Collection: Shop Fate
The Fate universe spans Grand Order, stay night and a decade of spin-offs, and its Servants have inspired one of anime's deepest goods catalogues. Each item carries its own condition grade.
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Saber Charlemagne Fate/Extella Link Darun Rubber Strap Collection Vol.1 Key Ring [USED]
ExcellentRegular price $24.99 USDRegular priceSale price $24.99 USD -
Shiro Kotomine, etc. Fate/Apocrypha Es Series Nino Rubber Strap Collection All 8 Types Set Key Ring [USED]
ExcellentRegular price $999.99 USDRegular priceSale price $999.99 USDSold out -
Lord El-Melloi II The Case Files of Lord El Melloi II {Rail Zeppelin} Grace note Puppet Charm ANIPLEX+ Limited Blu-ray/DVD Whole Vol.Purchase Bonus Charm [USED]
ExcellentRegular price $999.99 USDRegular priceSale price $999.99 USDSold out -
Saber Fate/saber Pikuriru Trading Strap All 10 Types Complete Set Key Ring [USED]
ExcellentRegular price $999.99 USDRegular priceSale price $999.99 USDSold out -
Sakura Matou, etc. Fate/stay night [Unlimited Blade Works] Cafe Famous Scene Rubber Strap Fate/Stay Night [Unlimited Blade Works] Cafe Limited Unlimited Blade Works Key Ring [USED]
ExcellentRegular price $999.99 USDRegular priceSale price $999.99 USDSold out
About this collection
Servants Worth Summoning
Grand Order supplies most of what collectors chase, from Saber and Morgan le Fay to Berserkers such as Ibuki-Douji and archers like Atalanta. Because the game leans so heavily on newly illustrated art, anniversary pieces and Fes.-exclusive designs carry real weight with long-time Masters. Illustrated acrylic stands make a natural centrepiece for a shelf, and the same key visuals often reappear across mascots and tapestries, giving a single favourite Servant several ways to display.
Charms & Prize-Hall Pulls
The smaller goods run just as deep. Servant keychains and rubber charms turn up across trading sets, while lottery tiers add hologram badges, coasters and stand figures. A large share of the rarer artwork comes from Ichiban Kuji draws rather than ordinary storefronts, so sorting by prize line is frequently the quickest route to closing a collection, and to spotting the older designs that no longer appear in shops.