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Dero Dero no Mi

Character

Melting anything into liquid is the power of this non-canon Paramecia, first shown in the One Piece novel Law. Its owner, the antagonist Artur Bacca, becomes a Dissolving Human able to turn his own body fluid and to corrode a victim's heart through eye contact.

Type: Paramecia
Epithet: Dissolving Human
Japanese Name: デロデロの実
First Appearance: One Piece novel Law Chapter 3
Kill Timer Hours: 24
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Overview

Reducing objects to liquid is the gift of this Paramecia, which lies outside the main canon and made its debut in the third chapter of the spin-off novel Law. English releases title it the Melt-Melt Fruit, and whoever consumes it is dubbed a Dissolving Human, since the power liquefies both outside matter and the eater's own frame. The name plays on the Japanese term derodero, which paints someone so worn out they can scarcely keep their feet. Its lone recorded eater is the villain Artur Bacca.

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Mechanics

Most commonly, the wielder melts into a fluid state, which sends ordinary strikes passing harmlessly through them. In that liquid form the user regulates their own acidity, gradually eating away at whatever brushes against them. A darker application aims at the heart: by meeting a victim's gaze, the user corrodes that heart in both a figurative and literal way and takes command of the person. Should the effect run past a full day without being cancelled, the victim dies. Because the trick depends on direct eye contact, anything blocking the line of sight, reflective lenses included, defeats it. The liquid body shrugs off physical force entirely, yet electricity still runs through it and reaches the user, and beyond that only the usual Devil Fruit weaknesses are known. Bacca channels the power through three named moves. His Derorinpa, or Dissolving Wave, sends a shaft of light out of his eyes; anyone struck in the eyes has their heart melted and falls under his will. Trocadero liquefies his body for defense. Melty Love spits a stream of acidic fluid from his mouth that scorches through whatever it lands on, the corrosion weakening the more often it is fired.

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Notable Users

The power rests with Artur Bacca, an enemy Trafalgar Law faces over the course of the novel. Bacca relies on it in two ways, offensively to force enemies and even ordinary civilians under his sway, and defensively to dodge blows by melting into liquid.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does the Dero Dero no Mi do?

The Dero Dero no Mi is a non-canon Paramecia-type Devil Fruit that lets its user melt objects, and their own body, into liquid, earning the eater the title Dissolving Human.

Who ate the Dero Dero no Mi?

Artur Bacca, a villain from the spin-off novel Law, is the only known user of the Dero Dero no Mi.

How does the Dero Dero no Mi corrode a victim's heart?

By meeting a victim's gaze, the Dero Dero no Mi user corrodes that person's heart and takes command of them, and the victim dies if the effect is not cancelled within a full day.

What weakness does the Dero Dero no Mi have?

The Dero Dero no Mi's heart-corroding effect depends on direct eye contact, so anything blocking the line of sight, including reflective lenses, defeats it, and electricity still passes through the user's liquid form.

What techniques does Artur Bacca use with the Dero Dero no Mi?

Artur Bacca's Dero Dero no Mi techniques include Derorinpa, a light beam from his eyes that melts a victim's heart, Trocadero, which liquefies his body for defense, and Melty Love, a stream of acidic fluid spat from his mouth.

Sources & Information

Looking for more on Dero Dero 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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