Updated 2026-05-13 · evidence-only roster · rarity + mutation data included

Roll an Anime Characters

A truthful guide to Roll an Anime characters: who is confirmed, how the rarity system works (Common → Godly), how mutations multiply cash output up to 6.89×, and what you need to do to roll better units. The game launched 2026-04-02 and the full public roster is still being documented — everything on this page has a source.

Verified characters

Every row below has at least one credible source. We do not invent character names — if we cannot point to a developer post, guide screenshot, or Discord drop, the unit does not appear here.

CharacterAnimeRarityCash outputBest useStatus
Luffy One Piece needs check not yet confirmed WELCOME code reward — your first Luffy is free. Place him on your strongest available pedestal to anchor early-game income. verified
Naruto Naruto needs check not yet confirmed Mentioned as a featured roster pick in third-party search snippets, but only one source surfaced the name. Treat as partial until Discord drops confirm. partial

Luffy confirmed by developer rlrblx in the official Discord #codes channel (2026-04-29) and 7 independent trackers. Naruto is a single third-party reference — treat as partial until confirmed. Rarity and cash output for both units are still needs_check; no developer post has published those numbers.

Rarity tiers — how each level works

Roll an Anime has five confirmed character rarity tiers. Higher rarity means higher base cash output per second. Tier names are confirmed by multiple guides (RoroWiki, Pro Game Guides, GameRant). Exact drop rates and cash-per-second values are still needs_check — the developer has not published them.

TierRankRoleStatus
Common 1 / 5 Filler unit. Better than an empty pedestal — every Common character still adds cash, so use them to occupy slots while you save for upgrades. verified
Rare 2 / 5 First meaningful upgrade target. Replace Commons one by one as Rares roll in. verified
Super Rare 3 / 5 Mid-game backbone. RoroWiki uniquely lists Super Rare as a distinct band between Rare and Epic. partial
Epic 4 / 5 Park these on your highest-multiplier pedestals. Epic units are the long-term workhorses before Godly. verified
Godly 5 / 5 Top of the rarity ladder. Godly characters are the rebirth payoff and the reason to chase higher-tier blocks. verified
Practical takeaway: Your rarity priority is always Godly > Epic > Super Rare > Rare > Common. Fill empty pedestal slots with whatever you have — an empty slot earns nothing. Replace bottom-up: swap your weakest unit first, protect your strongest pedestal.

How to roll better characters

Character quality is directly tied to which block you roll your dice on. Here is the verified loop:

  1. Buy dice with cash. Dice are the consumable that triggers a roll — you cannot roll without them.
  2. Roll dice on a block. The block determines which rarity bands are reachable. Common blocks are limited to low-rarity pools; higher blocks unlock Epic and Godly tiers.
  3. Place the character on a pedestal slot. Placed characters generate cash passively — online and offline.
  4. Upgrade your blocks to unlock rarer rolls. Each tier you climb improves your probability of landing rarer characters. The developer posted official stock drop chances in the Discord #announcements channel on 2026-04-26 — these are available on the blocks page.
  5. Rebirth when progression slows. Rebirthing gives permanent multipliers that stack on top of character base output and mutation bonuses. See the rebirth guide for the full decision framework.

The WELCOME code gives you a free Luffy — your first confirmed character. Redeem it at the Free Reward NPC near the Upgrade stand. From there, the path to better units is better blocks. There is no paywall gate on the rarity system.

Mutations — how they multiply character cash output

Mutations are bonus modifiers applied to a character that multiply its base cash rate. A Common character with a strong mutation can out-earn a Godly character with no mutation. Since Update 1.6 (2026-05-10), characters can hold multiple mutations and gain mutations from active server events.

Source: Mutation multipliers come from a community table posted by vorce__ in the official Discord #general channel on 2026-04-28, pinned by Discord staff. The author notes: "not testers but pretty confident on these numbers." Treat these as strong community estimates, not developer-verified figures.
MutationCash multiplierOutput boostTier
Radiant 1.92× +92% low
Aurora 2.63× +163% low
Starborn 3.93× +293% mid
Crimson 4.69× +369% mid
Umbral 5.4× +440% high
Anomaly 5.7× +470% high
AdminAbuse 6.89× +589% godly

AdminAbuse (6.89×) is the highest known mutation. A character with it earns nearly 7× its base cash rate. Mutation stacking (multiple mutations on one character) was added in Update 1.6 — the combined multiplier is not yet documented.

