Updated: April 12, 2026
The Blox Fruits April 2026 update brings two separate but equally significant additions: the Easter Event 2026 running from March 28 through April 12, and a full PvP moveset overhaul for the Dark fruit. The Easter Event sends players hunting 24 hidden eggs across all three seas using a new Codex tracking system, while the Dark rework turns one of the game's oldest fruits into a legitimate competitive pick for the first time in years. This guide covers both in full, with specific egg counts, shop prices, boss unlock conditions, and a breakdown of what changed in Dark's kit.
The Easter Event 2026 went live on March 28, 2026 and runs through April 12, 2026. It's built around a two-layer system: first you find and collect 24 hidden Easter Eggs scattered across the First, Second, and Third Seas, then you use the event currency those eggs generate to buy cosmetics, boosts, and access to a secret boss encounter that most players won't stumble into naturally.
What separates this event from previous Blox Fruits seasonal content is the Codex tracking system, a new in-game tool that logs your egg collection progress in real time and ties milestone rewards directly to how many eggs you've found. It's a meaningful quality-of-life addition that makes hunting far less frustrating than past event formats where you had no record of what you'd already found.
The event requires at least Second Sea access to reach the Easter Shop NPC and a handful of egg locations. For the complete 24-egg clear, you'll want Third Sea access too, since the rarest eggs are tucked away in areas that are locked behind progression. If you're still in the First Sea, you can still contribute to your Codex and farm Candy Eggs from eggs in your range — you just won't be able to complete it until you advance.
Play Blox Fruits on Roblox to participate before the event closes on April 12.
The Codex is displayed as an egg icon next to your compass and functions as a persistent record of every Easter Egg you've found. It tracks missing eggs, already-collected eggs, and sorts both by rarity tier and by sea. That last detail is particularly useful — instead of combing through the entire map trying to remember where you've been, the Codex narrows your search to a specific sea and rarity combination.
Beyond tracking, the Codex also rewards players at collection milestones. Reaching certain egg counts triggers payouts of Candy Eggs currency, Beli, and Easter Gifts. The gifts increase in quality as you push deeper into the Codex, with the final reward being a Legendary Easter Gift for completing all 24 eggs. On top of that, a full clear awards the permanent "True Eggloord" title that stays on your account after the event ends.
The 24 eggs span five rarity tiers, with each tier offering a different Candy Egg payout and a different level of challenge to locate.
| Rarity | Candy Eggs per Egg | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Common | 100 | Visible in the open, easy to spot |
| Uncommon | 200 | Hidden or partially obscured |
| Rare | 400 | Requires interactions or puzzles |
| Legendary | 1,000 | Obscure locations or timed challenges |
| Mythical | Variable | Multi-step tasks, most complex in the event |
| Celestial | 1,500 | Boss reward only — not found in the open world |
The Celestial Egg sits outside the normal hunt entirely. It's egg number 24 and the only one you can't find by exploring — it's the guaranteed reward for defeating the Indra Egg Boss at the end of the secret encounter chain. We'll cover exactly how to unlock that fight in a dedicated section below.
The 24 eggs don't cluster in any single area — they're spread deliberately to push players across all content zones. Here's how the distribution breaks down by sea and what you can expect from each region.
The First Sea contains most of the Common and Uncommon eggs along with a handful of Rare ones. These are the most accessible eggs in the event and the best starting point for players who haven't yet reached Second Sea. Named eggs found here include Eggcited, Wooden, and Fishy — the last of which requires interacting with a fishing-related object rather than simply walking up and collecting it.
The open-world Common eggs are visible without any special conditions. Look near spawn areas, coastlines, and major NPC hubs first. The Uncommon eggs tend to sit slightly off the beaten path, behind structures or in elevated spots that require flight or swimming.
Second Sea is where the event's systems really open up. The Easter Shop NPC sits at the Cafe here, making this sea the hub for all currency spending. The eggs in this region lean toward Rare and Legendary tiers, with a higher proportion requiring puzzles or interactions to unlock. Named eggs here include Thirsty, Kawaii, Shockwave, and Rocket.
The Shockwave and Rocket eggs both have interaction-gated collection conditions — expect to trigger specific mechanics or defeat enemies before the egg becomes collectible rather than just picking them up directly.
