Blox Fruits
By Paquito Jr Conde | October 18, 2025
How to Get the Pain Fruit
There are two common ways players obtain Pain:
- Buy from in-game fruit dealers when it appears in the rotating stock using in-game currency or premium currency, depending on available purchase options.
- Trade or receive it via player trades, events, or other in-game systems if the dealer does not currently list it.
Plan ahead: if you want Pain, keep enough in-game funds available and check dealer locations regularly so you can buy it the moment it appears. If you use premium currency to purchase a fruit, it typically remains yours after buying other fruits; buy with in-game currency only when you’re ready to commit.
How Pain Works — Key Mechanics
- Pain meter: a passive gauge that fills when you take damage or trigger specific in-game triggers; when full you gain temporary buffs like increased damage and reduced cooldowns.
- Last Stand / Berserk: instead of instantly dying when HP is depleted, Pain can enter a limited berserk mode that boosts mobility and damage for a short period; use it to turn fights around, then plan an exit or follow-up.
- Mastery and unlocking: moves unlock as you raise mastery; invest time in leveling Pain to access its best tools.
- Aim and timing matter: many Pain moves require landing hits precisely or following a setup; practice combos repeatedly to reduce missed inputs.
Improving Your Gameplay with Pain
To play Pain well, build habits and a setup that let you exploit its meter and last-stand windows predictably.
- Stat focus: invest in levels and mastery for the fruit first; prioritize damage and stamina that let you survive long enough to fill the Pain meter.
- Complementary choices: pick weapons or fighting styles that provide stuns, pulls, or quick gap closures (these create time to land Pain’s heavy moves).
- Practice drills: 10–15 minutes a day doing the same starter → stun → Pain chain will improve timing faster than random fights.
- Latency management: play on servers and networks with low ping where possible; many top Pain combos break with high latency.
- Risk control: bait light damage to fill your meter safely before committing to full engagements rather than intentionally suiciding mid-fight.
Core Combos and Practical Examples
Below are practical, repeatable combos. Read them slowly at first, then practice them in a calm training environment until you can perform each chain from memory.
Starter combos (easy → medium)
- Stun → Pain Z → Pain X (hold): use a short stun or weapon pull, press Pain Z to lock, follow with a held Pain X to capitalize on the stun window.
- Weapon grab → Pain X → dash → Pain C: use a weapon move to close, quickly burst Pain X, reposition, then finish with Pain C for area damage.
Intermediate combos (reliable in PvP)
- Pull weapon Z → Pain V → Pain Z → Pain X: pull or immobilize the target, use Pain V to stack damage, then chain Z and X for sustained hits.
- Air approach → Pain C (charged) → ground Pain Z → quick weapon X: approach from above, drop a charged C to force movement, then finish with Z and a weapon swing.
Advanced combos (high mastery)
- Full meter bait → intentionally take small hits → Last Stand activation → burst rotation: bait meter fill safely, enter Last Stand only when you can secure multiple hits, then use your fastest moves to take advantage of the speed and damage multipliers.
- Mix up starters: alternate between weapon stuns, style knockups, and environmental hazards to keep the opponent guessing — unpredictability opens windows for Pain’s slower, heavier attacks.
Practice tip: record or count the rhythm of each combo when learning. Think in beats: stun (1), gap close (2), Pain move (3–4). This mental rhythm reduces missed inputs under pressure.
Advanced Tips and Strategy
- Use movement tools (dash, short teleports, air jumps) immediately after long animations to avoid being punished for endlag.
- Reserve your strongest move for guaranteed follow-ups — don’t waste the meter on a single risky shot unless it secures the kill.
- Learn which moves break enemy defensive dodge or instinct; those moves are your best openers in competitive PvP.
- For mob grinding, use Pain’s AoE and charged attacks to clear clusters quickly, then reposition to collect drops before your meter decays.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Pain a good fruit?
Pain is excellent for players who enjoy high-skill payoff and clutch plays. It demands practice but can swing fights when used well. Less ideal for players who prefer simple, low-execution grinding tools.
How do I unlock all Pain moves?
Moves unlock as you raise Pain mastery. Play with the fruit, level it through combat and focused training, and you’ll gain full access over time.
Should I use Pain for PvP or grinding?
Both are possible. Pain is especially rewarding in PvP with combo practice, but its AoE and charged attacks also work in PvE when you know how to position yourself safely.
How do I awaken or upgrade Pain?
Upgrades and awakenings follow in-game progression systems that require specific tasks, mastery, or unlock steps. Focus on the listed objectives in the game’s upgrade panel to progress the fruit’s capabilities.
What are common mistakes new Pain users make?
- Triggering the meter too early or in situations where it cannot be followed up.
- Ignoring positioning and getting punished after long move animations.
- Not practicing combos in a calm setting before attempting them in live PvP.