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Blue Dragon Halfmoon Male BettaBlue Dragon Halfmoon Male Betta Blue Dragon Halfmoon Male Betta (Betta splendens) displays the Dragon Scale gene in vivid steel blue to cobalt the thick, overlapping metallic scales creating an armored, reptilian appearance across the entire body, combined with the Halfmoon tail spreading to a full 180 degree arc when flared. The blue metallic scale texture shifts and catches light across the spread fins. The Dragon Scale gene produces thick,
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Blue Dragon Halfmoon Male Betta

Halfmoon Tail

Blue Dragon Halfmoon Male Betta (Betta splendens) displays the Dragon Scale gene in vivid steel-blue to cobalt — the thick, overlapping metallic scales creating an armored, reptilian appearance across the entire body, combined with the Halfmoon tail spreading to a full 180-degree arc when flared. The blue metallic scale texture shifts and catches light across the spread fins. The Dragon Scale gene produces thick, overlapping, metallic scales that give the body an armored, almost reptilian appearance quite unlike the smooth scaling of standard bettas. The scales reflect light in a distinctive way, creating a shimmering, hard-edged metallic quality across the entire body surface. Dragon Scale bettas are among the most visually striking varieties available — the scale texture adds a three-dimensional depth to the coloration that no other betta variety can replicate.

Betta splendens — the Siamese Fighting Fish — is native to the rice paddies, floodplain pools, and slow-moving streams of Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, and surrounding Southeast Asia. Bettas are among the most cognitively aware freshwater fish in the hobby. They recognize individual humans — distinguishing their keeper from strangers by face and silhouette — and learn the meaning of familiar movements like approaching the tank or picking up the food container. Each fish has a genuinely distinct personality: some are bold and immediately investigative, others cautious and deliberate, others theatrical displayers that perform at every opportunity. A betta in a properly enriched aquarium with plants, sight lines, and visual stimulation outside the glass is an actively engaged animal that rewards attentive observation. We recommend giving your betta a name — keepers who do consistently report a stronger bond and more attentive care, and their fish tend to show for it.

Select Your Exact Fish — WYSIWYG: This listing is part of our What You See Is What You Get collection. Each betta is individually filmed in their container and video previews are available on cuboidstore.com. Browse the videos, find the fish you want, note the container number in the bottom right corner of the video, place your order, and include that number in your order notes. You will receive exactly that fish — not one like it.

People in Thailand have kept and selectively bred Betta splendens for at least 1,000 years — one of the longest domestication histories of any fish. The breeding tradition focused increasingly on color and fin development over the centuries, producing fish of growing beauty long before they reached the rest of the world. In 1840, King Rama III gave specimens to Danish physician Theodore Cantor, who published the first Western scientific description. Bettas arrived in France in 1892, Germany in 1896, and reached San Francisco in 1910 via importer Frank Locke. It was not until 1927 that the first brightly colored, long-finned specimens reached the United States — transforming the fish from a foreign curiosity into the spectacular ornamental varieties the world knows today. The scientific name Betta splendens, given by Charles Tate Regan of the British Museum in 1909, means "gleaming fighter" — combining splendens (brilliant, shining) with a reference to the ancient Bettah people of Southeast Asia.

The Cuboid Betta Wall: Our bettas are housed in our 260-container Betta Wall — one of the largest dedicated betta displays you will find anywhere. Every container has its own heated, filtered, UV-sterilized water and a live plant, giving each fish its own stable, enriched environment. While the containers are sized for retail housing rather than permanent home setups, the water quality and conditions are maintained at a standard well above typical retail. When you receive a betta from Cuboid, it has been kept properly — not in a cup.

The ideal home aquarium for a betta is a minimum of 5 gallons — 10 gallons gives more stable water temperature, better water quality, and more territory to explore and inhabit. A heater is required. Bettas are tropical fish that need 78–82°F (25–28°C) consistently. Room temperature in most US homes falls below this range, particularly in winter, and bettas kept too cool are noticeably less active, less colorful, and significantly more prone to disease. Bettas also possess a specialized breathing organ called the labyrinth organ — a structure above the gills that allows them to extract oxygen directly from atmospheric air at the surface. Unobstructed surface access is a biological necessity. Never cover the surface so completely that a betta cannot reach open air.

