Mammoth Fruit

Mammoth

Mammoth

MYTHICAL Beast Fruit
💎 Trading Value 10.05M
🔒 Permanent Value 5.57B +240M (4.5%) on June 12, 2026
🪙 Beli Price $2.7M
🟢 Robux Price R$ 2,350

Demand & Trend

Demand Score 7/10
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
➡️ Stable

This item trades at a stable rate. Fair trades are common.

Value History

When Mammoth shows up in stock, a lot of players look at the price first and then move on too quickly, because it does not give that instant expensive-looking impression some other Mythical fruits give at the dealer.

The price looks low for a Mythical Beast fruit, and that alone pushes a lot of players toward the same quick judgment, which is that the fruit must be decent but not serious. That idea usually lasts only until the transformed form enters a real fight, and the whole screen gets crowded by one huge body that does not care much about the little bit of space the other side was counting on.

That is the point where Mammoth finally makes sense. You do not pick this fruit for neat movement or for careful little trades from the edge of the screen. You pick it when you want the duel to turn rough, physical, and difficult to ignore once the transformed form is right in front of the enemy.

Where Mammoth gets its value

With some fruits, distance feels like safety. With Mammoth, distance only feels safe until the transformed body closes it, because the fruit is built around size, contact, and the kind of pressure that asks a very direct question. How much room does the other side really have once the armored form is already moving through it?

That question is the heart of this fruit. Mammoth is not asking you to dance around danger and wait for one delicate opening. It wants you to accept that the fight will get ugly, stay close enough for the body to matter, and force the other side to deal with a form that can take punishment while still moving forward.

What the other side hoped forWhat Mammoth does instead
A little room after one tradeThe transformed body closes that room much too fast
A quick punish after your mistakeThe armor lets Mammoth stay in the exchange longer than expected
A safe line across the groundThe rush tools and Stampede turn that line into a crash point
Small mistakes that might not cost much against lighter fruitsMammoth turns them into real damage once it is already close

The fruit tells the truth after V

The ordinary side of Mammoth still has useful tools, but the real shape of the fruit does not show up fully until the transformation is active. That is the moment when the body grows, the armor goes up, the jump changes, the dash picks up weight, and the transformed M1 string joins the same fight.

That is also the reason shop impressions miss so much. Mammoth costs $2,700,000 or 2,350 Robux, and on paper, that pushes many players into comparing it with faster Mythical fruits right away.

In actual use, Mammoth wants a different comparison, because the fruit is not trying to win admiration through speed. It is trying to take over the space directly in front of you and stay there long enough that the enemy no longer enjoys the same fight they were having a second ago.

The armor changes the tone of the duel

The damage reduction on Mammoth is not just some extra comfort sitting quietly behind the fruit. It is one of the main reasons the fruit has its own identity. Once the transformed form is active, Mammoth gets 50% damage reduction, and against NPCs, that number rises to 58.75%, which changes the entire way danger feels while you are inside the exchange.

That kind of protection does more than save health. It lets you accept contact that would feel far too risky on another fruit, and it gives you time to stay in bad space long enough for your own body pressure to do the real work. In raids and Sea Events, that difference is huge because the fruit no longer needs a perfect little opening every time the room gets messy.

The first three moves already give the idea away

Even before the transformed side takes over, Mammoth does not hide what kind of fight it wants. Ancient Cutter throws three large slashes forward. True Prehistoric Punt drives into the target and sends them up. Colossal Crusher forces the body in and slams the target back down.

That is not a quiet kit. It already shows you that Mammoth wants contact with weight behind it, and it already teaches the same lesson that the transformed form rewards later. Get close enough, stay committed long enough, and make the other side deal with your body instead of letting them choose a calm distance for the whole exchange.

The transformed M1 string deserves more attention

A lot of Mammoth talk stays focused on the large named skills, but the transformed M1 attacks carry a surprising amount of the fruit’s real pressure. The 4 hit sequence with trunk slaps, a stomp, and the roar at the end gives Mammoth a rhythm that feels far more active than most players expect from such a large transformation.