The Third Sea holds the Mythical eggs and the toughest Legendary ones. Named eggs confirmed in this region include Molten, Full Moon, and Night Hunter. These require the most effort of any eggs in the event, involving multi-step unlock sequences, high-level area access, or time-sensitive conditions. The Night Hunter egg in particular is known to have a requirement tied to in-game time of day, so plan your farming sessions around that if you're pushing for the full Codex completion.
Candy Eggs are the event-exclusive currency that powers the Easter Shop. You earn them by collecting Easter Eggs from the open world, with each egg's payout determined by its rarity tier. The system sounds straightforward, but there's a hard mechanic worth knowing: Candy Eggs cap at 10,000. Once you hit that ceiling, you stop earning more until you spend some down.
This cap turns the event into a spend-and-refill loop rather than a pure accumulation grind. The practical implication is that if you're planning to buy multiple items from the Easter Shop before going back for more eggs, you need to manage your cap deliberately. Hitting 10,000 and sitting there while still hunting eggs means you're leaving free currency on the table.
The most efficient approach is to set a spending target before each farming session, clear your Candy Eggs to below the cap, then go back out and collect. This keeps the income flowing consistently instead of wasting egg pickups because your wallet is full.
Here's a rough sense of what different egg tiers contribute to your total when you account for the cap:
| Action | Candy Eggs Earned | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Collect a Common egg | 100 | Fast, open-world pickup |
| Collect an Uncommon egg | 200 | Slightly hidden |
| Collect a Rare egg | 400 | Puzzle or interaction required |
| Collect a Legendary egg | 1,000 | Hard location or challenge |
| Collect a Celestial egg (boss) | 1,500 | Indra Egg Boss reward only |
| Codex milestone reward | Varies | Beli and Easter Gifts also awarded |
Collecting all 23 standard eggs without spending any currency would net you well above the 10,000 cap if you tried to do it in one go — which is exactly why the cap exists and why you need to check in at the Easter Shop regularly rather than hoarding. Plan your shop trips around the cap, not around arbitrary farming sessions.
The Easter Shop NPC is located at the Cafe in the Second Sea. The shop carries a mix of limited cosmetics, utility boosts, and a random fruit gamble. Two of the items — the Easter Bunny Skin and Cracked Egg Helmet — are event-exclusive cosmetics that won't be available after April 12. Everything else is either a consumable boost or a permanently acquirable item type.
| Item | Cost (Candy Eggs) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Easter Bunny Skin | 5,000 | Limited — not returning after event |
| Random Blox Fruit | 3,000 | Random roll, could be any fruit |
| Easter Chalice | 2,000 | Secret option — unlocks boss portal (23 eggs required) |
| Cracked Egg Helmet | 2,500 | Limited — not returning after event |
| Golden Egg Banner | 2,000 | Profile cosmetic |
| Drop Rate Boost (1 hr) | 1,200 | Increases fruit drop rate for 1 hour |
| Pastel Banner | 1,000 | Profile cosmetic |
| 2x XP Boost (1 hr) | 800 | Double XP for 1 hour |
| Candy Egg Basket | 500 | Cosmetic accessory |
The Easter Bunny Skin at 5,000 Candy Eggs is the highest-priority pick for players who care about cosmetics. It's the most visually distinctive item in the shop and won't come back in future events. The Cracked Egg Helmet at 2,500 is in the same category — both limited cosmetics should be grabbed before any consumable boosts if you're trying to maximize long-term value.
The Random Blox Fruit at 3,000 is the wildcard option. If you're chasing a specific fruit, this is a gamble. If you're just looking to flip something or fill a gap in your inventory, it's a reasonable spend. The odds of landing a high-value fruit aren't published, so treat it as a lottery ticket rather than a reliable investment.
The Drop Rate Boost and 2x XP Boost make sense as late-event purchases once you've already secured the limited cosmetics. Running a Drop Rate Boost during active egg farming or fruit grinding sessions can compound your overall progress meaningfully, especially in the final days of the event when you might be making a focused push.
The secret encounter is the most technically involved part of the Easter Event and the only way to get the 24th and final egg. The unlock chain has a strict prerequisite: you need all 23 standard Easter Eggs collected first. There's no workaround for this requirement, and the NPC won't show the secret dialogue option until that Codex condition is met.
Here's the full unlock sequence step by step.
The boss fight itself is designed as a meaningful challenge rather than a formality. At level 2,000 the three-phase structure will punish under-geared solo players, particularly during the AoE shockwave phase where positioning matters more than raw damage output. Bringing two coordinated teammates makes the fight significantly more manageable and keeps the run time short enough to farm the Cape efficiently if you're trying to hit that 5% drop rate.
