Astraknight is a Fighting-type Battle Pass Evomon hatched from Astraknight’s Egg, with Season Battle Pass level 35 as the safest unlock target, and it plays best as a fast physical attacker built around Attack-focused natures, offensive traits, and moves like Rider Kick and Heavy Blow.
Astraknight is one of the strongest early physical attackers in Evomon, and unlike most monsters in the game, you can’t catch it in the wild — it’s tied entirely to the Season Battle Pass. It hits hard and fast the moment you hatch it, which is exactly why players chase it. A quick note on names first: some guides and captions call this monster Astronite, but the in-game Dex spells it Astraknight, and that’s the spelling we’ll use throughout — they’re the same Evomon.
What Astraknight is and how to unlock it

Astraknight is a Fighting-type Evomon that only comes from hatching Astraknight’s Egg, a reward on the current Season Battle Pass. It never shows up as a wild encounter, so the entire unlock is a progression grind rather than a hunt. You climb the pass by completing objectives in the Daily Quests tab, and each level you gain pushes you further along the reward track toward the egg.
KEY!Treat level 35 as your practical target. Egg rewards are reported around Battle Pass level 7 as well as higher levels like 35, but the exact positions shift between seasons, so level 35 is the dependable milestone to aim for. Once the egg lands in your inventory, hatch it from the egg menu to add Astraknight straight to your party.
Grind the Daily Quests tab up to Season Battle Pass level 35 before spending any Robux — the free track already hands you a regular Astraknight’s Egg, so confirm the paid rewards are worth it first.
The free Battle Pass track is where regular Astraknight lives — progress far enough and you’re guaranteed Astraknight’s Egg, which always hatches into the standard monster. The premium track is what unlocks the shiny Astraknight’s Egg, so a shiny version comes specifically from that egg, not from any normal shiny-hunting or wild spawn.
Unlocking the premium rewards means buying into the pass — the Premium Season Pass runs 599 Robux and the Advanced Season Pass 999 Robux, though those prices and the reward layout can be rebalanced each season, so don’t treat them as permanent. The exact slot for the shiny egg is genuinely disputed between seasons and guides, so open the in-game reward list and confirm where it sits before you commit any Robux. The shiny is often described as carrying a slightly better stat spread than the standard version, which makes it the nicer pull if you’re already paying — but verify that in-game rather than banking on it.
Astraknight stats, typing, and matchups
| Stat | Value |
|---|---|
| HP | 88 |
| Attack | 108 |
| Defense | 94 |
| Special Attack | 50 |
| Special Defense | 80 |
| Speed | 90 |
| Total | 510 |
Astraknight is Dex entry S.088, a Fighting-type bruiser built for offense. Its numbers tell the whole story: a huge Attack stat backed by solid Defense and good Speed, with a deliberately low Special Attack that tells you exactly how to build it. Because it has no evolution line, those stats are already at their ceiling the moment you hatch it — there’s no waiting around for it to come online.
Its Fighting typing is strong into Normal, Ice, Rock, and Steel enemies, and it resists those same types on defense, which is a big part of why it holds the front line so well. The flip side: be careful against Flying and Psychic monsters, since those are its main weaknesses and will punish it if you lead into them blindly.
Best Astraknight build for physical damage
| Build slot | Best picks |
|---|---|
| Nature | Adamant, Hardy, or Naughty |
| Trait | Battle Spirit, Pursuit, or Reaper |
| Core moves | Rider Kick and Heavy Blow |
| Role | Fast front-line physical attacker |
| Coverage goal | Answers to Flying, Psychic, and Fairy |
Everything about Astraknight points at physical damage, so build it that way and never touch a Special Attack setup — its 50 SpA makes any special investment wasted. Start with a nature that raises Attack: Adamant, Hardy, or Naughty all boost its offensive power while keeping the bulk and speed that make it effective.
Traits do just as much heavy lifting. Battle Spirit raises both Attack and Special Attack by three stages the first time Astraknight enters battle, giving you an immediate opening spike. Pursuit increases its damage by roughly 18% across the board, and Reaper snowballs late fights by boosting both Attack and Special Attack by five stages after it knocks out an opponent. For moves, Rider Kick and Heavy Blow are your core physical attacks — paired with the right nature and trait, they let Astraknight hit incredibly hard into anything weak to Fighting.
Round out the last slots with coverage that helps against Flying, Psychic, and Fairy threats — the types your Fighting attacks can’t dent. Exact coverage move names shift by patch, so pick whatever your current movepool offers against those matchups rather than forcing a specific option.
Fitting Astraknight into your team

Astraknight’s job is to lead. As a fast front-line physical attacker, it pressures slower enemies early and can knock out multiple targets before they even get to move — that opening tempo is where it earns its spot. The catch is that its weaknesses are also its blind spots, so the teammates around it should cover what it can’t.
Bring partners that handle Flying and Psychic matchups so Astraknight isn’t forced into fights it loses. Reported end-game cores pair it with Chitaladin and Wisphex for added DPS and utility, and if you’d rather not commit Robux, Pummpaw (which evolves into Pummash) is a free Fighting-type alternative that fills a similar role. Think of these as flexible complements rather than a fixed lineup — Astraknight slots into plenty of teams as the aggressive opener.
Mistakes to avoid with Astraknight
The most common trap is hunting for Astraknight as a wild encounter — it doesn’t exist out in the world, and the only route is the Battle Pass egg. Right behind that is ignoring the Daily Quests tab and expecting the unlock to happen passively; those quests are the engine that levels your pass, and without them you’ll stall.
Don’t spend Robux purely to grab Astraknight without checking the reward track first — the regular egg sits on the free path, so the paid tiers are really about the shiny and the extras. Treating Astronite as a separate monster is another easy slip; it’s just an alternate name for the same Evomon. And finally, never build around Special Attack — with a 50 SpA stat, that setup throws away everything that makes Astraknight good.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Astraknight be found in the wild?
No. Astraknight is Battle Pass–exclusive and only comes from hatching Astraknight’s Egg — it never appears as a normal wild encounter.
What Battle Pass level do you need for Astraknight?
Aim for level 35 as the safe target. Egg rewards are also reported around level 7, but the exact positions can shift between seasons, so level 35 is the reliable milestone.
Is shiny Astraknight free or premium?
Premium. The shiny Astraknight’s Egg is a premium-track reward, so you need the Premium or Advanced Season Pass — the free track only gives the regular egg.
Does Astraknight evolve?
No. Astraknight has no evolution line, which means its stats are already maxed the moment you hatch it and it stays useful throughout the game.
Is Astraknight worth building?
Yes — it’s an easy-to-build physical attacker with excellent offensive stats that performs well against several common types, and it’s especially strong early. Just weigh whether to spend Robux, since a free Fighting alternative like Pummpaw exists.
More questions⤵
Is Astronite the same as Astraknight?
Yes. “Astronite” is an older or mis-heard name for the same monster; the in-game Dex spells it Astraknight, and the mechanics — Battle Pass egg, no evolution — are identical.
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