Chaos Piece Trello

Official Chaos Piece Trello board guide — map locations, fruit upgrades, updates, and how it compares to this wiki.

The Chaos Piece Trello board is the official developer-maintained roadmap and living game guide for Chaos Piece, the Roblox anime fighting RPG created by Chaos Studi0z. While Discord announcements move fast and YouTube guides go stale within days, the Trello is where the team organizes confirmed features, map pins, fruit upgrade paths, and patch notes in one searchable place.

This page explains how to find the official board, what each list actually contains, and how to use that information alongside this wiki. Whether you are hunting your first Dragon Ball, planning a Dungeon Ticket run, or checking whether the Summer Update added a new island, the Trello is your first stop — with caveats we cover below.

Bookmark this guide if you play across PC and mobile. We keep game terms in English (Fruits, Swords, Fighting Styles, Haki, Gems, Cash) so they match in-game text and community searches.

Map Locations on the Trello Board

Map coverage is the reason most players open the Chaos Piece Trello in the first place. The board usually splits the world into columns or labeled cards for the starting town, early islands, dungeon entrances, NPC vendors, and boss spawn hints. Unlike a flat screenshot, Trello cards often include notes like level recommendations, required items (Hearts, Dungeon Tickets), and whether a zone is PvP-enabled.

Starting area and hubs: Expect the first column to document the tutorial zone where you learn basic Fruits or Sword swings, the code redemption level gate (Level 20), and trainers for Fighting Styles. Cards may list exact coordinates or landmark descriptions — for example, "dock east of the quest giver" — because Roblox maps rarely ship with a built-in minimap filter for every quest.

Islands and travel: Mid-game lists cover boat or fast-travel unlocks, island level ranges, and which enemies drop Gems versus Cash. If a card mentions a Summer Update beach zone, cross-check the release date on the card footer; older screenshots may show pre-revamp terrain from before Chaos Studi0z reworked spawn tables.

Dungeons and bosses: Dungeon cards typically specify ticket tier (E Tier through A Tier), party size suggestions, and reward tables. Boss cards may note respawn timers or world-event triggers. Use these as planning tools, not guarantees — hotfixes can shift spawn locations without moving the Trello card until a moderator updates it.

How to use map cards efficiently: Open the board side-by-side with the game on a second monitor or phone. Screenshot pins you visit often, but label the date on your screenshot because terrain art passes change. For step-by-step routes and updated pins after patches, pair Trello with our dedicated Map page on this wiki, which synthesizes Trello data with in-game verification each patch cycle.

Fruits, Swords, and Upgrade Paths

The Fruits and upgrade section of the Trello is effectively a vertical progression chart. Cards often list Fruit rarities, awakening requirements, Stat Reset considerations, and synergy with Fighting Styles or Swords. Because Chaos Piece follows anime pirate RPG conventions, you will see terminology borrowed from community tier discussions — but the Trello sticks to developer intent, not hype.

Fruit listings: Each fruit card may include ability key hints (Z, X, C, V, F on PC), damage type (single-target, AoE, mobility), and whether the fruit is Logia, Paramecia, or Zoan-style in behavior even if those words are not literal class names in UI. Awakening branches, if present, appear as checklists: collect Dragon Balls, defeat a trainer, pay Gems, or finish a dungeon route.

Swords and Fighting Styles: Parallel lists document melee weapons and style unlock quests. Some styles require a minimum level, a Heart payment, or defeating an NPC sparring partner. Upgrade paths for swords may note forge locations and material farming zones tied back to map cards.

Stats and builds: Look for cards referencing Stat Reset items from codes like STATRESET or shop bundles. The Trello rarely tells you the "best" PvP build — that is community territory — but it does flag when a stat cap changes or when a fruit move gets a frame-data adjustment.

Using upgrades with economy systems: Tie fruit plans to Gems, Cash, and Dungeon Ticket farming cards. If a fruit awakening requires A Tier Dungeon Tickets, the board often links to the dungeon card that explains drop rates. Before you reroll stats or eat a new fruit, read the card comments; developers sometimes clarify bugs ("awakening disabled until next patch") in comment threads faster than patch notes propagate.

Updates, Patch Notes, and Roadmap Lists

Update tracking is where the Chaos Piece Trello overlaps most with a public roadmap. Lists are commonly named Released, In Development, Planned, and Ideas. Cards move left-to-right as features mature. The Summer Update — referenced across active codes such as SUMMERUPDATE and SUMMERGRIND — is a typical example: crate pools, gem boosters, and dungeon ticket rewards appeared on Trello cards before the Roblox game description updated.

Reading patch cards: A good release card lists: version nickname, date, balance targets (which Fruits or Swords changed), new NPCs, economy tweaks (Cash drop rates, Heart pricing), and known issues. Screenshots may show UI changes — new Codes button layout, inventory tabs, or dungeon queue screens. Treat "Known Issues" as mandatory reading so you do not waste a Stat Reset on a bugged quest.

Roadmap expectations: *Planned* cards are not promises. Chaos Studi0z may shelve a feature or ship it differently after playtesting. Use roadmap cards to gauge direction — new sea regions, PvP arenas, raid modes — not to schedule your personal grind a month ahead. When Discord polls appear, they often reference Trello card IDs for context.

Comparing updates to codes: Codes ship on their own schedule. A card can mark "New code batch" even when no code is live yet, or codes may go live hours before the Trello card moves to Released. Follow Discord #codes for instant drops; use Trello for understanding *what* the code celebrates (new dungeon, new fruit, balance pass).

Archive habit: When a card moves to Released, expand attachments before they are cleaned up. Older art helps you recognize reverted changes during hotfix weeks. This wiki's Release page summarizes major milestones, but the Trello retains the granular task history if you need proof that a mechanic existed before a revert.

Chaos Piece Wiki vs Trello — When to Use Which

Players often ask whether they should read this Chaos Piece Wiki or the official Trello. The answer is both, for different jobs. Trello is the developer's working board — fast, raw, and sometimes messy. This wiki is a player-focused reference that translates board data into guides, tables, and localized pages you can search without learning Trello's layout.

Use Trello when: You want first-party confirmation of a feature status (*In Testing* vs *Released*), early screenshots of unreleased islands, or comment replies from moderators about bug timelines. If you are theory-crafting around an announced Fruit rework and need the exact card wording, Trello wins.

Use this wiki when: You need curated codes with copy buttons and expiration tracking, full controls for PC/mobile/gamepad, tier list context after patches, map routes verified in-game, or guides like reaching Level 20 fast for code redemption. Wiki pages aggregate Discord, Trello, and live testing into one narrative — including FAQs this board does not host.

Accuracy and speed: Trello can lag behind hotfixes; wiki pages can lag behind Trello. We state last updated dates on key pages and cross-link official sources. Neither replaces the other: if Trello and wiki disagree for more than 48 hours after a patch, trust in-game behavior first, then Discord pin, then Trello, then wiki — or join Discord and ask with a screenshot.

Localization: Trello is primarily English. This wiki provides 17 locales for navigation UI and page bodies while keeping game terms (Dragon Ball, Dungeon Ticket, Rare Crate) in English for clarity. Non-English speakers should start here for readable explanations, then open Trello for images.

Safety: Neither official source asks for your Roblox password. Beware fake Trello links in YouTube descriptions promising "free Gems generators." Real rewards flow through codes, quests, and dungeons — documented on both official Trello cards and our Items and Codes pages.