or slide harmlessly through them.

What is the weakness of the Ame Ame no Mi?

The Ame Ame no Mi's telltale weakness is flour, which strips away the user's stickiness on contact and leaves them open to ordinary physical hits. Luffy discovered the fruit's syrup cannot actually be eaten when he tried and failed to hold Gasparde inside his mouth.

Is the Ame Ame no Mi canon?

The Ame Ame no Mi is non-canon, appearing only in the fourth One Piece film. It has not been shown or referenced in the main manga or anime storyline.

How does Gasparde fight with the Ame Ame no Mi?

Gasparde fights with the Ame Ame no Mi by growing hardened syrup spikes to run foes through or coating himself in spikes before charging forward. He has also copied Luffy's rubbery stretch, extending his arms to lengthen a syrup lance or fling his own body ahead.

Sources & Information

Looking for more on Ame Ame no Mi? The One Piece Wiki on Fandom has a dedicated page with community notes.

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This content is original writing by Daddy Jim Headquarters based on the One Piece anime series, manga, and official materials. Episode and chapter references are cited where applicable.

Character and scene imagery on this site is original artwork by Daddy Jim Headquarters, not screenshots or licensed imagery. Official cover art is used on three types of pages for editorial commentary:

  • Movie pages: theatrical posters and key visuals, credited to Toei Animation and Toei Company.
  • Game pages: official box art for the One Piece console and mobile games, credited to Bandai Namco.
  • Manga chapter pages: Jump Comics volume covers, credited to Shueisha and Eiichiro Oda.

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