Christmas cracker


 * "Cracker" redirects here. For the cracker gained to celebrate the Golden Joystick Jagex won, see Golden cracker.

A Christmas cracker is a holiday item that was dropped during the 2001 Christmas event on 25 December 2001, the first RuneScape Christmas event, and is the rarest and most expensive item in RuneScape, the second being the Blue partyhat and the third being the divine spirit shield.

Pulling
Held within the cracker is a Partyhat and one other item or a stack of items, such as some coins, runes, or runite armour or armours below runite. To open it, it must be used with another player. Upon opening, the player who had the cracker gets a random coloured party hat, and the other player gets the other item. It used to be random which player would get the partyhat, but Mod Ash has confirmed that this was changed to the player with the cracker always gets the hat to prevent a possible method of real world trading.

When these crackers were dropped, the original colour was red, and has since changed to white.

Pulling the cracked to open it WILL result in a net loss of millions of coins as the cracker is of a much higher value than any of the Party hats you will get from it.

An update now causes the player using the cracker on another player to receive a warning message, asking them if they are sure they wish to do so.

Also The royal crown cannot be obtained from opening a cracker you can only get the royal crown from looting kingly gimplings.

Rarity
Few Christmas crackers remain due to the fact that many were pulled immediately after the drop. The vast majority of players opened them for the rune items that could be obtained from doing so. Note that at the time of the drop, party hats were virtually worthless, while certain rune items such as the rune kteshield were worth millions. It wasn't expected that Christmas crackers would one day be worth so much.

Over time, many Christmas crackers have been lost as players with older account have quit, have been permanently banned, or have opened their Christmas crackers for fun. Their importance to the RuneScape economy (which was so crucial for years starting a few years after their release) has long diminished. Other discontinued items such as party hats, Halloween masks, and Santa hats are far more commonly traded.

The Christmas cracker is currently the rarest tradeable item in Runescape circulation.

Do not mistake the Christmas cracker for the Gold cracker (released 20/12/2010) the gold cracker will unlikely ever rise to the Christmas crackers price so do not bother keepng it.

Price Update History
Christmas crackers hardly ever update in price in the Grand Exchange. Since the release of the Grand Exchange, the price has only updated six times suggesting that it is rarely sold via the Grand Exchange. Furthermore, the maximum and minimum prices are 1% from the median a opposed to the 5% used for every other item in RuneScape except party hats.

The following list is the history of when the Christmas Cracker has updated in the Grand Exchange:

On the 23rd of August 2010 the Christmas Cracker was updated for the fifth time in the Grand Exchange,
 * On the 10th of February 2010 the price of the Christmas Cracker was updated for the third time ever in the Grand Exchange, which saw it rie by 6.7m.
 * On the 2nd of May 2010 the Christmas Cracker updated again for the fourth time in the Grand Exchange, rising by 6.7m again.
 * On the 30th of September 2010 the hristmas Cracker was updatd for the sixth time in the Grand Exchange.
 * On the 4th of December 2010 the Christmas Cracker was updatd for the seventh time in the Grand Exchange.

Trivia

 * Contrary to some popular belief, a Black Partyhat is unobtainable from a Christmas cracker.
 * A glitch in Runescape classic allowed players to duplicate Christmas crackers using third party software AutoRune.
 * Christmas crackers are currently the single most xpensive item in the game in terms of Grand Exchange price. They are also the most expensive item in terms of unofficial "street price".

Christmas cracker