EZNPC Tips to Pull Celestial Pegasus in Steal a Brainrot
Celestial Pegasus is Steal a Brainrot's secret-tier flex: a cosmic flying horse with a brutal 0.05% drop from Secret Lucky Blocks, yet it prints 175M cash/sec, making it a true endgame chase.
If you've been living in Steal a Brainrot for any length of time, you've heard the whispers about the Celestial Pegasus. People show it off like a trophy, sure, but most of the hype is simple: it prints money. The problem is getting one without nuking your whole account. If you're trying to stay afloat while you chase rare pulls, some players top up resources through marketplaces like EZNPC so they can keep the conveyor running and avoid stalling out mid-grind.
Why the drop feels impossible
The Pegasus isn't "rare" in the casual sense. It's a Secret Lucky Block drop sitting at 0.05%. That number doesn't sound real until you do the math and realise you're staring down about 2,000 blocks just to hit the average. And average isn't a promise. You can get it early, or you can go on a streak so dry it feels personal. Meanwhile, stuff like La Secret Combinasion at 0.5% starts looking almost friendly. This is why you'll see experienced players pacing around their base, opening blocks in silence, then suddenly yelling when the silhouette finally hits.
What you actually gain if it hits
The best part is that the unit's value isn't just bragging rights. A clean, no-mutation Celestial Pegasus cranks out 175 million cash per second, which is why late-game rebirth pushers chase it so hard. It also has a straightforward economy profile: 150 billion to buy outright, 75 billion if you sell. That resale matters more than people admit, because it gives you an escape hatch. Pull one, use it to stabilize your income, then liquidate if you need to pivot into upgrades, floor multipliers, or a sudden trait shopping spree.
Strategies that don't bankrupt you
There are a few ways to make the chase less painful. First, use pro servers whenever you can, since trade machines let you turn low-demand units into block volume. Second, keep your process steady: 1) set a cash target for the session, 2) buy or spawn blocks in batches, 3) stop when you hit your limit instead of "just one more." Third, don't ignore the messy side of the game. Some players wait for someone else to pull a Pegasus, pop a speed boost, and try to knock them off rhythm long enough to grab the advantage and sprint home. If that's the world you're playing in, your traps, sentries, and timed locks need to be more than decoration, and it helps to keep an eye on what's trending in the Steal a Brainrot Brainrots scene so you know what people are hunting and how they're getting it.