Upgrade costs of Dragon Portraits
Introduction
Dragon Portraits are one of those systems that look underwhelming at first glance, especially when you focus on a single level upgrade. The stat gains per level are small—often just a handful of attack and defense points. For many players, especially early on, it’s easy to dismiss portraits as low priority.
That’s a mistake.

Portraits are a classic scaling system. Individually weak, collectively powerful. Once you start stacking dozens of levels, the cumulative stat gain becomes significant, especially in prolonged fights where raw attributes matter more than burst mechanics. That said, the real limiting factor isn’t willingness—it’s cost.
Before we dive on in, special thanks to player GoldenState from server 344 who has been most helpful providing key information on the later portrait levels. Thank you!
Costs of all portrait levels
Please find complete list of all upgrade costs for dragon portraits level 1 through 50. Note that level 50 seems to remain the max level for portraits, regardless of other level-caps being increased during seasons, portrait level-caps remain the same.

Note that all dragons have the same portrait upgrade costs – including holy and shadow!

Understanding the Cost Curve
The defining feature of Dragon Portrait progression is how aggressively the costs scale.
- Early levels (1–10) are extremely cheap and accessible
- Mid levels (20–30) begin to demand real crystal investment
- Late levels (40–50) become a serious long-term resource sink
By the time you reach level 50:
- Total Crystals: 128,496
- Total Gold: 154,020,000
The jump is not linear—it’s exponential in practice. For example:
- Level 10 costs 284 crystals
- Level 30 costs 2,700 crystals
- Level 50 costs 7,500 crystals
That means a single late-game upgrade can cost more than the first 10 levels combined.
Why Portraits Still Matter
On paper, something like:
- +4 Physical Attack
- +6 Physical Defense
- +3 Magic Attack
- +6 Magic Defense
Doesn’t look impactful… but across 50 levels, you’re reaching meaningful and quite significant attribute levels.

Player Perspective
From experience, the biggest mistake players make is delaying portraits too long because the upgrades “look small.”
In practice, what works best is:
- Max talents first (priority system)
- Then steadily invest into portraits without overcommitting
Conclusion Summary
Dragon Portraits are a long-term investment system with heavy scaling costs. While each level offers small stat increases, the cumulative effect is substantial and should not be ignored.
- Early levels are highly efficient—take them quickly
- Mid levels require balanced investment
- Late levels are expensive and should be approached carefully
If you treat portraits as a background progression rather than a primary focus, they’ll quietly become one of the more reliable sources of raw power in your account.
Published: 17-04-2026
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