
Its name comes from One Piece: Burning Blood. It is strong enough to injure even the Blackbeard Pirates. Impact Wave ( 衝撃波, Shōgekiha ?): Sengoku launches a golden shockwave that can cause heavy damage to a large group of enemies.Sengoku strikes the Blackbeard Pirates with his blast. As he transformed, his body emitted a blinding golden light. When Sengoku first used his fruit's powers in an attempt to execute both Luffy and Ace, nearby Marines noted that they had never seen him use it before, suggesting that he rarely transforms. In the anime, these shock waves are shown to be powerful enough to clash against the tremor shockwaves created by Marshall D. That can cause heavy and widespread damage to a group of enemies, and was strong enough to injure even the Blackbeard Pirates. Sengoku can launch golden shockwaves by striking his hand forward in a motion similar to a palm thrust. Luffy despite his inflated and highly pressurized rubber body and destroying the scaffold they were on, even though his punch was buffered by Luffy's super-inflated belly and Galdino's harder-than-steel "Candle Wall". Sengoku has so far been seen using this fruit primarily for combat purposes, enhancing his punching power with his increased size, to the point of injuring Monkey D. This fruit has no apparent weaknesses, aside from the standard Devil Fruit weaknesses. His entire body takes on a solid gold hue (gray color in Gigant Battle) in addition to a full and hybrid transformation that are available to all Zoan Devil Fruit users, he can use palm thrusts to launch powerful shock waves. In this form, Sengoku's limbs grow out of proportion, giving him abnormally large arms and relatively tiny legs. The main strength of this fruit is that it allows the user to transform into a giant, living, golden Buddha, gaining an extreme boost in strength to match the increased size. In the Viz Manga it is called the Human-Human Fruit, Model: Buddha.Daibutsu ( 大仏 ?) is the Japanese term, often used informally, for large statues of Buddha, in particular Japanese Buddha statuary.

Hito ( 人 ?) is Japanese for "person/human (being)".
