A non-canon Paramecia that, through song, draws the minds of listeners into a dream realm called Uta World. The singer Uta wielded it in One Piece Film: Red, where she came close to trapping much of humanity.
Debuting in One Piece Film: Red, this non-canon Paramecia belongs to the singer Uta, who can pull the mind of any listener into a virtual dimension called Uta World simply by singing to them. The label comes from uta, Japanese for song or poetry, and the fruit is a round, pink shape carrying a musical note, banded rings, and a staff-like pattern. An unnamed predecessor, the one who once called up the entity Tot Musica, possessed the power before her.
The core effect drags a listener's mind into Uta World, reaching both those in earshot and anyone catching the voice relayed through a Den Den Mushi. Because the realm copies reality flawlessly, the unaware seldom notice they have shifted, and no captive can leave without help. Within it, the user borders on omnipotence: summoning objects from nothing, taking flight, warping the terrain, changing people into lifeless things and back, even mending or reviving them. Those physical edits, however, never transfer to the real world.
Anyone transported falls asleep back in reality, where the user can steer their bodies like puppets, going so far as to force slumbering Devil Fruit users to fire off their powers, as happened with Blueno. The ability collapses against anyone deaf to the song, so covered ears or a soundproofed room shut it down, and the user is neither all-seeing inside their own realm nor able to bend others' free will. Uta World dissolves the moment its maker sleeps, and holding it open bleeds stamina fast, a drain drugs like wake-shrooms can offset. Should the user die while it endures, the realm cuts loose from reality for good, stranding everyone caught inside.
Uta held this power since she was a child, sending the Red Hair Pirates into Uta World without meaning to during her performances. Twelve years before the film, she unknowingly sang Tot Musica's song on Elegia and erased the island's population, a truth hidden from her for years. Grown up, she plotted to die in the middle of a concert while sealing herself and the bulk of humanity into a piracy-free new world for good. The scheme fell apart once fighters across both realms brought down Tot Musica, and a regretful Uta turned down the medicine that would have saved her, singing instead to release everyone she had ensnared. Her toolkit ran from a golden Knight Form and Musical Note Soldiers to transformed Animal Band players and her trump card, the untamable Tot Musica.

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Uta ate the Uta Uta no Mi, a non-canon Paramecia fruit that pulls the minds of listeners into a virtual dimension called Uta World through her singing.
The Uta Uta no Mi drags a listener's mind into Uta World whenever the user sings, reaching anyone in earshot or hearing the voice through a Den Den Mushi.
The Uta Uta no Mi fails against anyone who cannot hear the song, so covered ears or a soundproofed room shut it down, and the user cannot see everything within the realm or bend others' free will. Uta World also dissolves the moment its creator falls asleep, and keeping it open drains stamina quickly.
Before Uta, an unnamed previous user wielded the Uta Uta no Mi and summoned the entity Tot Musica.
As a child, Uta unknowingly sang Tot Musica's song on the island of Elegia twelve years before the events of the film, erasing its entire population, a truth that was hidden from her for years.
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