Roblox doesn’t have one universal code system. Each experience — whether it’s an anime battler, a tower defense title, or a tycoon sim — runs its own currency, its own redemption menu, and its own release schedule for promo codes. Because of that, the fastest way to keep up isn’t to memorize hundreds of codes but to know where each game’s developer actually posts them: usually a Discord server, sometimes a Trello board, and occasionally both.
How code redemption works across most Roblox games
Almost every code-supporting Roblox game places a button labeled Codes, Twitter, or Settings somewhere on the main screen or side menu. Tapping it opens a text field where a code can be typed or pasted exactly as written, including capitalization and punctuation. Once submitted, the game either shows a confirmation message or immediately updates the player’s currency, pet, or item count on screen.
Rewards vary by genre. Simulators and tycoons tend to hand out coins, gems, or luck boosts. Anime RPGs and tower defense games lean toward reroll currency, trait resets, or event-specific materials. Fighting and battleground titles occasionally include cosmetic effects or in-game titles instead of currency.
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This category produces the highest volume of new codes because these games run frequent banner and event updates. Blox Fruits remains the single largest community of any Roblox title, and its Discord server is also where new EXP-boost codes surface first. Other high-traffic anime titles with active code drops include Anime Vanguards, King Legacy, Grand Piece Online, Sol’s RNG, and A Universal Time — each maintains a dedicated Discord invite, and several (Grand Piece Online, King Legacy) also keep a Trello board listing upcoming content rather than codes themselves.
Fighting-focused anime games such as Jujutsu Infinite, Anime Fighters Simulator, and The Strongest Battlegrounds follow the same pattern: codes appear tied to milestone player counts or new mode launches, and the fastest confirmation is watching in-game currency change the instant a code is submitted.
Tower defense and strategy titles
Tower defense games typically reward gems, trait rerolls, or unit unlocks rather than raw currency. Tower Defense Simulator, Toilet Tower Defense, All Star Tower Defense X, and Universal Tower Defense all post codes through their official Discords as soon as a new wave of towers or a collaboration event goes live. Because these games often gate rare units behind luck-based systems, code rewards here are usually framed as reroll tokens rather than direct unlocks.
Simulators, tycoons, and farming games
Farming and tycoon-style games like Grow a Garden, Pet Simulator 99, Build a Boat for Treasure, Bee Swarm Simulator, and Adopt Me tend to release codes tied to real-world holidays or subscriber milestones rather than combat updates. Adopt Me’s code drops usually add pets or bucks, while Grow a Garden’s codes typically add seeds, tools, or coin boosts. These titles rarely publish Trello boards since their update cadence is simpler than combat-driven games, so the Discord server is usually the only place a new code appears before the in-game news feed catches up.
Survival, horror, and social roleplay games
Survival and horror titles such as Doors, Dead Rails, The Mimic, and Pressure use codes sparingly, often only around anniversaries. Social roleplay games like Brookhaven RP and Adopt Me instead focus on cosmetic drops. For games in this category, the safest way to confirm a code worked is checking whether the reward appears directly in the inventory screen, since many of these titles don’t display a pop-up confirmation.
Largest official Roblox Discord communities
Server size is a useful signal for how quickly a code gets noticed and verified by other players. The table below reflects member counts for some of the largest official game servers as of mid-2026.
| Game | Discord members |
|---|---|
| Blox Fruits | 3.3M |
| The Strongest Battlegrounds | 2M |
| All Star Tower Defense | 1.4M |
| Attack on Titan Revolution | 1.2M |
| King Legacy | 1.1M |
| Bee Swarm Simulator | 1.07M |
| Tower Defense Simulator | 1.03M |
| Jujutsu Infinite | 968K |
| Sol’s RNG | 945K |
| A Universal Time | 870K |
What a Trello board actually tells you
A Trello board is not usually where codes get posted first. Instead, developers use it to track planned features, known bugs, and roadmap items for the next update. Games like Blox Fruits, Grand Piece Online, Arcane Odyssey, and Fisch keep public Trello boards for exactly this purpose. If a game’s Discord announces a new patch, the Trello board is often the faster way to see what content changed without waiting for full patch notes, though it rarely lists redeemable codes directly.
Note: some smaller or newer experiences don’t maintain a Discord or Trello at all. For those, the in-game social media icon (often linking to the developer’s X or TikTok account) is usually the only place a code gets announced.
Games with official Roblox community pages instead of Discord
Not every title relies on Discord. Some smaller games instead point players to a Roblox Community or Group page for announcements. Dinosaur Racing‘s community page and Build a Military Base‘s own game page serve this role, functioning as the primary spot for update notes when no external server exists.
Whichever game is being tracked, the pattern holds steady: check the in-game codes menu first, follow the official Discord for the fastest new-code alerts, and treat any Trello board as a roadmap rather than a code source.






