One Piece Card Game Rotation Explained

Want to know what rotation is, and how it affects the cards in your One Piece collection? Find out in our guide to rotation in One Piece!
One Piece Cards Devil Fruit Symbols

The One Piece Card Game has been around for a few years at this point. Yet until now, it hadn’t been affected by a trading card game phenomenon known as set rotation. Let’s check out what it means for you and your card collection!

What Is Set Rotation?

One Piece Card game Devil Fruit 2
Image credit: Jason Brown

As trading card games are continually adding more and more cards to the selection available, at some point it tends to become necessary to “retire” older cards. There are many reasons for this; an evolving competitive environment (or meta, as it’s known), for example. Also, a change to card mechanics or abilities can also play a part.

Regardless of the why, what happens is that a method is used to “rotate” older cards from legality. This means that older cards can no longer be used in competitive play. For One Piece, the devil fruit symbol in the bottom right of a card shows whether or not it’s legal for current play.

When Did Rotation Happen for One Piece?

Bandai One Piece Rotation
Image credit: Bandai

As of April 2026, all cards with the number 1 in the devil fruit symbol were no longer be legal for tournament play. Publisher Bandai’s plan is to use rotation annually, so from April 2027 this also includes devil fruit “2” cards.

Can I Still Play With Non-Tournament Legal Cards?

One Piece Super Rare card
Image credit: Jason Brown

Of course, if you’re not taking part in a tournament or other organized play event, you’re free to continue using cards which have been rotated. Many trading card games have Eternal formats, which allow the use of cards from any set, regardless of their “official” legality. As long as your opponent agrees, you’re free to use whichever cards you have available.

Check out our look at custom One Piece tokens, and our guide to the most valuable One Piece cards!

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Jason Brown

Card Gamer's owner, Jason has been a fan of both tabletop and digital gaming since the early 80s. Not only did he help launch Card Gamer, but he's also responsible for writing more than 500 articles on the site too. Jason has been writing for more than 25 years, with bylines at Polygon, Nintendo Life, Retro Dodo, Lost in Cult and many more. He also regularly writes on a variety of geeky topics at his own website, midlifegamergeek.com.

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