Blox Fruits

Dragon (East) vs Kitsune: the Better Blox Fruits Trade

Two mythic beast fruits, 3,300 VP against 3,200, both listed at high demand. On paper it's a coin flip. In practice the two fruits get their value from opposite places, and which one you should take depends on what you plan to do with it.

Sooner or later every trader working the top of the Blox Fruits market faces some version of this offer: a Dragon (East) on one side, a Kitsune on the other, and a value gap small enough to ignore. As of our community estimates last reviewed June 26, 2026, Dragon (East) sits at 3,300 VP and Kitsune at 3,200, both marked high demand. That 100 VP difference is about three percent — well inside the error bars of any community index. So the list can't settle this one. The character of each fruit's demand has to.

Where each fruit's value comes from

Dragon (East) is a scarcity story. It has no Robux price at all. The only ways in are catching it in dealer stock, grabbing an hourly spawn before it despawns, or paying an enormous 15,000,000 Beli — roughly double what any other top fruit costs in-game. No Robux tap means no steady stream of fresh copies entering the market whenever someone opens their wallet. Supply is tight at the source, and that tightness is doing a lot of the work holding 3,300.

Kitsune is a demand story. It can be rolled, bought for 2,750 Robux when stocked, or chased through the shrine route with an Azure Ember, so supply flows in more freely — and the price holds anyway, because Kitsune is the fruit this economy orbits. It is iconic, instantly recognized, and wanted in every trading hub. A Kitsune offer moves almost any trade conversation. That popularity carries a real hype premium: some of the 3,200 is paid for the name, not the moveset.

Same tier, opposite engines. If you want the longer version of why that distinction matters, our primer on demand vs value covers it.

If you plan to trade it again: Kitsune

Both fruits are marked high demand, but demand has texture the label doesn't capture. Kitsune's demand is broad — grinders, PvP mains, collectors, and traders all want it, which means offers arrive fast and you rarely wait to move one near list. Dragon (East)'s demand is narrower and more deliberate: buyers who specifically want the breath-attack kit or the scarcity thesis. It trades fine, but conversations take longer, and it lives in the shadow of Dragon (West), the rarer variant at 3,600 VP and insane demand, which absorbs most of the prestige attached to the Dragon name.

For a fruit you intend to re-trade within days or weeks, that liquidity gap is worth more than 100 VP. Take the Kitsune.

If you plan to hold: the Dragon (East) case, with a caveat

A holder is betting the price itself will drift up, and Dragon (East)'s no-Robux-price scarcity is a real structural support — fixed-ish supply against a game that keeps attracting players. Kitsune's premium, by contrast, is partly fashion, and fashion is the component of a price that fades first if the spotlight moves to a newer fruit.

The caveat is that Dragon (East)'s support rests on a developer decision, not a law of nature. One update adding a Robux price would knock the scarcity prop out overnight. Scarcity arguments in a live game are always on loan. If you hold Dragon (East), you're trusting the source stays closed.

If you plan to use it

Set trading aside and the comparison changes shape. Both are mythic beast fruits with no awakening to budget for. Kitsune shipped as a complete kit — fast multi-hit strings, fox-fire, and a built-in transformation earned through combat — and rewards aggressive duelers. Dragon (East) trades on massive area-of-effect breath attacks plus full flight, which stretches it across both PvP and grinding. Players who mostly farm lean Dragon (East); players who mostly duel lean Kitsune. A fruit you'll actually fly around with for six months is worth a small paper loss.

The honest verdict

Flipping or re-trading soon: Kitsune, because liquidity beats a three percent list gap. Holding long: Dragon (East) has the sounder structural story, as long as you understand what it depends on. Using it: pick the kit that fits your playstyle and stop staring at the 100 VP.

And whichever side you take, remember what these numbers are: community estimates from trading hubs, last reviewed June 26, 2026, not guaranteed prices. A gap this small can invert between reviews. Check the full Blox Fruits value list for the current figures, and run the exact offer — including whatever else is stacked on either side — through the trade calculator before you accept. When the values say it's a tie, the details are the trade.