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Moku Moku no Mi

Character

The first Logia introduced in the series, this fruit lets its eater create, steer, and become smoke. Marine officer Smoker wields it, earning the nickname White Hunter by thickening his smoke to seize targets and flying by jetting it from his body.

Type: Logia
Epithet: Smoke Human; White Hunter
Meaning: Sound of billowing smoke
Japanese Name: モクモクの実
First Appearance: Chapter 100; Episode 48
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Overview

A Logia power that grants control over smoke and the ability to transform into it, this fruit turns its holder into a Smoke Human. Smoker is the one who ate it. Its name comes from the Japanese onomatopoeia for smoke billowing upward, sits inside the word for smoke borrowed from English, and is an anagram of the Japanese for cloud. In appearance the fruit is a grayish sphere with puffy, cloud-like sections each bearing a swirl and a green stem, resembling a melon. It holds two firsts: the earliest Logia shown in the series and the final Devil Fruit unveiled during the East Blue Saga.

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Mechanics

The user can produce, shape, and turn into smoke. As with most Logia, strikes against Smoker pass through his smoke form and leave him unharmed, and he can fly by converting his lower body into vapor for great speed. His offense hinges on altering the smoke's density at will: he wraps targets in intangible haze, then solidifies it to grasp them, a tactic that earned his epithet, the White Hunter. The smoke also lands blunt blows with real force, though a sudden, powerful expansion of the body, like Luffy's Gomu Gomu no Fusen, can break its grip. When met with fire, the two tend to cancel out at equal temperature, as seen against Ace, while otherwise the only dependable ways to wound him are Haki, which Hancock used, or the usual Devil Fruit weaknesses such as Seastone.

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Notable Users

Smoker is the wielder and shows sharper command of basic Logia mechanics than most, selectively converting and manifesting individual body parts to ambush enemies from odd angles. He once faked his death against Law while smoke-formed, then sprouted his human legs to strike. A favorite tactic keeps his hands solid while his limbs go to smoke, extending the reach of his Seastone jitte, and after the timeskip he adds hardened Haki punches. He even powers his Billower Bike with smoke. His named moves include White Out, engulfing and trapping foes in dense smoke; White Blow, a smoke blast or long-range fist; White Snake, a homing smoke serpent; White Vine, a spiraling column; and White Launcher, hurling himself as smoke before pinning a target with the Nanashaku Jitte. By the Summit War of Marineford he had honed the fruit to reflexively become smoke when attacked.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Who ate the Moku Moku no Mi?

Smoker, a Marine officer, ate the Moku Moku no Mi, a Logia Devil Fruit that lets him create, control, and turn into smoke.

What does moku moku mean in Japanese?

Moku moku is the Japanese onomatopoeia for smoke billowing upward, which gives the Moku Moku no Mi its name.

How strong is the Moku Moku no Mi?

The Moku Moku no Mi lets Smoker generate, shape, and become smoke, so ordinary attacks pass through him like other Logia users, and he can solidify his smoke to trap enemies or fly by turning his lower body into vapor. Only Haki or Seastone can reliably harm him.

Why is Smoker known as the White Hunter?

Smoker earned the epithet White Hunter for wrapping targets in intangible smoke and then solidifying it to seize them, a signature tactic of his Moku Moku no Mi.

What makes the Moku Moku no Mi significant among Devil Fruits?

The Moku Moku no Mi was the first Logia fruit shown in One Piece and also the final Devil Fruit introduced during the East Blue Saga.

Sources & Information

Looking for more on Moku Moku 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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