About

Meet NaughtySausage.

FO76 Price Ledger is a free, independent PC price checker built and manually curated by NaughtySausage. This is the story behind its 1,504 price signals, the Public Alpha, and what comes next.

NaughtySausage's Fallout 76 character in a pink uniform at a nighttime camp
Meet the builder

The player behind the ledger.

I started playing Fallout 76 a little over a month ago and somehow managed to put more than 400 hours into it already. Yes, I know. Somewhere along the way, I became completely hooked on trading.

I recently became unemployed, which I promise was not caused by my Fallout 76 addiction, so I decided to use the time to build the price-checking tool I wanted to use myself.

01 · What it does

One search. A practical PC estimate.

Type an item name and the ledger instantly shows an estimated PC market value based on my manually curated database. If the item is covered, you will also see a confidence rating that shows how much weight the available evidence can carry. No account, no spreadsheet hunting, and no waiting for a reply.

TL;DR

Search an item to get an instant Fallout 76 PC price estimate and confidence rating, built from 1,504 manually reviewed trade signals. It is free, in Public Alpha, and improving as more data is added.

Try the price checker
02 · Why I built it

I wanted something instant and recent.

There are existing trading websites, Discord price-check channels, and subreddits, but I wanted something that was instant, easy to use, and based on recent PC market activity. I could not find exactly what I was looking for, so I decided to try building it myself.

03 · The hard part

Reliable data does not collect itself.

Many trade posts simply say something like “Have: item, Want: Leaders.” That tells us somebody wants to trade, but it does not tell us what the item is worth. I needed listings with usable seller asks, buyer offers, auctions, price checks, or other clear value information.

I initially considered downloading or exporting Discord trade history. After researching the platform rules, I decided against using bots, scraping, automated collection, or downloaded server logs.

Manual reviewPublic trade postsNo botsNo scraping
04 · The manual work

So I did it the hard way.

I manually reviewed publicly viewable community trade messages and recorded useful observations one by one. I separated different evidence types, removed duplicates and unclear trades, normalized values into Leader Bobbleheads or Caps, and used the collected evidence to build representative market estimates and confidence ratings.

Valuation records
647
Usable price signals
1,504
Dataset updated
15 July 2026

It was incredibly tedious work, but I am genuinely proud of the result. It already saves me a huge amount of time, and I hope it helps other players avoid bad trades too.

05 · Planned updates

This is only the beginning.

  • 01
    More market coverage

    Expand toward every meaningfully traded item while keeping weak evidence clearly labelled.

  • 02
    Regular price updates

    Refresh older valuations as the Fallout 76 PC market changes.

  • 03
    Weapon estimator

    Select a weapon and its three legendary effects to receive an estimated market value.

  • 04
    Search improvements

    Add more abbreviations, aliases, community terminology, and fixes based on alpha feedback.

  • 05
    Other platforms

    Console support may come later depending on demand. PC remains the current priority.