Feiko is a limited-time secret style in Volleyball Legends that turns a setter into a frontline threat. It combines maxed-out setting and jump with a “fake” toolkit built around sharp stop sets and a vertical dump that falls much faster than a normal spike.
How to unlock Feiko in Volleyball Legends
Step 1: From the Volleyball Legends main menu, open the Style menu. This is where all gacha-style rolls for characters and styles happen.

Step 2: In the Style screen, switch to the section that contains Secret styles and highlight Feiko as your preferred pick. Setting this preference tells the system which secret style you’re targeting.
Step 3: Choose the type of spin you want to use. Feiko can appear from both the standard spins and the Lucky Spins, but the odds are very different:
- Lucky Spin: at least 1% chance for a Secret Style
- Default spin: about 0.02% chance for a Secret Style
Using Lucky Spins is the practical way to hunt Feiko, since the default pool is far rarer.

Step 4: Start rolling with Lucky Spins while Feiko is selected under Secret styles. Each spin has its own independent chance to land on Feiko.
Step 5: Keep rolling until either Feiko drops naturally or the pity mechanic kicks in. The pity system improves your odds after around 100 Lucky Spins, making it increasingly likely that a Secret Style such as Feiko will appear.
Feiko availability window
Feiko is not a permanent addition to the style pool. It is marked as a limited Secret style that remains obtainable for roughly two weeks from its introduction in Update 51. The current availability window ends on January 17, 2026. After that date, Feiko drops out of the active banner rotation, and normal spins will no longer pull it while it is vaulted.
Because of that time limit, players who want to run setter or hybrid setter–spiker roles at higher ranks are effectively on a clock. Waiting until the end of the window usually means relying on pity or spending significantly more spins in a compressed timeframe.

What Feiko’s style actually does
Feiko is built as an offensive setter who can threaten the point directly instead of playing only a support role. Two parts of the kit define how it plays:
- Toggleable sets: Feiko can switch between a regular jump set and a modified set that behaves like a setter dump.
- High-gravity dumps: The dump option sends the ball almost straight down with heavy gravity, cutting travel distance and reaction time for defenders.
The regular jump sets resemble the stop-style sets from Timeskip Kyamo and similar setter-focused styles. The ball floats higher and is less affected by gravity than a bump, giving your spiker a clean, readable approach. In practice, this makes Feiko a very strong partner style in coordinated duos, especially when feeding burst spikers.
The dump, by contrast, is designed to be unpredictable. Once triggered near the front of the court, the ball drops aggressively into a small area on the opponent’s side. Because the path is short and steep, defenders have far less time to react than they would against a standard spike. Feiko can switch between these modes on the fly, forcing opponents to choose between guarding a traditional set or respecting a sudden dump at the net.

Feiko stats in Volleyball Legends
| Stat | Value | Practical impact |
|---|---|---|
| Block | 20% | Weak at straight blocking; rely on dumps and positioning instead. |
| Jump | 100% | Max jump height for flexible sets and front-row dumps. |
| Speed | 80% | Above-average movement to chase receives and reach tight sets. |
| Bump | 30% | Basic bumping; better used as a setter than a pure receiver. |
| Serve | 80% | Strong serve pressure, especially effective at lower ranks. |
| Spike | 40% | Serviceable spikes, but not the main win condition. |
| Dive | 60% | Reliable dive defense to keep rallies alive. |
| Set | 100% | Max set quality; supports precise stop sets and fakes. |
This statline tells you how to position Feiko. Max set and max jump clearly point toward a primary setter role, while strong speed and serve let you initiate plays instead of only reacting. Low block means direct blocking on the net is a poor use of the style; the dump mechanic effectively substitutes for traditional blocks in many situations.
How Feiko changes match strategy
Feiko shifts the setter role from a pure enabler into a dual-threat position. A few patterns emerge once players understand the kit:
- Offensive setting in 1v1: With no teammates to cover, Feiko can fake a normal set and then dump into open space. The defender has to commit early, which makes one-on-one rallies heavily skewed toward the Feiko player.
- Pressure in 2v2: In team modes, Feiko can read blockers. If a defender jumps early expecting a spike, Feiko can either dump around them or quickly switch to a regular stop set for a teammate on the opposite side.
- Meta overlap with existing setters: The regular stop set is similar to high-end setter styles like Timeskip Kyamo. That means many teams can drop their previous primary setter without losing set quality while gaining Feiko’s vertical dump as an extra attack option.
Because the dump travels such a short horizontal distance, it also tends to land inside the court even when aimed aggressively. That safety gives Feiko room to experiment with angles and fakes: looking one way and dumping another, or presenting a spike animation before bailing into a set.

When it’s worth spinning for Feiko
Feiko is designed for players who either main setter or like to control the pace of rallies. It is especially valuable if you:
- Play ranked modes where coordinated duos matter, and you regularly queue with a dedicated spiker.
- Prefer styles that can both feed teammates and close points without handing over control.
- Want a single style that covers serve pressure, high-quality sets, and an on-demand dump for tight games.
The low raw block stat does mean front-row defense has to be handled differently. Instead of committing to standard blocks, Feiko relies on reading spikes and using the dump in counter situations, or simply repositioning and letting the stronger dive stat cover more of the backcourt.
Because Feiko is time-limited and has Secret-level drop rates, grabbing it now is largely a commitment to the setter role for the current meta. For most players interested in that role, the combination of 100% set, 100% jump, and the high-gravity dump makes the style one of the strongest offensive setters currently available in Volleyball Legends.