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How to Get Points in Stonks (Roblox)

Pallav Pathak
How to Get Points in Stonks (Roblox)

Stonks drops every new player into its market with just 100 Points, which is barely enough to look at the top-tier stocks, let alone buy them. Since the in-game economy has no codes, daily login bonus, or free Point handout, the only way forward without spending Robux is to trade your way up by picking smaller Roblox experiences and waiting for their share price to climb.

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Quick answer: Buy shares of Roblox games with roughly 500–2,000 concurrent players using Points, hold until their price climbs, then sell for Points. Repeat until you have enough to buy into the bigger stocks.
Image credit: Roblox (via YouTube/@Wingos)

How the Points economy works in Stonks

Points are the soft currency that lets you trade without spending Robux. Every account starts at 100 Points, and there is no code redemption system, daily reward, or quest in the game that tops that number up for free. The market is the only Points faucet.

Most of the well-known Roblox experiences listed on the exchange (Blox Fruits, Adopt Me!, Brookhaven RP, Steal a Brainrot, and similar top-100 titles) trade well above 200 Points per share. With only 100 Points to your name, those are locked off until you grow your balance.

The conversion rate baked into the game treats 10 Points as roughly equivalent to 1 Robux when listing or selling shares, which is why Points are worth grinding rather than ignoring.

Image credit: Roblox (via YouTube/@Wingos)

The core loop: Buy small stocks, sell when they pump

The reliable Points strategy is to ignore the famous games entirely and target mid-popularity experiences that are cheap now but have room to climb. Anything sitting around 500 to 2,000 concurrent players is the sweet spot: low enough that a share costs only a handful of Points, high enough that the game is active and could trend upward.

Step 1: Open the discover menu on a trading terminal inside Stonks. Sort or scroll through the listings and look for games priced low enough to fit your 100-Point budget.

Step 2: Click a stock to open its chart, hit BUY, and choose Points when the game asks how you want to pay. Buy as many shares as you can afford, even if it is only one or two.

Step 3: Hold. Check back over the next hours or days. When the share price has risen meaningfully above what you paid, press SELL, choose Points again, and bank the profit.

Step 4: Roll your larger balance into the next opportunity. As your Points stack grows, you can start buying shares of bigger games or diversify across several mid-tier stocks at once.

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This is a gamble, not a guaranteed payout. A stock can drop just as easily as it can rise, especially for smaller experiences that lose players quickly. Spread your Points across a few picks rather than dumping everything into one game.
Image credit: Roblox (via YouTube/@Wingos)

Mid-tier stocks worth scouting

Stock prices shift constantly with player counts and market sentiment, so treat the table below as a starting list of smaller experiences that have been trading at accessible Point levels. Look them up by Experience ID inside Stonks' search bar and check the current price before buying.

GameExperience ID
Aura Craft17298589168
Craft Anime130855370130931
DIG126244816328678
Find the Auras17589670912
Beaks122678592501168
Hide your body parts130662936949299
Hide the Buttons123079846702355
Heads Up13946745315
Four Corners6033529883
Find the Penguins102280587843608

If any of these have already pumped more than 100 Points above their typical price by the time you check, skip them and hunt for a similar-sized game instead. Buying after a pump is how new players end up bag-holding.

Image credit: Roblox (via YouTube/@Wingos)

How to find a specific game stock

Every Roblox experience on the Stonks exchange is indexed by its Experience ID, not by its name. To trade a game you already play:

Step 1: Open the Roblox page for the game in your browser. The URL looks like roblox.com/games/[ID]/[Game-Name]. The long number sitting between games and the title is the Experience ID.

Step 2: Copy that ID and paste it into the search bar inside the discover tab on a Stonks trading terminal. The matching stock will open with its chart and trade buttons.

Step 3: Confirm the price in Points before buying. If the share costs more than you can afford, go back and look for a cheaper alternative.

For sourcing candidates, the player-count rankings on Roblox itself or third-party trackers can help you spot experiences hovering in the 500–2,000 concurrent player range that you would not otherwise notice on the in-game discover list.

Image credit: Roblox (via YouTube/@Wingos)

Scouting tips that actually move the needle

  • Watch player trend, not just current count. A game climbing from 800 to 1,500 players over a few days is a stronger buy than one stuck flat at 2,000.
  • Look for update or event timing. Stocks tend to spike when their underlying game pushes a major update, releases a viral feature, or gets a TikTok moment.
  • Sell into strength. If your share has doubled, take the profit. Waiting for "one more pump" is how Points evaporate.
  • Diversify. Splitting your balance across three or four mid-tier stocks softens the blow when one of them tanks.

Verifying your trades worked

Every successful buy or sell triggers a Success! popup with an OK button. After dismissing it, open your profile menu to confirm the change. The panel shows your Balance (Points), Net Worth, Total Shares, and Total Profit, along with a list of every position you currently hold. If a trade fails, the most common reason is "Not enough points!" — the game blocks the transaction outright rather than letting you go negative.

Stonks lists Robux purchases too, but for a Points-only run you can ignore that prompt entirely. Always pick Points when the buy or sell confirmation asks how you want to settle the trade, or you will accidentally spend Robux you did not need to.

The pace of progress is slow on purpose. Going from 100 starter Points to a balance that can touch the top-100 stocks usually means several sessions of patient flipping rather than a single afternoon of clicking. Pick smaller games you genuinely think have momentum, keep your buys small until the balance grows, and treat every trade as a probability rather than a sure thing.