Kitsune Fruit in Blox Fruits – Price, Value, Abilities, and Guide

Price And Value
Physical Value
60M
Perm Value
5.07B
Robux Price
4,000
Beli Price
8M
Demand
(8/10)
Rarity
Mythical
Rank
2/41
Type
Zoan
Best Use
Mobility, PvP
Tier
S
Kitsune is a Mythical Beast-type fruit that can be bought from the dealer for $8,000,000 or R$4,000.
It lets the user create and control blue flames for powerful attacks, and also transform into a Kitsune from Japanese mythology. In this form, the user becomes much stronger, gaining faster movement and the ability to cross water, though it consumes their tails.
As of Update 29, it is the third-rarest and third-most expensive fruit, making it highly valuable in trade.
In gameplay, it works very well for grinding across all three seas and is often compared to Buddha, though it is a bit less flexible overall. Its M1 damage is lower, and since the user cannot stay still on water, Sea Events and Raids can be harder to handle. Newer players may also find it difficult to unlock its moves due to high mastery requirements, and the M1 attacks can feel a bit tricky in open areas because of the strong knockback, although not as extreme as Gas.
How To Get The Kitsune Fruit
There are three main ways to get the Kitsune Fruit in Blox Fruits. Each method has its own challenges and requirements.
There are three main ways to get the Kitsune Fruit in Blox Fruits.
The most reliable method is buying it from the Blox Fruit Dealer for 8,000,000 Beli or 4,000 Robux. Robux keeps it permanently, while Beli will be replaced if you switch fruits. Since stock changes often, you may need to wait.
You can also try the Blox Fruit Gacha, which costs around 250,000 Beli depending on your level. However, the drop rate is very low (about 0.5%), so it’s a risky option.
Lastly, you can trade with other players or use the Kitsune Shrine in the Third Sea during a full moon by offering Azure Embers. This method has an extremely low chance (around 0.1%), but it’s another way to obtain it.

Abilities of Kitsune – Normal And Transformed
Kitsune has 6 passive abilities, 6 movesets in its normal form, and 6 movesets in its transformed form. Let’s review them.
Kitsune Tails (Swift Tails)
The Kitsune Fruit has a tail meter that fills up as you deal damage to players or NPCs. You can also gain tails passively over time by attacking. Once the meter reaches three tails, it turns rainbow, and you can transform into the nine-tailed fox.
This transformation gives you increased speed and dash abilities. Using an ability, including Kitsune’s M1 attacks, will decrease the meter if you miss, although normal attacks don’t reduce it as much.
When the meter fills, your character will visually grow tails on their back, and a Tail Meter UI will appear, similar to the one seen with the Dragon Fruit.

Kitsune Tails ( Transformed Energy)
After transforming with the Kitsune Fruit, part of your tail meter starts to slowly go down right away. Taking damage, whether from enemies, lava, or water, will also reduce it. While you’re transformed, you won’t gain tails automatically.
The only way to refill the meter is by dealing damage with Kitsune’s abilities, including its tick damage. This means you need to keep fighting to stay in your powerful nine-tailed fox form.

Kitsune Tails ( Number Of Tails)
The Kitsune Fruit’s tails give different bonuses depending on how many you have. With one tail, there aren’t any changes. At two tails, you start running on all fours and get a noticeable speed and dash boost, with unique animations for air jumping, dashing, and walking.
When you reach three tails, three glowing orbs appear around you. Using an M1 attack or the [F] move will cause enemies to take tick damage from blue flames over three seconds, with one tick per second.
Keep in mind, this passive effect doesn’t increase your overall attack damage, but it adds extra utility and control in fights.

Mythical Fox Fur
The Mythical Fox Fur ability gives the Kitsune Fruit user several powerful bonuses while transformed. You take 20% less damage from all sources, move faster, and can dash farther than normal.
Your jumps are twice as high, your attacks hit harder, and your cooldowns are reduced, making you much more agile and effective in both combat and movement while in fox form.

Spirited Beast of the Sea
While transformed, the Kitsune Fruit lets you run across water, giving you great mobility during fights or travel. However, you can’t stand still on the water; you can only move while running or dashing.

Kitsune Mount
When transformed, the Kitsune Fruit user can carry another allied player on their back, allowing the player to ride while moving across islands.

