Teens in Print
  • About Us
    • About Teens in Print
    • Meet the Staff
  • Browse Writing
    • By Topic
      • Cultural Criticism
      • Life During COVID-19
      • School and Career
      • Arts, Entertainment & Food
      • Science, Health & Technology
      • National and Global Issues
      • Local Issues
    • By Genre
      • Reviews & Listicles
      • Creative Writing
      • Opinion Writing
      • News
      • Personal Essays
      • Advocacy Letters
      • Multimedia
    • By Author
      • Cimmaron Holman Jr.
      • Ella Verinder
      • Gloria Ekechukwu
      • Graham Martin-Wilson
      • Isaiah Roseau
      • Ketura Joseph
      • Lily Castello
      • Shaniece Clarke
      • More authors
  • For Teachers
  • Get Involved
    • Join Teens in Print
    • Collaborate
    • Volunteer
    • Contact Us
Teens in Print

Type and hit Enter to search

Teens in Print
  • About Us
    • About Teens in Print

    We’re a writing program for Boston students. Learn about our approach and what we offer.

    • Meet The Staff
    Get to know the writing mentors behind Teens in Print.
  • Browse Writing
    • By Topic
    • Cultural Criticism
    • Life During COVID-19
    • School and Career
    • Arts, Entertainment & Food
    • Science, Health & Technology
    • National and Global Issues
    • Local Issues
    • By Genre
    • Reviews & Listicles
    • Creative Writing
    • Opinion Writing
    • News
    • Personal Essays
    • Advocacy Letters
    • Multimedia
    • Teens in Print Magazine
    • By Author
    • Cimmaron Holman Jr.
    • Ella Verinder
    • Gloria Ekechukwu
    • Graham Martin-Wilson
    • Isaiah Roseau
    • Ketura Joseph
    • Lily Castello
    • Shaniece Clarke
    • More authors
  • For Teachers
    • Use TiP in your classroom

    Model skills or genres using mentor texts by students.

  • Get Involved
    • Join Teens in Print

    We’re always looking for new voices. Boston students from grades 8 – 12 are welcome to apply.

    • Collaborate
    We offer workshops for educators and community organizations. Drop us a line to partner with Teens in Print.
    • Volunteer
    Lend your expertise to Teens in Print as an editor, writing mentor, guest speaker, or more.
    • Contact Us
    Reach out to Teens in Print.

Type and hit Enter to search

Teens in Print
  • About Us
    • About Teens in Print

    We’re a writing program for Boston students. Learn about our approach and what we offer.

    • Meet The Staff
    Get to know the writing mentors behind Teens in Print.
  • Browse Writing
    • By Topic
    • Cultural Criticism
    • Life During COVID-19
    • School and Career
    • Arts, Entertainment & Food
    • Science, Health & Technology
    • National and Global Issues
    • Local Issues
    • By Genre
    • Reviews & Listicles
    • Creative Writing
    • Opinion Writing
    • News
    • Personal Essays
    • Advocacy Letters
    • Multimedia
    • Teens in Print Magazine
    • By Author
    • Cimmaron Holman Jr.
    • Ella Verinder
    • Gloria Ekechukwu
    • Graham Martin-Wilson
    • Isaiah Roseau
    • Ketura Joseph
    • Lily Castello
    • Shaniece Clarke
    • More authors
  • For Teachers
    • Use TiP in your classroom

    Model skills or genres using mentor texts by students.

  • Get Involved
    • Join Teens in Print

    We’re always looking for new voices. Boston students from grades 8 – 12 are welcome to apply.

    • Collaborate
    We offer workshops for educators and community organizations. Drop us a line to partner with Teens in Print.
    • Volunteer
    Lend your expertise to Teens in Print as an editor, writing mentor, guest speaker, or more.
    • Contact Us
    Reach out to Teens in Print.
Arts & EntertainmentCreative WritinggamingPerspectiveReviews & Listicles

Rarest items in Royale High: a Roblox guide

Shanille Olivero De La Cruz
December 18, 2023 4 Mins Read
1.4K Views
0 Comments
Image courtesy of author of royal high game

The purpose of this is to educate readers, particularly, Royale High collectors, about the rarest and greatest items to trade for and collect so they can understand their value and avoid overspending or falling victim to scams. Royale High is a popular roleplaying game on the Roblox platform and allows players to attend a virtual high school and participate in a variety of activities. One must be fairly knowledgeable. Should you be new to Royale High, you will need to take some time to reach level 75 to be able to trade. After that, you must begin grinding for diamonds (the in-game currency) to exchange items for better ones and eventually obtain a rare.

