Grand Piece Online Item Values: What Your Gear Is Worth in 2026

Current trading prices for fruits, weapons, and cosmetics to help you make fair trades.

By Pallav Pathak 5 min read
Grand Piece Online Item Values: What Your Gear Is Worth in 2026

Trading in Grand Piece Online can be confusing when you're unsure what items are actually worth. Prices shift based on rarity, demand, and combat usefulness, and new players often end up on the wrong side of a deal. Understanding the current market value of fruits, weapons, and accessories is essential if you want to climb the trading ladder without getting scammed.

Why item values matter in GPO

Grand Piece Online's trading system lets you swap items with other players, but there's no official price tag. Instead, the community has established values based on how rare an item is, whether it's still obtainable, and how much it helps in PvP or PvE combat. Prestige items—cosmetics and weapons from past events—command the highest prices because they can't be earned anymore. Meta-relevant fruits like Mochi are expensive because they dominate player-versus-player fights. Quest drops and common cosmetics have minimal value since any player can grind them out.

The market shifts constantly. New patches that buff or nerf fruits change what players are willing to pay. Limited-time items spike in value after their event ends. Knowing where your items sit on the value spectrum prevents you from trading a 100,000-value item for something worth 50,000.

Grand Piece Online's trading system lets you swap items with other players | Image credit: Roblox (via YouTube/@TheCookieGuy)

High-tier fruits and their values

The rarest and most powerful fruits occupy the top of the market. Dragon sits at 15,000 value and remains unstable—its price swings based on patch changes and player interest. Mochi, the most sought-after fruit for PvP, holds a value of 5,500 but is marked unstable, meaning traders frequently negotiate around this baseline. Soul and Pteranodon are rising in value (5,000 and 4,500 respectively) as players recognize their combat potential. Venom at 4,200 and Tori at 3,000 round out the premium tier.

Mid-range fruits like Ope (2,000), Pika (1,500), and Buddha (1,000) are useful but easier to obtain or less dominant in fights, so their values reflect that gap. Magu at 500 marks the beginning of lower-tier fruits that still see some use.

Fruits from the first sea—Bomb, Kage, Yami, and others—are worth between 5 and 150 value. These are trivial to farm while grinding quests, so traders rarely want them unless bundled as add-ons to sweeten a deal.

Image credit: Roblox (via YouTube/@CallxMeVapor)

Prestige items and collectibles

Prestige cosmetics and weapons from anniversary events command the highest prices in the game. PCC (Prestige Candy Cane) tops the list at 750,000 value, though its price is unstable—expect negotiation. Prestige FW Launcher sits at 430,000, Pwender at 320,000, and PIRB (Prestige Inferno Rocket Blade) at 300,000. These items are unobtainable now, which drives their value sky-high.

Prestige Bag (170,000), Sparkle Valk (151,000), and PFD (150,000) follow as secondary prestige items. PFD is marked as rising, suggesting players are increasingly willing to pay more for it. Chromatic All Seeing Eyes at 130,000 and Candycane (the non-prestige version) at 125,000 round out the ultra-rare tier.

Below these sit items valued between 60,000 and 100,000—Anomalized Mega POW, Titan Aura, and various other cosmetics. Most of these have stabilized in price, meaning traders expect consistent value with minimal fluctuation.

Prestige cosmetics and weapons from anniversary events command the highest prices in the game | Image credit: Roblox (via YouTube/@MrCaptKiddJr)

Weapons and accessories under 50,000

Weapons and cosmetics in the 8,000 to 50,000 range form the bulk of active trades. Black Valk (15,000), Yukio Bunny (15,000), and World Ender (16,000) are popular mid-tier items. Soul Cleaver and Flowers both sit at 13,000. Devil Fruit Rod (22,000) and SK Scarf (27,000) are utility items that hold steady value.

Weapons like Iceborn Katana (1,400), Flower Sword (1,400), and Soul King Guitar (1,500) are quest drops or craftable items, so their low value reflects easy availability. Jester's Outfit (45,000) is an exception—it's a cosmetic that players actively want, keeping its price elevated despite being obtainable through gameplay.


Low-value items and quest drops

Most quest-related items, outfits, and common cosmetics fall into the 5 to 300 value range. Sunken Helmet (2,500), Cupid Dress (3,000), and Troll Face (3,000) are cosmetics you can grind out, so their prices stay low. Items like Moria Hat (25), Law Hat (25), and Darkroot (10) are essentially worthless in trades—they're filler you add to balance a deal, not items you'd trade for directly.

Bomb at 5 value is the absolute floor. It's the easiest fruit to obtain and has no combat advantage, making it purely a novelty.


How to use these values in trades

Treat these prices as reference points, not rigid rules. A fruit marked "unstable" means its value swings based on recent patches or community sentiment—you might negotiate 10 to 20 percent above or below the listed price. Items marked "stable" are more predictable; expect trades to land close to the stated value.

When comparing two offers, add up the total value on each side. If you're offering items worth 50,000 and receiving items worth 55,000, that's a fair trade. If the gap is larger, ask for adjustments or additional items to balance it out. New players often undervalue their items or overestimate what they're receiving, so doing quick math before accepting prevents regret.

Remember that demand fluctuates. A fruit that's meta today might be nerfed next patch and drop 20 percent in value. Cosmetics from ended events only go up. If you're holding prestige items, you're sitting on stable or appreciating assets—don't rush to trade them unless you need something urgently.

Remember that demand fluctuates | Image credit: Roblox (via YouTube/@CallxMeVapor)

Where prices come from

These values reflect what players actually trade for in the community, not developer-set prices. The game has no official trading market or price list, so the community has built consensus through thousands of trades in the Trading Hub and Discord servers. Prices shift when new content drops, when balance patches change how useful an item is, or when rare items become available again (or permanently unobtainable).

Be cautious of third-party value bots or lists created by individual traders. Some community members manipulate their own lists to artificially inflate the value of items they own, which can mislead you into overpaying. Stick to widely-accepted community values and verify trades with multiple players before committing.