[ TAP ] Azure Slash
The Kitsune Fruit’s normal attack lets you perform up to five slashes in a row. The final slash changes based on your position on the ground it slams down, and in the air, it knocks the enemy downward. Each slash drains a bit of the Tail meter, and using all five consumes about 7.5% of it.
At three tails, the slashes cause burning damage over time, break instinct, and cover the enemy in blue flames for 4–5 seconds, while also increasing base damage. The attack creates blue-flame slashes, with the fourth striking in a whirlwind.
If you jump right before the slam, it will turn into a slash instead. When transformed, this attack works the same as the three-tail version but deals more damage and has a larger AOE.


Pros
Cons
[Z] Accursed Enchantment ( 1 Mastery)
This move has two variations, depending on whether it hits or misses. If it connects, blue flames circle the opponent and strike them multiple times, dealing damage. If it misses, it creates a small AOE on the ground that deals light damage to nearby enemies.
The move consumes 10% of the visible Tail meter, costs 1 Mastery, does 3,581 damage, has a 9-second cooldown, and requires 20 energy.
It also breaks instinct. When transformed, the move changes: you summon three fireballs and dash forward. If it lands, it can hit up to three enemies, knocking them back and causing damage over time with a fiery explosion.
If it misses, you spin and launch the fireballs, creating a large AOE explosion. This version also breaks instinct.


Pros
Cons
[X] Tails of Burning Agony (50 Mastery)
This move sends out blue flames that travel in a zig-zag pattern, striking one side, then the other, before landing on the target. It can hit up to three enemies and stun them for about 0.65 seconds.
The attack costs 40 energy, has a 12-second cooldown, deals 3,601 damage, and consumes 12.5% of the visible Tail meter. While it doesn’t break instinct, it significantly drains it. In the transformed version, you dash forward in a zig-zag motion.
If you hit an enemy, you grab them, jump into the air, and slam them to the ground, the final impact breaking their instincts.

Pros
Cons
[C] Fox Fire Disruption (100 Mastery)
This move lets you summon a ball of blue flames and launch it at the enemy. When it lands, it erupts into a massive explosion, leaving flames on the ground if it hits nearby terrain. A direct hit deals slightly more damage, and the attack is strong enough to break instinct.
It costs 100 energy, has a 15-second cooldown, deals 6,078 damage, and consumes 15% of the visible Tail meter. In the transformed version, you fire a blue flame that explodes into a large AOE, dealing damage over time. This version also breaks instinct.

Pros
Cons
[V] Transformation (300 Mastery)
With this move, you transform into a full Kitsune, becoming immune to all basic damage for one second during the transformation. It consumes 30% of the visible Tail meter, costs 20 energy, has a 3-second cooldown, and deals around 2,686 damage.
This ability also breaks instinct and requires three tails to activate. In the transformed version, you return to your normal form, regaining access to fighting styles, swords, and guns.

Pros
Cons
[F] Wild Assault (200 Mastery)
This move lets you dash forward and, if you connect, slash your opponent multiple times with your claws. It consumes 10% of the visible Tail meter, costs 100 energy, has a 10-second cooldown, and deals between 3,409–3,967 damage.
If you manage to grab the enemy, the move will also break instinct. In the transformed version, instead of claws, you use your tails to strike, but it functions the same way, still breaking instinct on a successful grab.

Pros
Cons
[ TAP ] Azure Slash
Works the same as the untransformed version with 3 tails, but it has a bit more area coverage, a bigger hitbox, and more serious damage. Using all 5 M1 attacks will consume 7.5% of the visible Tails meter.

Pros
Cons
[Z] Accursed Enchantment (1 Mastery)
The user creates three blue fireballs and dashes forward. If the move connects, it can hit up to 1–3 enemies, knocking them back while firing one blue flame ball at each target, which then explodes and deals damage over time.
If it doesn’t connect, the user spins and releases a burst of blue fireballs around them, resulting in a large-area explosion. This move consumes 15% of the visible Tails meter.



Pros
Cons
[X] Tails of Burning Agony (50 Mastery)
The user rushes forward in a zig-zag motion. When the move lands, the enemy is grabbed, taken into the air, and then slammed down with force. It breaks Instinct, and blue flames burst up from the ground along with several large tails.
If used while in the air, the slam happens instantly. On impact, a Kitsune face is left marked on the ground. This move uses 20% of the visible Tails meter.

Pros
Cons
[C] Fox Fire Disruption (100 Mastery)
The user fires a blue fireball that hits and spreads damage over a wide area. After impact, blue flames stay on the ground and keep dealing heavy damage over time. This move uses 25% of the visible Tails meter.