On defeat, you also receive the permanent "True Eggloord" title from the Codex milestone for completing all 24 eggs. This title stays on your account permanently and is the main prestige reward for completing the event in full.
Alongside the Easter Event, this update delivered a full PvP moveset rework for the Dark fruit. Dark has been in the game for years and was historically considered a utility pick rather than a PvP threat — useful for its passive effects but not a fruit you'd bring into serious competitive play. The April 2026 overhaul changes that picture entirely.
The core philosophy shift is from passive utility to active, skill-expressive combat. The old Dark kit rewarded players for passive positioning; the new kit rewards players who can chain abilities and manage debuff stacks under pressure. It's a higher ceiling and a higher floor, which is exactly what a rework needs to justify the change.
Dark Scythe — new melee ability: The headline addition is a scythe-based slash attack with wide area-of-effect reach. Each hit applies a Darkness debuff that stacks and increases the damage of subsequent hits. In practice this rewards sustained aggression — the longer you stay on a target, the harder each follow-up lands. The cooldown sits at a medium length to prevent indefinite stacking, but it's short enough to maintain pressure in a standard combo.
Reworked projectiles: Dark's old slow-moving shadow balls were one of the main reasons the fruit underperformed in PvP. The rework replaces them with projectiles that now feature homing mechanics or impact explosion effects. This makes the kit dramatically more reliable at range — opponents can no longer simply sidestep the projectile spam that used to define Dark's kit and neutralize it entirely.
Redesigned passive: The passive no longer functions as a pure utility effect. It now scales with attack speed and critical strike chance, which creates a feedback loop with the Dark Scythe's debuff stacks. High attack speed players will ramp the passive faster and extend their damage windows. This design targets skilled players who've invested in complementary builds rather than casual users who want a plug-and-play fruit.
The rework's market reception has been immediate. Dark fruit trade value jumped approximately 40% in the days following the update as players recognized its new PvP viability and rushed to acquire it before prices settled higher. That kind of movement is significant for a fruit that had been largely dormant in the competitive meta for an extended period.
For active PvP players, Dark is now genuinely worth building around — particularly in scenarios where the Darkness debuff stacks can be applied in sustained close-range fights. It doesn't outright replace top-tier fruits like Venom (which also received adjustments this update) but it's no longer a second-tier option that serious players ignore.
| Aspect | Before Rework | After Rework |
|---|---|---|
| PvP viability | Low — utility-focused | High — competitive meta-viable |
| Melee | Basic hit pattern | Dark Scythe with wide AOE & debuff stacking |
| Projectiles | Slow, easy to dodge | Homing or impact explosions |
| Passive | Fixed utility effect | Scales with attack speed & crit chance |
| Trade value change | — | +40% post-announcement |
Beyond the Dark rework and Easter Event, the April 2026 patch included a round of balance adjustments across fruits and swords. None are as sweeping as the Dark overhaul, but they're worth knowing if they affect your main setup.
On the fruit side: Oni received a 5% base damage increase, making it more attractive for players who've already built around it. Buddha had its hitbox size reduced by 8%, a nerf that primarily affects grinding efficiency in tight spaces. Dough's V move damage was cut by 3%, a light tuning pass rather than a meaningful meta shift. Control got a cooldown reduction on its Z move, a quality-of-life improvement that active Control users will notice in extended fights.
Sword adjustments followed a similar minor-tune pattern: CDK's teleport range was reduced by 10%, bringing it slightly more in line with other gap-closers. TTK gained a 5% AOE radius increase. The Spikey Trident received an 8% combo speed boost, and Pole V2 got a 6% damage increase. None of these changes are dramatic enough to shake up the weapon tier list on their own, but the Spikey Trident and Pole V2 buffs are genuine improvements for players already using those weapons.
Market reactions to the balance patch reflect the broader update sentiment. Venom fruit saw a 25% value increase alongside the Dark changes, suggesting it also benefited from unspecified adjustments. Oni's 5% damage buff pushed its value up 15%. Buddha's nerf translated to a 5% value drop — small but consistent with how the community prices farming-oriented fruits when their efficiency takes a hit.
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With the event closing on April 12, you're at the final window for completing the Codex, spending Candy Eggs, and farming the Easter Bunny Cape. Here's a clear priority framework based on different player goals.
