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Fuku Fuku no Mi

Character

Eaten by the Wano retainer Kin'emon, this Paramecia conjures clothing and gear out of leaves or stones the moment he pictures them. Prized for disguises and warm garb, it offers almost nothing in a fight, and its results are only as sharp as the user's imagination.

Type: Paramecia
User: Kin'emon
Meaning: Clothing
Japanese Name: フクフクの実
First Appearance: Chapter 663; Episode 588
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Overview

Kin'emon, the Wano samurai and Kouzuki retainer, is the holder of this Paramecia, which English releases label the Garb-Garb Fruit or Garb-Garb Jutsu. First shown in Chapter 663 and Episode 588, its power turns leaves or stones into garments and other apparel the instant the user pictures a design. The name draws on fuku, the Japanese word for clothing. In-story Kin'emon speaks of it as a technique of his own rather than ever naming the fruit outright.

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Mechanics

The fruit proves handy in many ways. Whatever it produces can double as a disguise, perfect for slipping unnoticed through covert missions, and can meet plain needs such as warming its wearer against the cold. It has even yielded working armor and weaponry, swords included. The catches are firm. Kin'emon has to have small objects like leaves or stones close by, so with no raw material at hand the power simply will not fire. Nothing it makes lasts: the garments snap back to their source objects the moment they come off. He must also picture the outfit beforehand, so the polish of the result rides entirely on how well he imagines it. With scarcely any combat use, the ability behaves largely as a passive one. In practice he rests a leaf or stone atop someone's head and speaks a word to convert it into the outfit he needs, holding it for as long as he keeps the image. His one named move, Kin-chan Gofukuten, sets up an arching gate hung with a leaf-marked banner; whoever steps through it is dressed anew on the spot, no object placed overhead, which let him outfit a whole alliance nearing Onigashima. Past all this, the usual Devil Fruit drawbacks still weigh on the user.

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Notable Users

The power sits with Kin'emon, sworn retainer of the Kouzuki Family. He calls on it constantly to kit out his companions, spinning coats, disguises, armor, and even animal costumes across the Dressrosa and Wano arcs, from dressing the Sanji Retrieval Team for Wano to passing off the Kid Pirates as Beasts Pirates. Among Devil Fruits, it ranks with the rare few that carry virtually no direct offensive punch.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does the Fuku Fuku no Mi do?

The Fuku Fuku no Mi is a Paramecia-type Devil Fruit that lets its user turn nearby leaves or stones into clothing and gear the instant they picture a design.

Who ate the Fuku Fuku no Mi?

Kin'emon, a sworn retainer of the Kouzuki Family, is the only known user of the Fuku Fuku no Mi.

What materials does the Fuku Fuku no Mi need to work?

The Fuku Fuku no Mi requires small objects like leaves or stones close at hand to transform, since the power simply will not activate without raw material available.

Is the Fuku Fuku no Mi good for combat?

No, the Fuku Fuku no Mi has scarcely any combat use and behaves largely as a passive ability, valued instead for disguises and warm clothing.

What is Kin'emon's signature Fuku Fuku no Mi technique?

Kin'emon's named Fuku Fuku no Mi technique, Kin-chan Gofukuten, creates an arching gate that instantly dresses anyone who steps through it, which let him outfit a whole alliance nearing Onigashima.

Sources & Information

Looking for more on Fuku Fuku 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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