That matters because the fruit is not sitting idle between big moves. You can keep pressure alive through ordinary transformed contact, and once that pressure starts stacking with the armor and the body size, Mammoth no longer looks like a slow beast waiting on cooldowns. It looks like a heavy form that keeps asking the same uncomfortable question with every step forward. Can you get out before the next hit connects?

There is a nice little technical side here too. The cooldown after the roar does not always have to trap you in place, since players can cut the string short or flow into another move instead. So even the ordinary transformed contact gives patient users more freedom than people expect at first glance.

The jump makes Mammoth feel bigger

A lot of players remember Stampede because it looks wild, but the real value of the move is not spectacle. It is the way the body keeps forcing the issue after the first contact is already there. While transformed, Mammoth drives forward, deals damage through the run, can drag up to five enemies or players, and once the grab is active, it always breaks Instinct. On top of that, the move gives stun immunity during the run.

That is why the fruit gets so much value in crowded content. A group that stands too close is not only dealing with one hit. They are dealing with a body that continues pushing through the same bad stretch of space and refuses to get interrupted in the easy way many lighter fruits would. In Sea Events, that style fits the job very well because Mammoth survives for a long time and still keeps pressure on targets that are already within reach.

The jump makes Mammoth feel bigger

Prehistoric Leap looks like a small detail on paper, and then the transformed form takes a jump in a real fight, and the whole body feels much larger than the moves list alone suggested. The first jump goes high, the landing makes a crater, and the fruit gets one more way to turn the ground itself into part of the pressure even when no named attack is being used at that second.

That is one of the reasons Mammoth feels so physical. The jump, the landing, the armor, the rush tools, and the sheer body size all push the same idea from different directions. This fruit wants to stand in the middle of the fight and make the nearby space unpleasant until the other side finally breaks away.

Where I would actually use Mammoth

Mammoth has a real place in Sea Events, raids, and PvP, where transformed pressure still counts for a lot. The transformed M1 attacks can hit Sea Beasts, the armor keeps you active longer, and the fruit still gives enough area pressure that crowded rooms do not force you into delicate play.

It also suits a certain kind of player very well. If your style is to step into a bad situation, trust the transformed form, and make the enemy regret staying near you, Mammoth gives you exactly that kind of fight. You are not playing for little windows at the edge of the screen. You are playing to break the space in front of you and keep the collision going long enough for the body to matter.

The weak side is easy to spot

Mammoth has real power, but its weak side is not hidden. The transformed form loses walk speed. The air is not where the fruit looks comfortable. Several rush moves are punishable when they miss. The whole fruit can also look awkward when the enemy is disciplined enough to hold distance and never gives you the close contact Mammoth wants.

That is why I would not put Mammoth on every account. If you want quick direction changes, easy mobility, or a fruit that solves most fights from far away, this is not the right answer. Mammoth gives a giant body, heavy pressure, and serious armor instead, and that trade only makes sense if you actually enjoy the rough side of the game.

Before you keep Mammoth for a long stretch, these four questions are worth asking yourself first.

  • Do you enjoy rough close fights more than tidy spacing battles?
  • Does your account care about Sea Events, raids, or transformed pressure in PvP?
  • Are you fine with armor and force instead of easy mobility?
  • Do you like the idea of winning space by pushing through it instead of circling around it?

My take on Mammoth

Mammoth reads badly from a distance and much better once you are actually inside a fight with it. The dealer price tells a smaller story than the fruit deserves, because the real value does not sit in the stock screen. It sits in the moment where the transformed body takes over the space in front of you, and the duel turns into something the other side no longer likes.

I would trust Mammoth for Sea Events, raids, and for players who enjoy transformed pressure that stays in the enemy’s face until they finally manage to break away. I would leave it away from anyone who wants a light fruit with easy movement and quick changes in direction. Mammoth gives a lot back, but it does it in a very direct and rough way, and that is exactly why the fruit works.

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