⚠ Filter Flow: Bettas are native to slow-moving rice paddies and still forest pools — strong current stresses them, exhausts their fins, and can prevent them from swimming comfortably. Use a gentle sponge filter or baffle a hang-on-back filter to reduce outflow. The surface should ripple gently — not churn.

Plants are genuine habitat for bettas, not merely decoration. Floating plants provide shade and surface cover that significantly reduces stress. Indian almond leaves (Catappa) are particularly valuable — they release tannins that replicate the natural blackwater chemistry of betta habitat and have mild antibacterial and antifungal properties. Add one or two leaves per 5 gallons and replace monthly. The slight amber tint they produce is entirely natural and beneficial.

Feeding & Care Tip: Hikari Betta Gold is our recommended staple food. Feed one pellet at a time — if your betta eats it, offer another, up to three pellets twice daily. If they do not eat a pellet, do not add another — remove uneaten food promptly. Fasting one day per week supports digestive health.

For treats, rotate Hikari Frozen Bloodworms, Hikari Frozen Baby Brine Shrimp, and Hikari Frozen Daphnia 2–3 times per week.

When setting up your betta's new aquarium, add Seachem Betta Basics to the water — a betta-specific conditioner that neutralizes chlorine and chloramines and provides a slime coat supplement. It does not contain aloe vera, which can coat the water surface and interfere with a betta's surface breathing. Use it at every water change going forward.

Dragon Scale Care: The Dragon Scale gene causes thick metallic scaling that continues to develop throughout the fish's life. In some individuals this scaling can gradually encroach across the eyes — a condition known as Diamond Eye or Dragon Eye — progressively reducing and eventually eliminating vision. This is genetic and irreversible; not every Dragon Scale betta develops it, but the risk is real and worth monitoring. Check eye clarity regularly — early signs are a whitening or clouding of the normally dark iris.

We strongly recommend establishing a tap-and-feed routine from the start: tap gently on the glass before each feeding to signal that food is coming, then offer a pellet. A sighted Dragon Scale betta that learns this association early will be far better prepared to continue feeding normally if Diamond Eye does develop — the conditioned behavior carries over even as vision is lost.

The raised scale texture also means debris and bacteria can lodge between scales more easily than on smooth-scaled fish. Clean water, low nitrates, and regular inspection of the scale surface for any lifting, redness, or irregularity are especially important for Dragon Scale bettas.

One benefit: the metallic Dragon Scale iridescence shows best under moderate to good directional lighting — unlike most bettas that look best in subdued light, Dragon Scale bettas genuinely reward good illumination.

Male bettas cannot be housed together — one male per tank, always. With peaceful, non-fin-nipping community fish in a larger aquarium they can coexist well: small Corydoras, Ember Tetras, small rasboras, and snails are typically compatible. Avoid confirmed fin-nippers such as Tiger Barbs and Serpae Tetras, and brightly colored fish with flowing fins that a betta may perceive as a rival.

Most fish are kept. Bettas are known. Give one the right environment, learn its habits, and you will find yourself checking on it not out of obligation but out of genuine curiosity about what it is doing. That is the experience that has made Betta splendens one of the most kept fish on Earth for over a thousand years — and it starts with the fish you choose.

Blue Dragon Halfmoon Male Betta
Difficulty Beginner — Easy
Temperament Males must be kept one per tank
Adult Size 2.5–3.0 inches (6–7.5 cm)
Group Size One male only — no other male bettas
Ideal Temperature 78–82°F (25–28°C) — heater required
Ideal pH 6.5–7.5
Ideal GH 3–12 dGH
Ideal KH 2–8 dKH
Staple Food Hikari Betta Gold — one pellet at a time, up to 3 pellets twice daily; remove uneaten food promptly
Treat / Supplement Hikari Frozen Bloodworms; Hikari Frozen Baby Brine Shrimp; Hikari Frozen Daphnia (weekly for digestive health)
Origin Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, and surrounding Southeast Asia
Notes Filtration: Gentle sponge filter or baffled HOB only — no strong current
Surface Access: Required at all times — labyrinth organ breathes atmospheric air
Minimum Tank: 5 gallons — 10 gallons recommended
New Tank: Seachem Betta Basics at setup and every water change (no aloe vera)
Enrichment: Indian almond leaves; floating plants; live plant in tank
Dragon Scale: Monitor eyes regularly for Diamond Eye (scale growth over cornea); establish tap-and-feed routine early; directional lighting enhances metallic scale appearance

Blue Dragon Halfmoon Male Betta

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