
If you have been grinding through Sailor Piece on Roblox and wondering why your damage feels stuck or your critical hits are inconsistent, the answer is probably the Skill Tree. Learning how to get and use Skill Points (SP) in Sailor Piece is one of the most important progression mechanics the game offers, yet many players unlock it late or use their points inefficiently.
In this guide, I will walk you through everything you need to know about Skill Points: how to unlock the Skill Tree, how SP actually gets earned, which upgrades to prioritize, and the fastest ways to farm points so you can stop guessing and start building a stronger character.
Whether you just hit level 7000 or you are sitting on a pile of unused SP, this guide covers the full system from start to finish.
Skill Points (SP) are a special currency in Sailor Piece that you spend on permanent stat upgrades through the Skill Tree. Unlike regular Stat Points that you get from leveling up and assign to basic stats, Skill Points come from a completely separate system tied to enemy kills.
Each Skill Point you earn can be allocated toward one of five upgrades: Damage, HP, Crit Chance, Crit Damage, or Luck. These boosts are permanent and apply across every combat situation in the game, including PvE, PvP, boss fights, and dungeons.
The key distinction that confuses a lot of players is that Skill Points and Stat Points are two different things. Stat Points come from leveling. Skill Points come from defeating enemies after you unlock the Skill Tree. You cannot use one in place of the other.
Before you can earn or spend any Skill Points, you need to unlock the Skill Tree itself. This is a one-time process that has a few prerequisites, and many players miss it because the game does not force you toward it.
You need to meet two requirements before the Skill Master will talk to you:
That gem cost is not refundable, so make sure you have the spare gems before making the trip. Most players naturally accumulate 1,000 gems through normal gameplay well before hitting level 7000, but if you spent gems on other upgrades, you may need to save up first.
Here is exactly how to unlock the Skill Tree:
After unlocking, you can access your Skill Tree from anywhere. You do not need to return to the Skill Master to spend points, though you will need to visit him again if you want to reset your tree later.
The core mechanic is simple: you earn 1 Skill Point for every 250 enemies you defeat. That is the only way to get SP. There are no quests, no gem purchases, and no codes that give you Skill Points directly.
There are a few important details that trip players up:
This is why some players report being level 13,000 with only a handful of Skill Points. They unlocked the Skill Tree late and have only been accumulating kills since then, or they have been spending most of their time fighting bosses instead of grinding mobs.
The Skill Tree has five upgrade categories, and each one has multiple levels that increase in cost as you invest more points. Here is a breakdown of every upgrade and what it does:
Increases your overall damage output across all attack types, including melee, devil fruit abilities, and sword attacks. This is the most straightforward upgrade and benefits every single build in the game. Each point spent here raises your base damage by a percentage, and the effect compounds with other damage-boosting gear and abilities.
Increases your maximum health pool. More HP means you can take more hits before going down, which matters a lot during boss fights and PvP encounters. The HP upgrade gives a percentage boost, so it scales better as your base HP grows through leveling.
Raises the probability that any given attack will land as a critical hit. Critical hits deal significantly more damage than normal attacks, and boosting your crit chance means you see those big damage numbers more consistently. This pairs especially well with the Crit Damage upgrade.
Increases the multiplier applied when you land a critical hit. If your crit chance is high but your crit damage is low, your criticals will not hit much harder than normal attacks. Investing in this stat makes every critical hit count for substantially more damage.
Improves your drop rates for items, fruits, and other loot. Luck does not directly make you stronger in combat, but it accelerates your overall progression by increasing the quality and frequency of drops you receive from defeated enemies and completed activities. For players who spend a lot of time farming rare items, this can be a very valuable stat.
Fully maxing out every upgrade on the Skill Tree requires roughly 430 to 476 Skill Points, depending on the current game version. Since each Skill Point costs 250 enemy kills, that means you are looking at defeating somewhere between 107,500 and 119,000 NPCs to complete the entire tree. That is a massive grind, which is why prioritizing the right upgrades early matters so much.
Because the grind for Skill Points is long, you want every point to count. Here is the priority order I recommend based on community testing and my own experience:
Put your first points into Damage. Every combat scenario benefits from higher damage. Faster kills mean faster farming, which means more Skill Points sooner. It is a feedback loop that accelerates everything else.
Once you have a few points in Damage, start investing in Crit Chance. Consistent critical hits stack on top of your increased base damage, creating a noticeable jump in your overall DPS. The earlier you raise this, the more value you get across your entire grind.
After Damage and Crit Chance, put points into HP so you can survive longer encounters. This is especially important if you are farming in areas with high-level mobs that hit hard. Dying less means fewer interruptions to your farming sessions.
Crit Damage becomes more valuable once your Crit Chance is already at a reasonable level. There is no point boosting crit damage if you rarely land criticals, so this stat always comes after Crit Chance in priority.
Luck is a luxury stat. Save it for last unless you are specifically farming rare drops and your combat stats are already solid. The progression boost from better drops is nice, but it does not help you if you cannot kill enemies efficiently in the first place.
Since you need 250 NPC kills per Skill Point, efficiency is everything. Here are the best strategies I have found for farming SP quickly.
Shinjuku Island is widely considered the best farming spot in the game for Skill Points. It has dense groups of Curse enemies that spawn close together, which means you can rack up kills fast with AoE attacks. The enemies here are tough enough to be worth your time but not so hard that you die frequently.
Hollow Island is a solid alternative if Shinjuku is crowded with other players. The mob density is slightly lower, but the enemies are easier to kill, which can actually result in comparable SP rates for lower-level players.
Lawless Island works well for mid-level players who have unlocked the Skill Tree recently and need a spot where they can farm without constantly dying. The enemy groups are manageable, and the spawn rates are consistent.
