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Toki Toki no Mi

Character

Sending people forward through time is the singular gift of this Paramecia fruit. Kouzuki Toki ate it and leapt across the centuries era by era, and her last jump flung her son and four retainers twenty years ahead. Her death then released the power back into the world.

Type: Paramecia
Meaning: Time
Japanese Name: トキトキの実
Previous User: Kouzuki Toki
First Appearance: Chapter 920; Episode 910
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Overview

Propelling its bearer, or other people, into the future is what this Paramecia power does, wiping the traveler from the present and reinstating them instantly at a chosen later point. The term toki means time in Japanese, and the manga first referred to it as the Toki Toki Ability before a Vivre Card databook supplied the complete name. Kouzuki Toki kept it until her death, whereupon it slipped back into circulation to be discovered anew.

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Mechanics

Each jump makes a clean getaway from peril, lifting the traveler out of the current day and depositing them in the selected one in a single instant, and the user apparently chooses how far each leap reaches, with two decades the widest gap ever shown. The effect persists even beyond the wielder's own death.

Movement runs strictly forward. No return to the past is achievable, rendering every future jump permanent, and the ability relocates travelers through time only, never through space, so the user must watch exactly where everyone is standing at the instant of departure. The ordinary Devil Fruit weaknesses hold otherwise.

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Notable Users

Throughout her life Toki rode the ability steadily into ever-later epochs, dwelling across many periods and jumping ahead whenever a threat cornered her, emerging in a future where the danger had passed. She almost used it to escape capture by the Takotopus Pirates, stopped only by Oden's intervention, and she ultimately settled roughly thirty years before the present day and wed Kouzuki Oden.

Her final use of the fruit rescued her son Momonosuke and four of the Nine Red Scabbards from the blaze that consumed Oden Castle, hurling them two decades into the future. Having eaten the fruit at least 830 years prior, she holds the longest recorded span of a single person possessing a Devil Fruit, and her passing returned the power to circulation. It ranks among the rare few fruits with no known offensive use.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Toki Toki no Mi?

The Toki Toki no Mi is a Paramecia Devil Fruit, known in English as the Time-Time Fruit, that sends its user or another person forward through time. Each jump wipes the traveler from the present and reinstates them instantly at a chosen later point.

What happened to the Toki Toki no Mi?

Kouzuki Toki held the Toki Toki no Mi for her entire life, using it to leap ahead whenever a threat cornered her, until her death released the power back into circulation to be discovered anew.

Who ate the Toki Toki no Mi?

Kouzuki Toki ate the Toki Toki no Mi and had eaten it at least 830 years before the present day, giving her the longest recorded span of a single person possessing a Devil Fruit. She eventually settled roughly thirty years before the present and wed Kouzuki Oden.

What was Toki's final use of the Toki Toki no Mi?

Toki's final use of the Toki Toki no Mi rescued her son Momonosuke and four of the Nine Red Scabbards from the blaze that consumed Oden Castle, hurling them twenty years into the future.

Can the Toki Toki no Mi send someone to the past?

No, the Toki Toki no Mi only moves people forward through time; no return to the past is achievable, making every jump permanent. It also relocates travelers through time alone, never through space.

Sources & Information

Looking for more on Toki Toki 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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