Pros
Cons
[V] Transformation (300 Mastery)
The user gathers purple Gas around themselves and returns to their normal form. After changing back, they can use Fighting Styles, Swords, and Guns again.
When this happens, they lose the ability to stand on water, so using this move in the ocean can be risky.

[F] Wild Assault (200 Mastery)
The user rushes toward the enemy and strikes with their tail in quick swipes, similar to fast combo-style attacks like Wolf Fang Rush or Demon Slayer. This move consumes 15% of the visible Tails meter.

Pros
Cons
Is Kitsune Fruit Good In Blox Fruit?
Below is a detailed comparision its advantages and disadvantages both in normal and transformed form.
Pros
Cons
Pros
Cons
Kitsune Showcase
Interesting Facts About Kitsune
Here are some key details and lesser-known facts that help you understand how Kitsune works and how it was designed.
- @Kuzuryu_Kei created the concept on X, one of the winners of the first fan fruit/art contest.
- Kitsune is the second fruit with a mutation, after Tiger.
- All moves except the transformation can only be held for up to 12 seconds.
- Even though it is based on a nine-tailed fox, it normally has three tails and five when transformed, while the icon still shows nine tails.
- The [F] move was first shown as “Swift Assault” and later renamed “Wild Assault.”
- A physical version can be obtained with a very low 0.1% chance by offering Azure Embers at the Kitsune Shrine in the Third Sea.
- The inventory icon shows four tails, while the physical fruit shows three tails.
- It is the third most expensive fruit, behind Control and Dragon.
- The [C] move was originally called “Tailed Beast Bomb” and was later changed to “Fox Fire Disruption.”
- Rabbit V3 Agility has much less effect during transformation and is barely noticeable.
- When moving with two or more tails, the animation changes from crawling to an upright, playful skipping motion.
- The user can reach up to 9.3× their normal speed by combining two tails, Rabbit race bonuses, and the Pilot Helmet.
- It is the first Beast-type fruit that allows other players to ride the user, with Dragon being the second.
- Kitsune is the second fan-made fruit added to the game, with Sound being the first.
- A bug in Love’s Flamingo Ride once caused players on the ride to be taken away, but it has been fixed.
- Even though Kitsune and the reworked Control cost the same (R$4,000), their in-game values are different, with Kitsune at $8,000,000 and Control at $9,000,000.
- The [X] move was originally called “Claws of Burning Agony” before being changed to “Tails of Burning Agony.”
Kitsune Bugs and Glitches
While using Kitsune, you might notice a few strange bugs and unusual effects during gameplay. Some are just visual issues, while others can affect movement or combat in unexpected ways.
- Switching to another fruit with a power meter while at three tails can keep the rainbow effect, and sometimes even carry over the one-tail UI.
- Using the transformed [X] move on water can pull both the user and the enemy underwater, which can be deadly when combined with Shark V2 or higher.
- The untransformed [Z] Accursed Enchantment (hit version) may turn invisible after it connects with a target.
- If a health-boosting accessory is removed after using the transformation, the user may lose tails as if they took damage.
- After using Kitsune frequently, swords, guns, and fighting styles may lose their models and M1 attacks, likely when reaching two tails.
- Using Portal [Z] Portal Dash on a transformed user with a rider will instantly kill the rider, and the Portal user still gains bounty or honor.
- The transformed [X] Tails of Burning Agony can sometimes pass through walls, and the same can happen with the [F] Wild Assault move, though less often.
- If the player untransforms and removes their fruit at the same time, they can still mount another Kitsune while staying in the transformed form.
- A player riding on the user can use Dragonstorm M1 attacks without being removed, while other guns will normally dismount them, which appears to be a bug.
- This can be used to stack multiple users on top of each other, forming a tower of up to 14.
Frequently Asked Questions – Kitsune Fruit Blox Fruit
Let’s review some frequently asked Questions about Kitsune Blox Fruit.
Final Thoughts – Kitsune Blox Fruit
Kitsune isn’t just rare — it’s one of the most rewarding fruits in Blox Fruits. With its mix of power, mobility, and unique mechanics, it shines in PvP, though it does require careful energy and tail management.
For players who can master its rhythm, Kitsune easily stands as an S-tier fruit and a worthy rival to Dragon, making it a prized choice for endgame play.