The faster you kill groups of enemies, the faster you earn SP. Here is what the community recommends:
The general rule: prioritize AoE (area of effect) attacks over single-target damage. You want to be hitting multiple enemies simultaneously to speed up your kill count.
Some players set up auto-farming configurations where their character repeatedly attacks spawned enemy groups without manual input. This typically involves positioning your character in a high-density spawn area, equipping your strongest AoE ability, and using an auto-click tool or macro to repeatedly trigger the attack.
Be aware that auto-farming with third-party tools may violate the game’s terms of service. Always check current Roblox and Sailor Piece policies before using any automation. The safest approach is active farming where you manually trigger abilities while positioning yourself efficiently.
Dungeons, boss rush modes, and the Infinite Tower are great activities, but they are not the best for SP farming. These activities involve a lot of boss encounters, and bosses do not count toward your 250-kill progress. Use these activities for gear and gem farming, then return to mob grinding for Skill Points.
If you want to redistribute your Skill Points, you can reset the Skill Tree by returning to the Skill Master NPC on Slime Island. The reset process refunds all your spent Skill Points so you can reallocate them differently.
There is a cost to resetting, which varies by game version. The community generally recommends only resetting if you have made significant misallocations or if a game update has changed the balance of the skill tree.
To reset your Skill Tree:
Keep in mind that resetting does not change your kill counter. You keep all the Skill Points you have earned so far and can redistribute them immediately.
After reading through dozens of forum posts and community discussions, these are the most common mistakes players make with the Skill Point system:
1. Unlocking the Skill Tree too late. The moment you hit level 7000, go unlock the Skill Tree. Every NPC you kill before unlocking it is wasted progress. I have seen players at level 13,000 who only have 10 SP because they waited until level 8000 or later to unlock the tree.
2. Farming bosses instead of mobs. Bosses are fun and drop good loot, but they do not count toward your 250-kill progress. If your goal is earning SP, stick to NPC mob grinding.
3. Putting points into Luck too early. Luck sounds appealing because of better drops, but if your damage and survivability are low, you will farm slower and earn SP slower. Always build your combat stats first.
4. Confusing Skill Points with Stat Points. These are two completely separate systems. Stat Points come from leveling up. Skill Points come from killing 250 NPCs. You cannot interchange them.
5. Not tracking progress. The game does not always show a visible counter for your kill progress toward the next Skill Point. If you notice your SP count has not changed after a long farming session, double-check that you are killing NPCs (not bosses) and that you have actually unlocked the Skill Tree.
The fastest way to earn Skill Points is to farm dense NPC groups on Shinjuku Island using AoE attacks like Quake Fruit’s C skill. Equip your strongest area-of-effect ability, position yourself in high-density spawn areas, and focus exclusively on killing regular mobs. Bosses do not count toward your 250-kill progress, so avoid them during SP farming sessions.
You earn 1 Skill Point (SP) for every 250 NPC enemies you defeat after unlocking the Skill Tree. To start earning SP, reach Level 7000, travel to Slime Island, and talk to the Skill Master NPC to pay the 1,000 Gem unlock fee. Once unlocked, every 250 NPC kills grants you 1 SP automatically.
Skill Points are earned by defeating NPC enemies. After unlocking the Skill Tree at Level 7000 from the Skill Master on Slime Island, you receive 1 Skill Point for every 250 NPCs you kill. Only regular NPC enemies count. Bosses and other players do not contribute to your kill counter.
Maxing the entire Skill Tree requires approximately 430 to 476 Skill Points depending on the current game version. Since each SP costs 250 NPC kills, you are looking at defeating roughly 107,500 to 119,000 enemies to fully complete every upgrade category (Damage, HP, Crit Chance, Crit Damage, Luck).
Yes, you can reset your Skill Tree by visiting the Skill Master NPC on Slime Island. Choose the reset option from his dialogue menu and pay the reset fee. All your spent Skill Points will be refunded so you can reallocate them. This is useful if you made poor upgrade choices early on or if a game update changes skill balance.
Skill Points come from killing 250 NPC enemies and are spent on the Skill Tree for upgrades like Damage, HP, Crit Chance, Crit Damage, and Luck. Stat Points come from leveling up your character and are assigned to basic attributes. These are two separate systems and you cannot use one type of point for the other.
No, bosses do not count toward your Skill Point progress. Only regular NPC enemies (mobs) contribute to the 250-kill counter that earns you 1 SP. This is a common reason players feel their SP is not increasing. If you want to earn Skill Points, focus on mob-dense areas like Shinjuku Island instead of boss fights.
The recommended priority order is Damage first, then Crit Chance, then HP, followed by Crit Damage, and finally Luck. Damage accelerates everything because faster kills mean faster farming. Crit Chance builds on that damage boost. HP keeps you alive during farming sessions. Crit Damage becomes valuable once your crit rate is respectable, and Luck is a late-game luxury for better drops.
Knowing how to get and use Skill Points (SP) in Sailor Piece comes down to three things: unlock the Skill Tree as soon as you hit Level 7000, farm NPC mobs in dense areas like Shinjuku Island, and spend your points with a clear priority in mind (Damage, then Crit Chance, then HP).
The grind of 250 kills per SP is long, but the permanent stat boosts you get from the Skill Tree make a real difference in every part of the game. Avoid the common traps of farming bosses, investing in Luck too early, or waiting too long to unlock the tree. Stay consistent with mob farming, use your strongest AoE abilities, and your character will get noticeably stronger with each Skill Point you earn.
If you found this guide helpful, bookmark it so you can refer back when you are ready to reset your tree or switch up your farming strategy. The Skill Tree system rewards patience and consistency, and now you have the roadmap to make every point count.