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Fude Fude no Mi

Character

Wielded by the traitorous Wano samurai Kurozumi Kanjuro, this Paramecia lets its holder secrete ink and bring anything he paints to life as a solid, breathing object. Its creations rise only as far as the artist's skill allows, and the fruit rejoined circulation when he died.

Type: Paramecia
Status: returned to circulation
Meaning: Brush
Japanese Name: フデフデの実
Previous User: Kurozumi Kanjuro
First Appearance: Chapter 754; Episode 691
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Overview

Kurozumi Kanjuro, the samurai who betrayed the Kouzuki cause, held this Paramecia, rendered in English as the Brush-Brush Fruit. Its power surfaced in Chapter 754 and Episode 691, while the fruit form itself was not shown until Chapter 974. Whoever eats it can produce ink from within their own body and turn any drawing made with that ink into a lifelike physical thing. The name traces to fude, the Japanese term for an ink brush. Upon Kanjuro's death, the power was released back into circulation.

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Mechanics

Because the ink wells up internally, no outside supply is ever needed and the artist can paint whenever he likes, routing the ink through a brush or, lacking one, through his own hair, and recoloring it as he pleases. Any finished drawing can be willed into three dimensions, either matching the real subject's properties or taking on different ones by choice: painted people and beasts wake with a mind of their own, sketched weapons work like the genuine items, and drawn meals become edible though they taste awful. Living creations answer fully to the artist, who speaks through them and appears to share their senses. Given enough familiarity with a face, he can forge flawless doubles, even of himself, voices included, or wrap his own body inside a painting of someone else to move about disguised. Since drawings carry no blood or organs, a cut exposes a counterfeit, yet they feel nothing and stay active even when badly torn apart, only dissolving after severe damage or the moment the user wills it. The great catch is talent-dependence: crudely drawn beings labor and tire, dropping back to flat images once spent, and the paintings show some frailty toward water. Steering a creation from a distance also drains the artist. Named techniques include Ideyo, which peels a flat drawing into a living form; the escape beasts Nuke Suzume and Nobori Ryu; and Sumigumo, an ink cloud that in its Ukiyo Yudachi Ezu variant rains piercing droplets. Ordinary Devil Fruit weaknesses apply.

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Notable Users

The fruit passed to Kurozumi Kanjuro, handed to him by Kurozumi Orochi so he could burrow into the Kouzuki Family as a spy. For years he faked clumsy artistry, churning out barely usable scrawls, while in truth being a master who could produce instant, lifelike work such as an elegant crane or a perfect self-clone slipped in among the Nine Red Scabbards. He wed his acting to his brushwork for psychological cruelty, animating a persuasive illusion of Kouzuki Oden to wound the Scabbards. His named creations are the dragon Ryunosuke, the cat Nekozaemon, the tiger Torasaburo, and the flame-wreathed ghost Kazenbo, his final act as he succumbed to his wounds.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does the Fude Fude no Mi do?

The Fude Fude no Mi is a Paramecia-type Devil Fruit that lets its user produce ink from their own body and bring any drawing made with that ink to life as a solid, physical object.

Who ate the Fude Fude no Mi?

Kurozumi Kanjuro, the samurai who betrayed the Kouzuki Family, was the user of the Fude Fude no Mi until his death, after which the fruit returned to circulation.

Can the Fude Fude no Mi bring drawings to life?

Yes, the Fude Fude no Mi can turn any finished drawing into a living, three-dimensional creation that the artist fully controls, including painted people, animals, weapons, and even edible meals.

What is the weakness of creations made by the Fude Fude no Mi?

Creations made by the Fude Fude no Mi depend on the artist's skill, since crudely drawn beings labor and tire before dropping back into flat images, and the paintings also show some frailty toward water.

What were Kurozumi Kanjuro's named Fude Fude no Mi creations?

Kurozumi Kanjuro's named Fude Fude no Mi creations include the dragon Ryunosuke, the cat Nekozaemon, the tiger Torasaburo, and the flame-wreathed ghost Kazenbo, summoned as his final act.

Sources & Information

Looking for more on Fude Fude 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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