Promo cards dominate the board again this week, and the top mover put up a number big enough to be worth a second look: Tony Tony.Chopper from the Tournament Pack 2026 Vol. 2 promo run is up nearly 400% over the past 7 days. That's the sharpest single-card move we've tracked since this site launched.

Here's what climbed the most in One Piece TCG card prices this week:

1. Tony Tony.Chopper (Tournament Pack 2026 Vol. 2) — $8.26, up 394.6%

The biggest mover we've recorded to date, and by a wide margin. Tournament-exclusive promos have shown up at the top of this list before, but a near-4x move in a week is well outside the usual range even for this print type — worth watching whether it holds or corrects.

2. Monkey.D.Luffy (Tournament Pack 2026 Vol. 2) — $6.71, up 294.7%

From the same promo set as this week's top mover. When one card from a limited tournament print run starts climbing, it's common to see others from the same release follow — collectors chasing the set tend to bid up the whole run, not just one card.

3. DON!! Card (English Version 2nd Anniversary Set) — $26.53, up 165.0%

Anniversary-set promos keep showing up on this list week after week. These are low-print by design — given out to celebrate a milestone rather than sold as a regular product — which keeps them structurally scarce long after release.

4. King (Alternate Art) — $35.25, up 126.8%

The highest dollar-price card on the board this week, and the only mainline booster pull rather than a promo. Alternate arts are typically the chase pull of any set, and King's holding that pattern here.

5. Otama (Parallel) — $19.86, up 116.1%

From the 500 Years in the Future set. Parallel rares sit in an odd middle ground — less scarce than a true alternate art, but still limited enough to move sharply when demand for a specific set picks up.

6. Kingbaum (Pre-Release Cards) — $6.94, up 114.9%

A pre-release promo from the Pillars of Strength set. These are given out at official pre-release events in small numbers, which is a recurring theme across almost everything on this week's list — thin supply, not just player demand, is driving a lot of these moves.

Take these numbers with context

Five of this week's six movers are promotional or pre-release prints rather than standard booster pulls — cards with inherently thin supply, where a handful of actual sales can swing the percentage change significantly. That's not a reason to dismiss the move, but it is a reason to weigh the dollar price alongside the percentage, which is why both are shown here rather than the percentage alone.

Prices update daily. Check the live board any time for current numbers, or search for a specific card to see its full price history.


Prices sourced from JustTCG. Figures reflect market data at time of publishing and will differ from current live prices.