Stonks drops every player in with 100 points and a blank trading terminal. Spend those points on a dead listing, and you're stuck watching a flat line, which usually ends with a Robux top-up or a restart. The trick is picking experiences that are still growing in concurrent players, because the in-game share price tracks live Roblox popularity.
Quick answer: New players should put their starting 100 points into semi-popular climbers like Drag to Combine, Craft a Baddie, or Find the Secret Base. Once your balance is healthy, rotate into heavy hitters like Fisch, Grow A Garden, Steal A Brainrot, and Anime Vanguards.

How stock picking works in Stonks
Each "stock" inside Stonks is tied to a real Roblox experience, and its price moves with that game's traffic and hype. You buy in at the current price, hold while the player count climbs, and sell before momentum cools. Top blue-chip games like Grow A Garden or Blox Fruits cost far more than 100 points per share, so beginners can't touch them on day one.
That's why the early game is about flipping cheaper, fast-moving listings to build a bankroll. Once you have a few thousand points, the strategy shifts toward holding established hits that move in larger absolute swings.
Beginner stocks for your first 100 points
These are the lower-priced, semi-popular experiences worth targeting first. They tend to have enough player movement to generate a quick profit without requiring a huge buy-in. Buy the experience ID directly in the trading terminal.
| Experience | Experience ID |
|---|---|
| Find the Secret Base | 119545467557915 |
| Drag to Combine | 18571888939 |
| Juice Factory | 121984698514794 |
| Craft a Plushie | 70577070135851 |
| Unamed Battlegrounds | 84633364434995 |
| Craft Anything | 93493544491997 |
| Craft a Baddie | 108374757076037 |
| Find the YouTuber | 128007914207061 |
| Flip Rocks for Brainrots | 10731403361046 |
| Catch Brainrots from River | 117735412151102 |
Drag to Combine and Craft a Baddie are the safest opening plays — both ride the current "craft and combine" trend that keeps pulling in casual players. Brainrot-themed listings are volatile but produce some of the fastest swings if you time the meme cycle right.

Advanced stocks for big point swings
Once your balance can comfortably absorb a single share of a blue-chip game, the math changes. These listings move in larger absolute increments, so a 5% bump on Fisch or Grow A Garden returns far more than a 30% jump on a beginner stock. They're also more stable because their player bases are massive and consistent.
| Experience | Experience ID |
|---|---|
| Fisch | 16732694052 |
| Steal A Brainrot | 109983668079237 |
| Grow A Garden | 126884695634066 |
| Sailor Piece | 77747658251236 |
| Anime Vanguards | 16146832113 |
| Blox Fruits | 2753915549 |
| The Strongest Battlegrounds | 10449761463 |
| Adopt Me | 920587237 |
| Bite By Night | 70845479499574 |
| Rivals | 17625359962 |
Anime Vanguards, Grow A Garden, and Fisch tend to be the most reliable holds because they get frequent content updates that drive concurrent player spikes. Steal A Brainrot and Bite By Night are higher-variance plays that can outperform on the right weekend.
Buying a stock with its experience ID
Every transaction inside Stonks runs on Roblox experience IDs rather than game titles, so you'll need that number ready before you walk up to a trading computer.
Step 1: Open the Roblox game page for the experience you want to buy in any browser. The URL will look something like roblox.com/games/[ID]/[Game-Title].
Step 2: Copy the number sitting between /games/ and the game's title slug. That number is the experience ID Stonks uses to identify the stock.
Step 3: In Stonks, sit at any trading computer, paste the ID into the buy field, and confirm the share quantity. The terminal will show the current price per share before you commit.

When to sell and rotate
Holding a stock too long is the most common way to lose points. Listings tied to brainrot trends and "find the X" games can collapse within 24 hours once the social media bump fades. A reasonable rule is to sell as soon as your position is up 15 to 25 percent on a beginner stock, then immediately rotate the larger balance into the next climber.
For blue chips, the timeline is more forgiving. Fisch, Blox Fruits, and Grow A Garden tend to recover from dips because their core player base keeps logging in regardless of meta shifts, so longer holds are viable. Avoid sinking your entire balance into a single share — even a stable listing can correct hard after a big update window closes.
Stonks rewards patience more than instinct. Pick two or three names from each tier, watch how they react to the daily Roblox front-page shuffle, and your 100 starting points should compound into something tradeable without ever touching Robux.