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One Piece Card Game rarities guide: Common, Rare, Super Rare, Secret Rare and manga
Guide · July 16, 2026 · 8 min read · By the OpItem crew

One Piece Card Game rarities explained

Common, Rare, Super Rare, Secret Rare, Leader, alt-art, Treasure Rare, manga... The One Piece Card Game rarity system can be confusing at first. Here's a clear guide to make sense of it all and understand what drives a card's value.

When you're starting a collection, the letters printed on One Piece cards (C, R, SR, SEC...) look like a coded language. Yet understanding One Piece Card Game rarities is the key to recognizing a great card, estimating its market value and avoiding nasty surprises. Let's break it all down, from the most common to the ultimate grail.

The rarity table

Here are the official rarities and their abbreviations, from the most common to the rarest. The value ranges are purely indicative and vary enormously depending on the card, the character and its condition.

RarityAbbr.How to spot it
CommonCMatte surface, no shiny effect
UncommonUCAlso matte, no foil, just a little less frequent
RareRFoil on the border and accents only
LeaderLRed back (instead of blue), no cost, a Life value
Super RareSRSilver border, holographic foil across the whole card
Secret RareSECGold border, foil, often a textured relief
SpecialSPFull-art with a unique art direction (wanted posters, stained glass...)
Treasure RareTRPremium alt-art, exclusive to Western editions (since OP-06), 1 per set
MangaMR / ★Manga-panel-style artwork, the collectors' grail

Special treatments (alt-art, DON!!)

On top of its "base" rarity, a card can receive a special treatment layered on top:

Alternate art (or "parallel"). This is a card with the same number and the same gameplay effects, but with completely different artwork, often full-art. You can spot it by a small star ☆ above the rarity symbol (a notation adopted since the OP-04 set). Its lower print run and its look make it far more expensive than the standard version.

DON!! cards. These are the resource cards with a white back. The standard version has no value, but the special versions (alt-art, Gold DON!!) are sought after.

How to identify a card's rarity

  • The code in the bottom right: the rarity letter (C, UC, R, SR, SEC...) is printed there next to the card number.
  • The star ☆ above the symbol indicates an alternate art (so a premium).
  • The shine test: tilt the card under the light. Foil on the border only = Rare; foil across the whole surface = Super Rare or higher.
  • The color of the back: blue = standard card, red = Leader, white = DON!!.
  • The feel: a textured relief usually signals a Secret Rare or a premium treatment.

What drives a card's value

The final market value doesn't come down to the printed rarity alone. It combines four levers:

1. Print rarity (the famous "pull rate"): the harder a card is to obtain, the more prized it is.

2. The treatment: alt-art, full-art, gilding, texture, manga. The manga treatment is almost always at the top.

3. Character popularity: Luffy, Zoro, Shanks, Nami or Ace push prices up, sometimes regardless of the technical rarity.

4. Condition and grading: for valuable cards, professional grading (PSA, BGS, CGC) authenticates and rates the condition out of 10. A card graded PSA 10 can be worth several times the price of the same ungraded card.

To see these principles applied to real cards, take a look at our market-value breakdowns, for example Shanks OP01-120, Portgas D. Ace OP02-013, or our top of the most expensive cards.

Conclusion

Mastering the rarities means going from "I have a nice card" to "I know exactly what I have and what it's worth". The code in the bottom right, the alt-art star and the shine test are enough to sort 90% of your collection. For the rest, the market value comes down to the details of the version, and that's where precise tracking makes all the difference.

To identify your cards and track their market value automatically, open OpItem in your browser, or head to the Download page.

Track your cards' market value in real time

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