Key mutation strategy tips

  • Mutation beats rarity for cash output: A Common character with AdminAbuse (6.89×) will often out-earn a Godly with no mutation. Always check the mutation before deciding whether to replace a unit.
  • Park mutated characters on high-multiplier pedestals: Pedestal location multipliers stack with mutation multipliers. Your highest mutation + highest pedestal slot is your peak cash-per-slot combination.
  • Don't sell a mutated character for a higher-rarity non-mutated one without checking the math: A Starborn (3.93×) or higher mutation on a Rare unit can outperform an Epic unit with no mutation, depending on the base output difference.
  • Traded anime characters cannot rebirth: Per the developer (2026-05-02): characters acquired by trading do not count toward rebirth. Hold your best self-rolled mutated units for rebirth eligibility.
  • Mutation stacking: stack multiple mutations per character via active events: As of Update 1.6 (2026-05-10): placed anime can receive the mutation from the current active event. If an Anomaly event is running, all your placed anime have a chance to receive Anomaly on top of their existing mutation. Participate in mutation events to compound your highest-value characters.

Which characters to keep — the decision framework

With limited pedestal slots, you will need to decide what to replace. Use this priority order:

  1. Mutation first. AdminAbuse (6.89×) on a Common beats a Godly with no mutation. Always check mutation before deciding to sell or replace a unit.
  2. Rarity second. Within the same mutation tier, prefer higher rarity (Godly > Epic > Super Rare > Rare > Common).
  3. Never leave a pedestal empty. An empty slot generates zero cash. A Common with no mutation still out-earns nothing.
  4. Replace weakest unit first. Sort by lowest cash output (or lowest rarity + no mutation) and swap those pedestals when something better drops.
  5. Hold mutated units through early rebirth. Mutations persist after rebirth. A high-mutation unit keeps its bonus even when you reset for multipliers.

Building your first 7 days: a practical roster growth path

Most new players make one of two mistakes: they either try to hold out for rare units before placing anything, or they sell useful characters too early to chase something new. The 7-day path below avoids both traps by treating your roster as a compounding system, not a collection to be curated.

Day 1: claim every free unit, fill every slot

Redeem WELCOME for your free Luffy and place him on your strongest pedestal immediately. Use the other active codes (1MIL, STOCKLUCK1, STOCKQUANTITY1) to get bonus block stock and luck. Roll enough dice to fill every pedestal slot — even with Commons. An empty slot earns zero cash online and zero cash offline. A Common earns something on both. By end of day one, every slot should be occupied and offline earnings should be running.

Days 2–3: upgrade your block, not your dice count

The biggest lever in the early game is the block upgrade, not more dice on the same block. Once your plot is full of Commons, all your overnight cash should go toward the first block tier upgrade. A higher block immediately unlocks Rare and Super Rare drop pools. The first Rare that lands replaces your weakest Common — and each Rare earns meaningfully more per pedestal slot. Start replacing from your weakest slot first. Do not empty a pedestal to reorganize; swap directly, unit for unit.

Days 4–5: check every unit for mutations before replacing

By this point, some of your placed units may have mutations you have not noticed. Before replacing any unit with a newly rolled character, check the mutation tier. A Starborn (3.93×) Common earns nearly 4× its base cash rate — that often out-earns a no-mutation Rare. Introduce a rule: every swap decision gets a 10-second mutation check. Keep the higher effective output unit in the higher priority pedestal, regardless of rarity. Sorting by mutation first reshapes your lineup in ways raw rarity never does.

Days 6–7: plan the next block tier and stack event timing

By day six, your overnight cash pile is meaningfully larger than day one. The question is how to spend it. Check the update log for a current event window before spending. If an active event (mutation or luck) is running, spend dice during the event — the ROI on every roll is higher. If no event is running, direct cash toward the next block tier upgrade. Also begin tracking which units are self-rolled vs. acquired through trading. Only self-rolled units count toward rebirth eligibility — the developer confirmed this on 2026-05-02.

What to expect from each rarity tier in practice

The five rarity tiers in Roll an Anime are not just labels — each band represents a fundamentally different level of passive cash output and a different set of strategic decisions. Understanding what each tier means in practice changes how you think about block upgrades and pedestal management.

