Cowboy Bebop Swordfish Ship Necklace

Wear the Cowboy Bebop Swordfish Ship as a Necklace

This inspired piece of merchandise is now available to pre-order.

Pre-orders are open for a Cowboy Bebop Swordfish ship necklace. The necklace is based off the Swordfish II that appears in Episode 19 of the animated series. Pre-orders will remain open until March 26, 2025, with the Cowboy Bebop Swordfish ship necklace expected to ship in mid-June 2025.

Recommended Videos

The necklace itself will cost 19,800 yen or approximately $132, and is available to purchase in Japan. International shipping for this item is not available, so consumers outside of Japan will need to use a middle-man service if they want to get their hands on this inspired piece of jewelry.

You can take a look at the Cowboy Bebop necklace below:

The necklace was announced alongside other Cowboy Bebop merchandise. This includes a series of inspired ties and t-shirts featuring illustrations from the series. The shirts feature iconic images of the characters from the opening of the animated series.

Spike and Faye have appeared in Fortnite as skins. Consumers can buy these skins for a limited time, like all Fortnite collaboration skins. Alongside the arrival of Spike and Faye, players can complete a series of Cowboy Bebop quests to receive a special loading screen and weapon wrap.

Cowboy Bebop is available to stream on Crunchyroll and Hulu in the US. A live action series appeared on Netflix.


Siliconera is ed by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small commission. Learn more about our Policy
Author
Image of Kazuma Hashimoto
Kazuma Hashimoto
Senior staff writer, translator and streamer, Kazuma spends his time playing a variety of games ranging from farming simulators to classic CRPGs. Having spent upwards of 6 years in the industry, he has written reviews, features, guides, with work extending within the industry itself. In his spare time he speedruns games from the Resident Evil series, and raids in Final Fantasy XIV. His work, which has included in-depth features focusing on cultural analysis, has been seen on other websites such as Polygon and IGN.