Roblox Game Guide
Dragon Adventures Value List
“How rare is your dragon, and what actually makes one worth more to trade?”
Last Updated: July 2026
Dragon Adventures has over 200 dragon species to hatch, raise, and trade, and figuring out which ones are actually worth something takes more than just looking at a rarity label.
The game has pulled in more than 1.6 billion visits and is still actively updated, with a new season and fresh dragons landing every few months. That constant refresh is exactly why trade values shift so much over time.
Dragon Adventures does not publish an official price list anywhere, and no single fan tracker has settled on fixed numbers either. What we can tell you, straight from the game’s own records, is exactly how rare each dragon actually is and what pushes its trade demand up or down.
New to the game? Our Dragon Adventures wiki covers the basics, and the Dragon Adventures codes page lists any free boosts or eggs you can claim.
Below is the real rarity breakdown, the three rarest dragons in the game, and what actually drives a dragon’s trade value.
The Quick Answer
There is no official price list for Dragon Adventures, and no fan tracker has locked down fixed coin numbers either. The real value drivers are rarity band (Relic and Legendary sit at the top), whether a dragon’s season or event has retired so it can never be hatched fresh again, and actual Auction House and Trading activity, which is the closest thing this game has to a live price signal. Only three dragons in the entire game carry Relic rarity, and one of them, Veidreki, is retired and can never be hatched again, which makes it the single most sought-after dragon in Dragon Adventures.
How Rarity and Trading Actually Work
Before the breakdown, here is how dragons actually move between players. Every value driver below plugs into this loop.
1
Hatch or win a dragon. Eggs come from world nests, chests, bosses, races, and events. Each egg only hatches specific dragons, so rarer eggs mean rarer odds.
2
Check its rarity label. Every dragon in the Dragonpedia is tagged Common, Uncommon, Rare, Epic, Legendary, or Relic. That label is the starting point for value, not the whole story.
3
Trade it directly. Open a trade with another player and add dragons, eggs, or items on both sides. This is the main way rare dragons change hands.
4
Or send it to the Auction House. Auction a dragon for coins with a starting bid and increment, or buy one that is currently listed. Bidding activity here is the closest thing to a real price check. See the Dragon Adventures codes page for free coin boosts before you start bidding.
Every Rarity Band
These counts come straight from the game’s own Dragonpedia records, not a fan estimate. Notice how lopsided the top of the chart is.
| Rarity |
How many exist |
What it means |
| Common |
21 dragons |
The bread-and-butter hatches from early starter worlds. Easy to get, and there is always a steady supply on the Player Market. |
| Uncommon |
17 dragons |
A small step up from Common. Still easy to find once you know which world’s eggs to farm. |
| Rare |
22 dragons |
Genuinely harder pulls. You will usually need to grind a specific world or wait out an egg’s odds. |
| Epic |
85 dragons |
The single biggest band in the game, which makes individual Epic dragons swing wildly in demand depending on how good they look or fly. |
| Legendary |
74 dragons |
Season and event mainstays. Most of the dragons players actively chase and trade for live here. |
| Relic |
3 dragons total |
The rarest band that exists. Only three dragons have ever carried this rarity, and one of them can no longer be hatched at all. |
The 3 Relic Dragons
Relic is not just the top of the rarity ladder, it is a tier with only three members in the game’s entire history. Here is all three, and why one stands well above the others in trade demand.
| Dragon |
Rarity |
Obtained |
Why it stands out |
| Veidreki |
Relic |
Legacy Dragon Season 1 (October 2021) |
The only Relic tied to a retired Legacy season, so it can never be hatched fresh again. That alone makes it the most sought-after of the three. |
| Voltstorm |
Relic |
Dragon Season 1 (January 2026) |
The second Relic ever added, still traceable to an early current-era season. |
| Putrefacceum |
Relic |
Season 6 (June 2026, current) |
The newest Relic and still obtainable through the live season, which keeps its trade price lower than the other two for now. |
No official price list exists, so these are the three factors that actually move a dragon’s trade value.
Why we are not listing exact coin prices
Dragon Adventures does not publish official values, and we could not find a fan tracker with a settled, consistent price list either. Auction House bids and player trades shift constantly as new seasons launch and old ones retire, so a fixed number posted today would likely be wrong within weeks. Rarity band plus retired-season status is the most reliable signal we can honestly give you.
What to Trade For, Stage by Stage
Not sure what to aim for next? Here is the target for each stage of your trading journey.
| Where you are |
Trade toward |
Why |
| Just starting out |
A common event dragon |
Get any tradeable dragon first. It is your entry into the trading economy. |
| Building up |
A Legendary dragon |
Trade several commons into one Legendary. That is your first real milestone. |
| Mid-game |
A retired event dragon |
Retired dragons cannot be hatched anymore, so their supply is frozen and value holds. |
| Endgame |
A Relic dragon |
The three Relic dragons are the top of the value list. This is the finish line. |
| Best long-term hold |
Any retired exclusive |
Frozen supply means new hatches cannot devalue it. |
| What to avoid |
Overpaying on a new dragon |
New dragons spike then settle. Never trade a Relic for a fad. |
Tips for Trading Smart
- Check whether a dragon’s season or event has retired before you trade it away. Retired dragons only get harder to find over time.
- Watch the Auction House for a few days before bidding. Watching real bids teaches you more about current demand than any list can.
- Do not assume Epic beats Rare in every single case. With 85 Epic dragons in one band, some individual Epics are more common in practice than certain sought-after Rares.
- Favorite any dragon you are not ready to trade. Favorited dragons cannot be added to a trade or auction by accident.
- Only trade with players you trust, and never rush a trade. Once both sides accept, it cannot be undone.
- Check the Dragon Adventures codes page for free eggs and coin boosts before you start grinding for a rare hatch.
Dragon Adventures Value List FAQ
What is the rarest dragon in Dragon Adventures?
Relic is the rarest rarity band, and only three dragons in the entire game carry it: Putrefacceum, Veidreki, and Voltstorm. Veidreki is the most sought-after of the three because its season has retired, so it can never be hatched fresh again.
Is there an official Dragon Adventures value list?
No. The developers do not publish trade values, and no fan tracker we checked has a settled, consistent price list either. Rarity band and retired-season status are the most reliable signals available.
How many dragons are Legendary or higher?
74 dragons carry Legendary rarity and only 3 carry Relic, for 77 total out of roughly 213 released species. That means most of the dragons in the game sit at Epic or below.
Does rarity always match trade value?
Not perfectly. Epic is the single biggest band with 85 dragons, so individual demand within that band varies a lot. A retired Legendary can end up more sought-after than a currently obtainable Epic.
Where do I trade dragons in-game?
Send a direct trade request to another player from the Social tab, or list a dragon at the Auction House in the Undercity for coin bids. The Player Market only handles eggs and items, not dragons directly.
Does Dragon Adventures have codes?
Check our Dragon Adventures codes page for the current list. Codes usually hand out free coins, eggs, or growth boosts, which help you hatch and raise dragons faster.