Display for Sticker Slab | Pink Jaggyfish
Lowest Markets Price

About Sticker Slab Pink Jaggyfish

Sticker Pink Jaggyfish depicts a stylized fish rendered in sharp, jagged shapes with a vivid pink color scheme. Its graphic, angular artwork gives this sticker a playful but aggressive look that stands apart from more conventional animal-themed sticker designs in CS2.

Release & Source

The Sticker Slab Pink Jaggyfish can be found in the Riptide Surf Shop Sticker Collection.

Rarity

Drop Chance~80%

The Sticker Slab Pink Jaggyfish is a High Grade-tier sticker with an estimated drop chance of ~80% per capsule, making it one of the more common stickers in CS2.

Popularity

Of skins
Search Volume--

Community Rating

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Sticker Pink Jaggyfish in CS2?

Sticker Pink Jaggyfish is a High Grade sticker in CS2 from the Riptide Surf Shop Sticker Collection. It uses a cartoon fish design with a pink color palette, so it fits playful, beach-themed, and bright loadouts more than realistic or military-style crafts.

What skins pair well with Sticker Pink Jaggyfish?

Sticker Pink Jaggyfish works well on colorful finishes that already use pink, blue, or aqua tones. Good matches include MAC-10 Disco Tech, USP-S Cortex, AK-47 Neon Rider, and MP9 Mount Fuji, where the sticker blends into vibrant artwork instead of clashing with muted finishes.

What stickers go well with Sticker Pink Jaggyfish?

Sticker Pink Jaggyfish combines well with other playful or water-themed stickers from the same style family. Try Sticker Purple Jaggyfish for a matching color-variant craft, Sticker Surf's Up for a beach theme, Sticker Miami Flow for neon summer colors, or Sticker Kawaii T for a bright cartoon look.

Is Sticker Pink Jaggyfish a good investment in CS2?

Sticker prices usually depend on collection age, supply, and whether crafters actually use the design on popular skins. Pink Jaggyfish is more niche than tournament team stickers, so its long-term demand tends to come from themed crafts and collectors of Riptide-era stickers rather than broad market demand.