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Chiyu Chiyu no Mi

Character

Healing is the gift of this Paramecia power, whose owner mends wounds using liquid drawn from their own body. Mansherry, princess of the Tontatta tribe, ate it, gaining one of the few known fruits that carries no offensive use whatsoever.

Type: Paramecia
Meaning: Healing
Japanese Name: チユチユの実
First Appearance: Chapter 774; Episode 714
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Overview

Restoring injuries through fluid produced by the body, most commonly tears, defines this Paramecia ability. Its owner, Mansherry of the Tontatta Kingdom, can bring any hurt creature back to health. The name borrows chiyu, a Japanese word meaning healing, and English releases from VIZ and Funimation retitle it the Heal-Heal Fruit. Among all recorded powers, it stands out as one of the rare few offering nothing for direct combat.

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Mechanics

Contact is everything here. Tears from the wielder, upon reaching a wounded living thing, instantly return it to perfect condition, and water produced at the palms carries the same restorative charge. Regrowing a lost limb from nothing lies beyond the fruit, which can only reattach what remains, and its healing may be triggered only a limited number of times. The power extends to the self as well, hinted when Leo urged Mansherry to mend her own body and escape. Broken objects and even buildings can be made whole, at the cost of trimming the user's own remaining years. A cruel loophole exists: enemies who force the wielder to weep can harvest healing tears against her will, exactly the trick the Donquixote Pirates relied upon, since she cannot strip her tears of their effect. Whether sickness can be cured stays unknown, and the ordinary vulnerabilities of a Devil Fruit still apply.

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Notable Users

Mansherry, the Tontatta princess, remains the only eater. Seized by the Donquixote Pirates, she served both as leverage over the Dwarves and as a reserve medic meant to revive their fallen executives, refusing until she was made to cry. Once freed, Giolla and Trebol still counted on her to rebuild the SMILE Factory should it fall. Her Chiyupopo technique releases dandelions formed from tears that briefly speed recovery and dull pain, a boost that fades over time and cannot repeat on the same person, first deployed to help Dressrosa's people outrun the Birdcage. With Kenpopo, she cultivates storable healing dandelions grown from willing donors, a method Sengoku compared to giving blood, though generous donors are left too drained to move.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Chiyu Chiyu no Mi?

The Chiyu Chiyu no Mi is a Paramecia-type Devil Fruit that lets its user heal wounds using fluid produced by their own body, most often tears. It is one of the few known Devil Fruits that offers no direct combat ability.

Who has the Chiyu Chiyu no Mi?

Mansherry, the princess of the Tontatta Kingdom, is the only known user of the Chiyu Chiyu no Mi. She was captured by the Donquixote Pirates, who forced her to heal their fallen executives.

How does the Chiyu Chiyu no Mi heal wounds?

The Chiyu Chiyu no Mi heals through contact with tears or water produced at the user's palms, which instantly restore an injured living thing to full health. It can also mend broken objects and buildings, though doing so shortens the user's own remaining years.

Can the Chiyu Chiyu no Mi regrow lost limbs?

No. The Chiyu Chiyu no Mi cannot regrow a limb from nothing; it can only reattach and heal what still remains, and its healing can only be triggered a limited number of times.

What techniques does Mansherry use with the Chiyu Chiyu no Mi?

Mansherry's Chiyupopo releases tear-formed dandelions that briefly speed recovery and dull pain, while her Kenpopo cultivates storable healing dandelions grown from willing donors, though generous donors are left too drained to move.

Sources & Information

Looking for more on Chiyu Chiyu 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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