Alternatively, you can just farm for diamonds to purchase the rare, but that would take far too long for a beginner without diamond-multiplier game passes. The Royale High wiki page is a good place to gain additional background information on rare things. The Royale High traderie page allows you to exchange in-game items for real money, which makes it easy to get scammed but at least it displays the fairly realistic value of rares that are in high demand.

Enough background information now here are just a few of the rarest items in the game.

1. Callmehbob’s diamond ring

This very rare ring is only available in real life, which makes it even harder to obtain because of its constant demand. It can’t be obtained in the game (unless it is traded, of course). This ring, which was added to the game when the developer got married, can only be obtained by purchasing a toy and using the code found on it to receive it in the game. Since the toy is nearly always sold out, I would rank it as the rarest on this list.

Pictures of the rare ring.

2. Halos

Halos are rare, and difficult to get, and only randomly or by sheer chance may one obtain one at the wishing fountain in Divinia Park. Typically a new halo comes out every season. For example, during the summer of 2019, a mermaid halo came out, and on Halloween another halo was released. The Halloween halo is the rarest halo since out of the thousands of players that Royale High has, only a few hundred were lucky enough to get it but it isn’t really in high demand anymore since better ones have come out since then.

Screenshot of the various halos

3. Original elegant parasol

The original parasol came out in the 2019 Valentine’s Day update along with many other cute Valentine’s Day items but this one is considered rare because it is no longer on sale. I’d say it’s medium demand now since there is a copy of the 2020 parasol which is the same but for collectors who want both, it’s hard to trade for since it’s overpriced. Why would someone want two parasols? Well, when wearing both of them you can make them change colors. It may not sound too interesting but like I said for collectors it’s sort of a must-have.

The Valentine’s Day parasol

4. Mood changing necklace

I added this necklace to my list of rare items since it is comparable to the Callmehbob diamond ring in that it can only be obtained with a toy code. However, the toy is not as difficult to locate as the CMB ring. I’d say it’s medium demand so to get it you should not overpay much.

Mood changing necklace

5. Head over heels

These heels are mostly known as chicken legs because in the game it changes your legs from having joints to being stiff with the heels. This heel however out of all the chicken legs that have come out is the rarest basically since it’s the prettiest one and the people that own it over price way too much since they know it’s a rare that won’t come back on sale making it hard for players to get or they just won’t trade it just to have it.

The “chicken leg” heels

Just a handful of the rare accessories available in Royale High are listed here; the majority can be acquired through trade. You should farm diamonds for the items I’ve mentioned if you’re serious about starting the game and looking rich while playing it. If you’re very committed to obtaining the accessories, you might use websites like Traderie and X (Twitter) to wager against diamond costs, as they are difficult to come by. Now you should try out the game and see if you can get your hands on the rare jewels. You can play Royal High here

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Tags:

EntertainmentGamingListiclePerspectiveShanille Olivero De La Cruz

Share Article

Read more by this author Written By

Shanille Olivero De La Cruz

Next
Image of baking tray courtesy of Evgeny Tchebotarev on Pexels
January 2, 2024

Five baking tips for beginners 

Previous
December 18, 2023

Boston Latin School Walk-Out: “Standing With Palestine”

Photo of the protest. Photo courtesy of the author.

You might also like

Bad Guys 2 movie review: A sequel that holds its own

Lillien R. Manobianco
August 11, 2025
Image of Ayo Edebiri speaking into a microphone at a panel discussion / interview. Seated next to flowers.

Ayo Edebiri returns to her high school to share her secrets of success

Theodora Rodine
July 31, 2025
Illustrated silhouettes of diverse women, holding hands in front of an illustrated sunset.

Women are perceived wrong in 2025! Here are 5 myths about women, busted.

Madison Duffy
July 24, 2025

Empowerment or Entitlement? A Critical Look at Manifestations of Contemporary Online Feminism

Essence Tucker
May 21, 2025

Subscribe to our newsletter and get student writing delivered to your inbox.

Sign me up
Teens in Print
We’re a writing program and publication for Boston students.

2025 © Teens in Print All rights reserved.

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Browse Articles
  • Join Teens in Print
  • Contact Us
  • About our parent organization, WordPowered
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Keep up with TiP

Instagram Twitter Youtube