Blox Fruits

How to read the Blox Fruits value list

A Blox Fruits item page shows three different numbers that all look like prices — Beli, Robux, and VP. Only one of them is a trade value. Here's how to read each column without mixing them up.

You pull a Kitsune from a dealer, open the Blox Fruits value list, and see 3,200 next to it. On the same page you can find an in-game Beli price, sometimes a Robux price, a rarity tier, and a demand rating. Five numbers and labels for one fruit, and they measure five different things. Most bad trades in this game start with someone reading the wrong column.

This is a walkthrough of what each column on our list actually means — and just as important, what it doesn't.

VP: the only column that is a trade value

The big number is VP, our value-point index. It is a community trade estimate: a rough consensus of what the trading community treats a fruit as worth when matching it against other fruits, cross-referenced from active trading hubs and dealer prices. It is not an official number, it is not Beli, and it is not Robux. It exists so that two completely different fruits can be compared on one scale — a Dragon (East) at 3,300 VP against, say, a Yeti at 2,900 plus something small.

Two habits keep VP honest. First, check the date — the current Blox Fruits list was last updated June 26, 2026, and that date is on the page for a reason. Values move when the game moves, and updates are exactly when they move most. Second, treat the number as a midpoint, not a law. A community estimate has error bars; if a fruit trades a little above or below list in practice, the list is not "wrong," it is approximate by nature.

Beli and Robux: shop prices, not values

Most fruits also show what they cost from the in-game dealer — a Beli price, and for many fruits a Robux price. Neither sets trade value. Buddha is the cleanest example: at 1.2 million Beli it is one of the cheapest fruits in this part of the list to buy from the dealer, yet it holds 1,500 VP with high demand, because everyone levelling wants one. Shop price measures what the developers charge; VP measures what traders will give up.

Control is the trap in the other direction: its Robux shop price is 2,400 and its VP happens to also be 2,400. Those numbers agreeing is pure coincidence — one is a real-money purchase price, the other is a barter index. If you catch yourself converting VP to Robux in your head, stop; the two never exchange.

The most instructive row is the one with a missing number. Dragon (East) has no Robux price at all — the only ways in are dealer luck or an enormous 15 million Beli purchase — and that scarcity is a large part of why it sits at 3,300 VP. When a supply column is empty, the value column is usually high. We compared it with Kitsune in detail in Dragon (East) vs Kitsune.

Rarity: a floor, not a price

Rarity is the game's own label — common up through legendary and mythic. On the current list the tiers happen to sort cleanly: every mythic carries more VP than every legendary. But the spread inside a tier is enormous. Shadow at 1,800 VP and Dragon (West) at 3,600 are both mythics; one is worth two of the other. Read rarity as a floor — a mythic won't be cheap — and never as the price itself. Two fruits sharing a tier tells you almost nothing about whether a trade between them is fair.

Demand: how fast the number is real

Demand is the column traders skip, and it changes everything about how VP behaves. Yeti (2,900 VP, high demand) and Gas (2,700 VP, medium demand) sit 200 points apart on paper. In practice the Yeti moves quickly at its number, while the Gas waits longer for a taker and often closes below list. High demand means the value is liquid; medium or low means the value is theoretical until proven. When two trades look equal in VP, take the one that leaves you holding the higher-demand side — the longer version of that argument is here.

The rows with no value at all

Thirty-seven of the eighty Blox Fruits items on our list — swords and fighting styles like Yama, Dark Blade and Godhuman — show "value pending" instead of a number. That is deliberate. Those items don't have a liquid, trackable trading market the way physical fruits do, so any VP we printed would be an invention. A value list you can trust for what it does know has to be honest about what it doesn't. If a list somewhere shows you a confident number for everything, that should worry you, not reassure you.

Putting a trade together

Reading done, the mechanics are simple: sum the VP on each side, weigh the demand tiers, and sanity-check the result in the Blox Fruits trade calculator before you accept anything. If the sides are close but not equal, that gap is an overpay, and sometimes paying it is correct. If someone quotes you values that don't match any list you can find, walk.

The list is a map, not an oracle. It will not tell you whether to trade your Kitsune. It will tell you what the community currently thinks a Kitsune is worth, how sure that opinion is, and how quickly you can act on it — which is everything you actually need to negotiate like you've done this before.