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How Fortnite Players Trade Rare Sprites in Chapter 7 Season 3

The community-run swap method that hands you missing Sprites using the season's extraction mechanic.

The community-run swap method that hands you missing Sprites using the season’s extraction mechanic.

Some Sprites in Fortnite Chapter 7 Season 3 are rare enough that you could grind for days and never see one. The Gold Zero Point Sprite, for example, drops at roughly 0.009% (about 1 in 11,067) from high-tier Vault Sprite Chests. Since Epic never built an official trading system, the community worked out a reliable way to hand a Sprite to another player and get one back, all using the season’s extraction mechanic.

Quick answer: Pair up with another player in a bot lobby, each carry one spare Sprite, drop the Sprite you want to give away, pick up the one your partner drops, then extract it together at an Extraction Site. The traded Sprite lands in your collection once extraction finishes, and your original stays in your collection too.

Fortnite Sprites
Image: Epic Games

Why trading is the only realistic way to get the rarest Sprites

Sprites are the back-bling companions at the center of the Runners season. Each one carries a passive ability, and the gold variants stack a large XP bonus on top of that ability. The problem is the drop rates, which are punishing for the top-tier variants.

Gold variantWhere it spawnsDrop odds
Gold Water / Earth / FireTied to their biomes (water, forest, urban)0.12% (1 in 830)
Gold Duck / Ghost / Demon / KingVault areas, night cycle, or Sprite and Rare Chests0.045% (1 in 2,211)
Gold Dream / PunkVault Sprite Chests and high-tier vault chests0.021% (1 in 4,740)
Gold Zero PointHigh-tier Vault Sprite Chests only0.009% (1 in 11,067)

At those numbers, a swap with another player is far faster than chasing chests. It also lets you fill in variants you are simply missing, which is the whole point of completing a collection.


What you need before you trade

The method works because Sprites are physical pickups you can drop and re-collect during a round, and because extraction permanently banks whatever you are carrying. Before you load in, get these four things lined up.

RequirementWhy it matters
A trade partnerThey drop the Sprite you want and pick up yours.
A bot lobbyStops random players from killing you mid-extraction and ruining the swap.
A spare Sprite eachYou need a second Sprite in your inventory so you can swap and free up the one you are trading away.
An Extraction SiteExtraction is what banks the traded Sprite into your permanent collection.

The most active place to find a partner is the community-run Sprite Trading HQ or Fortnite Infinite Sprite Trading Discord server, where players post which Sprites they own and which ones they are hunting. You can browse the Sprite Trading channel, list what you want to give and receive, or send a direct offer to someone with a matching want.

If Discord is not your thing, the r/FortNiteBR subreddit runs a collection trading megathread where players set up lobbies with each other. The community rule on both platforms is the same and worth respecting: trades must be Sprite for Sprite, with no V-Bucks, gifts, or other incentives attached.


How to trade Sprites with another player

Find a partner and agree on the swap. In the trading channel or megathread, say which Sprite you are offering and which one you want back. Lock in a deal with someone whose wants match yours, then add each other on Epic Games.
Equip the Sprite you plan to give away and invite your partner to your party. Set up a bot lobby for the round so outside players cannot interrupt the exchange. Start the match and drop onto the island together.
Both of you find a second Sprite somewhere on the map. You need this extra Sprite so you still have something in your inventory after you let go of the one you are trading. Once you have it, switch it into your backpack slot.
Drop the Sprite you agreed to trade so your partner can grab it, and pick up the Sprite they dropped for you. Open your inventory and drop the Sprite directly onto the floor rather than throwing it, since Epic disabled throwing to shut down a duplication glitch. You should now be holding the Sprite you wanted.
Head to an Extraction Site together and place your Sprites into the crate. Stay inside the zone until the timer completes. When extraction finishes, the traded Sprite is added to your collection for good, and you can leave the lobby or play on for the Victory Royale.

How to confirm the trade worked

Once extraction completes, open your Sprite collection in the lobby. The new Sprite will be listed there, and you can equip it at the start of a future match by spending the required Sprite Dust. That confirmation in your collection is the only proof you need that the swap landed.

You also do not lose your original Sprite by trading it. Dropping a Sprite during a match only removes it from your active session, not your permanent collection, so you can buy it back later with Sprite Dust. That safety net is what makes the whole method low-risk.


Common reasons a trade fails

Most failed swaps come down to a handful of avoidable mistakes. The Extraction Site is loud and visible to other players, which is exactly why a bot lobby matters so much.

  • Getting eliminated during the extraction timer, which cancels the bank and can hit hard if either of you carried a Mastered Sprite.
  • Skipping the spare Sprite, which leaves you with nothing to swap into your backpack so the drop-and-pickup never lines up.
  • Getting griefed by a partner using Shockwave Grenades to push you into the Storm before extraction finishes.
  • Being handed the wrong Sprite in a rush, leaving you with a variant you did not need or already owned.

Run the process patiently in a private lobby and these issues mostly disappear. If a swap goes sideways, the worst case is buying your own Sprite back with Sprite Dust and trying again with another player.


Do not buy Sprites with real money

Because demand for rare Sprites is high, some people have started listing them for sale on sites like eBay and Gameflip at steep prices. Avoid these completely. Sprites can be earned for free, and paying for one puts you in clear violation of Fortnite’s terms of service.

There is no way to actually “buy” a Sprite, so any paid deal relies entirely on the seller’s good faith to add you, load into a match, and complete the swap after you have already paid. You can get scammed, and Epic will not be accountable for the lost money. Worse, if you are reported, you risk a ban that could make Runners your last season on the account.

Stick to Sprite-for-Sprite trades with friends or trusted players from the community hubs, hunt Sprite Chests for the variants you are missing, and keep every exchange free of money. It is slower than handing over cash, but it is the only method that keeps your collection and your account safe.