The "True Eggloord" title and Celestial Egg are only available this event, and both require finishing the full 24-egg Codex. That means completing the boss encounter is non-negotiable if prestige is your goal. Focus on egg hunting first — prioritize Third Sea Mythical eggs since they're the hardest to find and take the most time. Get the 23 eggs, buy the Easter Chalice, and clear the boss with teammates at level 2,000 or above.
The Easter Bunny Skin (5,000) and Cracked Egg Helmet (2,500) both disappear permanently after April 12. If you care about cosmetics at all, these two are your highest-priority Candy Egg spends. Collect enough eggs to hit both before buying any boosts or gambling on the Random Fruit. The Easter Bunny Cape from the boss has a 5% drop rate and is worth farming if you have time after completing the Codex.
The Dark rework has already moved the market, and the window to buy Dark at near-pre-rework prices is closing quickly as the community settles on its new value floor. If you're a trader, the 40% jump indicates strong demand. The Random Blox Fruit at 3,000 Candy Eggs is a loose hedge here — low-cost, and there's always a chance it rolls something worth keeping or trading. Don't bank your event strategy on it, but it's a reasonable last spend once the cosmetics are secured.
The Drop Rate Boost (1,200) and 2x XP Boost (800) are genuinely useful for players grinding levels or fruit hunting during the event window. Stack them during active play sessions rather than letting them sit. Run the XP boost during boss farming or grinding sessions where you're already committing 30 to 60 minutes, and time the Drop Rate Boost around fruit-spawn areas where the increased odds actually translate to pickups.
For codes that can supplement your Candy Egg income and help you push toward the 10,000 cap faster, check the Blox Fruits codes page — we keep it updated as new codes drop. And if you're looking for a broader overview of the game's systems and progression, the Blox Fruits hub page covers everything from sea progression to fruit tier rankings. Players looking for Robux to spend on game passes or exclusive items should also read our Blox Fruits free Robux guide.
The Blox Fruits Easter Event 2026 runs from March 28 to April 12, 2026. After that date all 24 Easter Eggs become unobtainable, the Candy Eggs currency is removed, and the Easter Shop closes. Any cosmetics or rewards you've already earned stay in your inventory permanently.
There are 24 Easter Eggs in total spread across all three seas. Eggs span five rarity tiers — Common, Uncommon, Rare, Legendary, and Mythical — plus one Celestial Egg that's earned exclusively by defeating the Indra Egg Boss. The Codex tracker in your HUD shows which eggs you've collected and which are still missing, organized by sea.
The Codex is a built-in tracker shown as an egg icon next to your compass. It displays your collected eggs, missing eggs, and rarity-tier progress organized by sea. Milestone completions reward Candy Eggs, Beli, and special Easter Gifts. Collecting all 24 eggs triggers a Legendary Easter Gift and awards the permanent "True Eggloord" title.
You need to collect all 23 standard Easter Eggs first. Then visit the Easter Shop NPC at the Cafe in Second Sea and choose the hidden "Secret" dialogue option. Spend 2,000 Candy Eggs to purchase the Easter Chalice, drop it in water, and a portal to the Indra Egg Boss arena opens. The boss is recommended for level 2,000+ players and supports up to 3 players. Defeating it grants the guaranteed Celestial Egg (egg 24) and has roughly a 5% chance to drop the Easter Bunny Cape.
The April 2026 Dark fruit rework was a full PvP moveset overhaul that transformed Dark from a passive utility fruit into a high-skill combat option. Key changes include a new Dark Scythe melee ability with wide AOE and Darkness debuff stacking, reworked projectiles with homing or impact-explosion mechanics, and a redesigned passive that scales with attack speed and critical strike chance. The rework pushed Dark fruit's trade value up roughly 40% as it became viable in the competitive PvP meta.
The Easter Shop NPC sits at the Cafe in Second Sea. Items available for Candy Eggs include: Easter Bunny Skin (5,000 — limited cosmetic), Random Blox Fruit (3,000), Cracked Egg Helmet (2,500 — limited cosmetic), Golden Egg Banner (2,000), Drop Rate Boost 1 hr (1,200), Pastel Banner (1,000), 2x XP Boost 1 hr (800), and Candy Egg Basket (500). The Easter Chalice for the secret boss also costs 2,000 and appears only after you've collected 23 eggs.