Tiger
Demand & Trend
This item trades at a stable rate. Fair trades are common.
Tiger gets dangerous at the exact moment another player thinks the chase is finally over. They win a little space, turn for a reset, and then Body Flicker cuts that space away before the fight has time to settle.
Most players notice the transformation first, but that is not the part that catches people off guard. The harder part shows up after the gap closes, because Tiger is built to rush back into contact before the other side can calm the exchange down.
That first bit of space does not last
A lot of players think the first escape solved the problem. Tiger is much more annoying than that, because one late movement choice is often enough for the fruit to get right back on top of you.
Body Flicker is what turns that little escape into a bad memory almost immediately. The move snaps Tiger forward hard enough that even a small delay can pull the target back into reach. After the transformation, the fruit also gains its own M1 chain, and that changes the fight because the danger no longer depends only on one named skill. Once Tiger is already in your face, even the basic follow-up starts carrying real weight.
The fruit gets much easier to understand once the important mastery unlocks stop hiding the real kit. Tiger is a Mythical Beast fruit priced at $5,000,000 or 3,000 Robux. Finger Revolver opens at 1 mastery, Spiraling Kick at 50, Body Flicker at 200, and transformation at 300. It also uses a Fire Meter, which fits the same fight style because Tiger does better in longer exchanges than in one quick first impression.
Once Tiger gets back in range, the whole exchange changes
After Tiger closes the gap properly, one escape move rarely fixes much. The other side is no longer dealing only with the obvious fruit skills, because the transformed attack chain itself can carry the close fight after the reset, which should have opened the distance again.
In a rough chase, that close-range return is exactly what makes Tiger much harder to deal with than it looks in a tidy showcase clip. Standing just outside the named moves no longer gives much comfort, because the close exchange itself has already turned into part of the problem.
Distance also stops calming things down in the way many players expect. Tiger is built to punish the exact second that space begins to open, which is why it often looks more dangerous in a messy pursuit than in a clean demonstration.
I have watched players underestimate Tiger because the first hit does not always look overwhelming on its own. That opinion changes very quickly once one late turn or one slow movement choice lets the fruit jump straight back on top of them.
Tiger does its best work after the first reset fails
Tiger usually looks strongest in the fight that should have cooled down already, but did not. The other player turns to settle after the first escape, and a second later, Tiger is back on top of them before that bit of breathing room has done anything useful.
Open ground gives Tiger more room to punish a bad reset, because the other player often thinks the extra distance is enough when it really is not. Rough PvP creates the same opening in a different way. It also helps when the fight lasts a little longer, because the transformed chain finally gets enough time to matter instead of disappearing behind one short trade.
I have also seen Tiger do its best work against players who trust one reset move too much. The fruit is very good at shrinking that first escape, and once that happens, the whole fight starts leaning back toward close contact again.
Tiger stops looking unfair once the other player stays calm
The fruit loses a lot once the opponent stops throwing away that first bit of space. A player who waits, saves movement, and chooses the reset later takes away one of Tigerโs easiest ways back into the fight.
After that, Tiger has to earn the next entry instead of being handed one. It can still hit hard, but the chase gets much less forgiving once the other side reads Body Flicker early and refuses to panic.
- A well timed first escape takes away the easy close entry that Body Flicker usually gets.
- Saving movement until Tiger fully commits removes the second close exchange the fruit was hoping to steal.
- Very short fights end before the transformed chain gets enough time to matter.
- A player who reads the Body Flicker angle early forces Tiger to close the space again the hard way.
Where I would actually keep Tiger
I would keep Tiger in the part of the game where one broken reset matters more than one perfect hit. It works best when the other player thinks they finally got enough room, then loses that room before it turns into anything useful. On open ground, Tiger has room to keep the chase alive, and rough PvP gives it the same kind of opening because one bad turn is often enough.
That same style does not disappear outside duels. Once the account is strong enough to use the full kit, Tiger still does real work in bosses and longer PvE fights. You notice that most clearly when a target stays in front of you long enough for the transformed chain to matter instead of ending after one short trade.
Where I would stop trusting Tiger
I would move on when the other player stops giving Tiger those rushed resets. A player who reads the angle early and saves movement for the right second takes away a big part of what makes this fruit so annoying.
At that point, Tiger has to earn the next entry the hard way. It can still hit hard, but the easy way back into the chase is gone, and other fruits begin giving a simpler answer once the fight stops getting dragged into close range.
FAQ
Most players looking up Tiger are really asking one practical question. After the flashy clips are gone, does the fruit still hold up when the fight gets messy, and the other player starts reacting properly?
Is Tiger Fruit good in Blox Fruits?
Yes. Tiger is very good once the account can actually use the dangerous part of the kit. The fruit looks best in the moment when the other player creates a little room, and Tiger takes that room away almost immediately.
Is a tiger better than a leopard?
Yes. The current Tiger is much better to use than the old Leopard. The rework gave it a transformed M1 chain and made the fruit much better at getting back into the fight after the first escape.
Is Tiger good for grinding?
Tiger can grind well after the important mastery unlocks are there. I would not hand it to a low-level account for relaxed early farming, but later on, it clears comfortably because the damage stays high and the pace stays fast enough that PvE does not bog it down too much.
Is Tiger good for PvP?
Tiger is very strong in PvP when the other side burns movement too early or misreads the return angle. That is when Body Flicker and the transformed follow-up look most unfair.
Should beginners keep Tiger Fruit?
Most beginners should not rush into Tiger unless the account already has the level and patience for the mastery grind. The fruit shows its real value later, after the important parts of the kit are opened.
