A Paramecia fruit that converts living people into toys, wipes all memory of their existence, and binds them to obey. Eaten by Sugar, it also froze her aging, and it powered Doflamingo's hidden slave trade in Dressrosa.
This Paramecia lets its user turn living beings into toys and erase every memory others hold of them, while a side effect grants the eater eternal youth. It belongs to Sugar of the Donquixote Pirates. Shaped like a yo-yo, the wheel-like fruit has a spiraling pale-yellow core on each side, a red swirly shell, and a thick winding-key stem. Its name comes from hobi, the Japanese rendering of hobby, a word also used there for collecting toys.
A touch from the user transforms a person or animal into a toy, and a contract sealed immediately afterward forces the victim to obey every command. Toys lose their physical strength, shrink, often down well below human size even for giants, and find their Devil Fruit powers and weapons gone, though any combat skill they had is retained. Being inorganic, they deteriorate under strain and are vulnerable to powers like the Pamu Pamu no Mi. The chilling core of the ability is instant, total memory erasure: the moment someone becomes a toy, everyone forgets they ever existed, even witnesses, leaving no one to mount a rescue. The user can also choose the toy's shape and combine several victims into one larger doll. Knocking the user out or killing them cancels every transformation and restores all memories, so Sugar required constant protection. Loopholes let some toys defy their contracts, physical evidence like engravings survives the memory wipe, and the user must touch a target with a bare hand and deliberately will the change.
Sugar is the only user, and her power was central to Doflamingo's underworld operation, turning the citizens of Dressrosa and beaten Corrida Colosseum fighters into a steady supply of forgotten slaves while Trebol guarded her. The transformation is known to its victims as the Hobi Hobi Curse. Having eaten the fruit at age ten, she stopped aging for twelve years and passed as a harmless little girl. Named techniques include Keiyaku, the binding contract; Little Black Bears, a rapid touch that turns many foes into teddy bears at once; and Atamawari Ningyo, giant nutcracker dolls each built from eight people, with crushing jaws and the durability to reattach a severed head and keep fighting.

When I first decided to commit to watching One Piece seriously, I knew I was embarking on one of anime's longest and most beloved series. With over 100...

The transformation everyone knows, the follow-up question nobody would touch. Why we made a smooth R&B track about the golden glow Dragon Ball never talks about....
The name Hobi Hobi no Mi comes from hobi, the Japanese rendering of hobby, a word also used in Japan for collecting toys, fitting its power to turn living beings into toys.
Sugar of the Donquixote Pirates is the only known user of the Hobi Hobi no Mi, a Paramecia type Devil Fruit shaped like a yo-yo.
The Hobi Hobi no Mi lets its user transform a living being into a toy with a single touch, then erase all memory that person ever existed and bind them to obey commands through a sealed contract. As a side effect it also grants the eater eternal youth.
Victims turned into toys by the Hobi Hobi no Mi are instantly and totally forgotten by everyone, even witnesses, leaving no one able to mount a rescue.
Sugar's power was central to Doflamingo's underworld operation, turning the citizens of Dressrosa and beaten Corrida Colosseum fighters into a steady supply of forgotten toy slaves while Trebol guarded her.
Looking for more on Hobi Hobi no Mi? The One Piece Wiki on Fandom has a dedicated page with community notes.
View on FandomThis 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:
Official resources:
Daddy Jim Headquarters maintains this encyclopedia. If you spot an error, a translation issue, or something that doesn't look right, let us know.