
One Piece
One Piece Card Game — Complete Set Guide
The One Piece Card Game (OPCG) is a competitive and collectible trading card game published by Bandai, launched globally in December 2022. Based on Eiichiro Oda’s iconic manga and anime franchise, the game features Leader cards, Character cards, Event cards, and Stage cards across multiple colours corresponding to in-universe factions. OPCG has grown rapidly into one of the top-selling TCGs worldwide, with English and Japanese releases now synchronised for simultaneous global launches from 2026 onward.
Current Sets Available at Grailborne
OP-13: Carrying On His Will
Set Code: OP-13 | English Release: November 7, 2025 | Total Card Types: 128 main cards + 1 DON!! card
Carrying On His Will is the official Third Anniversary set for the One Piece Card Game, thematically centred on the bond between the Three Brothers — Monkey D. Luffy, Portgas D. Ace, and Sabo. The set marks Gol D. Roger’s debut as a Leader card. Rarity breakdown: 6 Leaders, 45 Commons, 30 Uncommons, 26 Rares, 10 Super Rares, 2 Secret Rares, 6 Special Parallels, 2 Third Anniversary Special cards, and 1 Treasure Rare.
OP-14: The Azure Sea’s Seven
Set Code: OP-14 | English Release: January 16, 2026 | Total Card Types: 156 unique cards (163+2 total including variants)
The Azure Sea’s Seven is themed around the legendary Seven Warlords of the Sea (Shichibukai), bringing Mihawk, Crocodile, Hancock, Moria, Kuma, Doflamingo, and Jinbe into the card pool with new mechanics and reimagined colour identities. The set includes 2 Secret Rares, manga alternate art parallels, and a Treasure Rare tier. Mihawk and Crocodile are the primary Secret Rare targets. This set generated significant competitive interest due to the wide range of playable Warlord Leaders.
OP-15: Adventure on Kami’s Island
Set Code: OP-15 | Global Release: April 3, 2026 | Total Card Types: 160 unique cards
Adventure on Kami’s Island is the first simultaneously released global set under Bandai’s worldwide synchronisation policy, covering the Skypiea arc — specifically Luffy’s conflict with God Enel. Rarity breakdown: 6 Leaders, 45 Commons, 30 Uncommons, 26 Rares, 10 Super Rares, 2 Secret Rares. The simultaneous release means English and Japanese versions hit shelves on the same day, eliminating the traditional import premium window.
What’s Available at Grailborne
Grailborne stocks the following One Piece Card Game product formats for current sets:
- Booster Boxes — 24 packs per box, 12 cards per pack. Primary sealed product for pulling hits.
- Booster Packs — Single packs for casual pulls or top-ups.
- Singles — Individual cards including Alt Art Leaders, Secret Rares, and Treasure Rares.
- Starter Decks — Pre-built 51-card decks for new players entering the format.
Chase Cards and Key Cards by Set
OP-13 Key Cards
- Portgas D. Ace — Secret Rare (OP13-119): 7,000 power Blue character, gains Rush when you have 3 or fewer Life cards. The primary pull target in OP-13. Features high demand due to Ace’s popularity and the Anniversary theme.
- Gol D. Roger — Leader Debut: Roger makes his first Leader appearance in OP-13. The Ace & Sabo & Luffy Leader card (OP13-007) is the most sought-after Leader in the set.
- Edward Newgate (Whitebeard) — OP13-042: Key Whitebeard Pirates support card, pairs with Ace in competitive builds.
- Treasure Rare: One Treasure Rare present in the set — the highest rarity tier, pulled approximately once per case (12 boxes).
OP-14 Key Cards
- Dracule Mihawk — Secret Rare: One of two Secret Rares in OP-14, featuring Mihawk in alternate artwork. Consistently among the highest-value pulls from the set.
- Crocodile — Secret Rare: The second Secret Rare target, highly playable and collectable.
- Manga Alternate Arts: Available in both English and Japanese versions — multiple Warlords appear with manga panel artwork parallels, adding a collector-only tier above standard Super Rares.
- Treasure Rare: One Treasure Rare present in OP-14.
OP-15 Key Cards
- Enel — Secret Rare (OP15-118) and Alternate Arts (OP15-060 AA, OP15-118 AA): God Enel is the undisputed chase card of OP-15. Appears as a Secret Rare and in multiple alternate art versions, including the Manga Rare (SEC-SP) featuring iconic manga panels of Enel ruling Skypiea.
- Monkey D. Luffy — Secret Rare (OP15-119): The second Secret Rare, pairing with Enel as the set’s defining pull targets.
- Enel — Super Rare Alternate Art: Even outside the Secret Rare tier, Enel’s Super Rare alternate art is among the most visually distinct cards in the set.
Collector Notes
The One Piece Card Game stands out among modern TCGs for its aggressive print-and-play approach alongside a strong collector tier. Secret Rares and Treasure Rares maintain significant secondary market value because booster box pull rates remain low — approximately 1 Secret Rare per 2–4 boxes at standard rates. The shift to simultaneous global releases from OP-15 onward has reduced the traditional 3–6 month window where Japanese versions carried an import premium. Collectors who previously targeted Japanese-only cards now find both versions competitively priced at launch.
Sets themed around iconic arcs consistently outperform generic releases in long-term secondary market performance: Skypiea nostalgia drives sustained Enel demand in OP-15; the Warlords era has a deep established fanbase for OP-14; and the Marineford War backstory (Ace’s death arc) means OP-13 carries strong emotional collector appeal. The Third Anniversary framing of OP-13 makes it a particularly notable keepsake set.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the difference between a Special Rare (SPR) and a Secret Rare (SEC) in OPCG?
A: Special Rares (SPR) are alternate art versions of existing Rare or Super Rare cards — typically one per box. Secret Rares (SEC) are the highest rarity tier of unique cards, pulled approximately once every 2–4 boxes. Secret Rares have distinct card numbers (e.g., OP15-118) and feature foil treatments not present on the standard version of the card.
Q: Are English and Japanese One Piece Card Game cards legal in the same tournaments?
A: No — official Bandai tournaments enforce language separation. English-language events require English cards; Japanese events require Japanese cards. However, for casual play and collection purposes both versions are fully interchangeable in terms of card effects and gameplay. From OP-15 onward, English and Japanese sets release simultaneously with identical card pools.
Q: What is a Treasure Rare and how rare is it?
A: Treasure Rares (TR) were introduced in OP-13 as the highest rarity tier above Secret Rares. They feature a distinct gold foil frame and are pulled approximately once per case (12 booster boxes). OP-13 and OP-14 each contain 1 Treasure Rare card. They represent the top-end pull in a sealed case and command the highest secondary market prices within each set.
Q: How many cards are in a One Piece Card Game booster box and what can I expect to pull?
A: Each booster box contains 24 packs with 12 cards each (288 cards total). A standard box will typically yield: 1 Special Rare (SPR), approximately 1 Super Rare, and a chance at 1 Secret Rare (roughly 1 in 2–4 boxes). Treasure Rares average approximately 1 per case (12 boxes). These are estimated pull rates, not guarantees.
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