Rarity tier What it means in practice Strategic priority
Common The floor. Low base cash output, but still better than an empty pedestal. A Common with a high-tier mutation (Umbral+) can out-earn a no-mutation Rare. Commons are not garbage — they are filler that earns while you chase upgrades. Fill every empty slot. Replace bottom-up, starting with your lowest-earning Common first.
Rare The first meaningful upgrade. Rares produce more base cash per slot than Commons. A full plot of Rares is a stable passive income base that funds the climb toward Super Rare and Epic blocks. Prioritize getting at least one Rare per pedestal slot before pushing further. Rares with mid-tier mutations (Starborn+) are worth protecting in good pedestal positions.
Super Rare Mid-game inflection point. Super Rares produce noticeably more cash per slot than Rares. A plot where most slots have Super Rares starts generating offline stacks large enough to fund an Epic-tier block in a single overnight session. Target Super Rare as the upgrade threshold for each pedestal slot. Once half your slots have Super Rares, the cash compounding rate accelerates enough to make Epic-tier blocks accessible within days.
Epic Late-game anchor. Epics produce the second-highest base cash rate per slot. A single Epic with a high-tier mutation in your top pedestal can produce more offline cash in one night than an entire Common-tier plot running for a week. Protect Epics with high mutations in your top pedestal slots. Replace only when a Godly drops in or when a mutated Super Rare's effective output exceeds the Epic's.
Godly The ceiling. The highest base cash rate per pedestal slot in the game. A Godly unit with AdminAbuse mutation is the theoretical peak of single-slot output. Godly units require reaching the highest block tier bands (Godly band: 6–8.5% drop chance). Chase Godly through block tier progression, not through trading (traded characters cannot contribute to rebirth). Protect any Godly unit you roll — these are the long-term anchors of an end-game plot.

The character swap decision matrix

Every new character that drops forces a decision: replace something, or add to an empty slot. The framework below covers every scenario you will encounter in the first 30 days, so you can make the right call without guessing.

  1. If there is an empty pedestal: always fill it. No calculation needed. Place the new character immediately, regardless of its rarity or mutation. An empty pedestal earns zero cash. The new character earns something. Fill first, optimize later.
  2. If all pedestals are occupied, identify your weakest slot first. Sort your placed characters by effective output: check rarity tier, then check mutation multiplier. Your weakest slot is the one with the lowest combination of rarity and mutation. That is the slot to consider swapping — not your second-best or third-best slot.
  3. Compare the new character's effective output against the weakest slot. If the new character is a higher rarity with no mutation versus a lower rarity with a mutation: check the mutation table. A Starborn (3.93×) or higher mutation on a lower-rarity unit often produces more cash than the new character. If the new character clearly wins the comparison, swap it into that slot.
  4. Do not displace a mutated unit without placing the new character simultaneously. The moment between removing the old unit and placing the new one is when your pedestal is empty. If you log out during that window — accidentally or otherwise — you lose offline cash from that slot for the whole session. Keep the old unit in place until the new one is ready to drop in.
  5. Re-audit after every block upgrade. The unit that was your best candidate for a given slot last week may not be the right call after you upgrade blocks and start rolling higher-rarity characters. Run a quick audit every time a new block tier unlocks — mutation tier vs rarity across all placed units, and reassign pedestals if the ranking has changed.

How the Roll an Anime character roster is growing: what we track

Roll an Anime launched on 2026-04-02. The community and third-party guides are still mapping the full character roster. This section explains exactly how we verify new character entries and what the data collection gap looks like in practice.

Our verification bar: two sources

A character reaches the verified table only after two independent credible sources name the same unit. A single tracker mention earns a "partial" status, not "verified." Currently, Luffy (One Piece) is the only fully verified character — confirmed by developer rlrblx in the official Discord #codes channel with a screenshot, and cross-confirmed by seven independent trackers. Naruto has one tracker mention and holds partial status. No other units have crossed the two-source bar yet.

Why the roster is still sparse

The game is under 60 days old at the time of this writing. The community wikis (RoroWiki and others) explicitly flag character data as "coming soon." The developer has not published an official roster or character list. Drop-rate data comes from community tracking of individual rolls — and since higher-rarity units drop less frequently, those units take more collective rolls to confirm. The roster will fill in gradually as the community accumulates footage and the developer publishes more character-specific content.

Where new characters get confirmed first

The official Discord #announcements and #general channels are where the developer posts new content teasers. YouTube luck-test videos (where players roll through hundreds of blocks on-camera) are where community confirmation usually happens — a character that appears on-screen in multiple videos is a strong candidate for partial status. Reddit Roll an Anime discussions also surface new character names when players screenshot their luck runs.

What we refuse to invent

Several Roll an Anime guides on other sites publish "tier lists" and "character databases" that contain units we cannot verify. We do not follow that approach. A character on this page has a source you can check — a Discord post, a guide screenshot, a developer statement. A character without a source does not appear here, even if the genre expectation suggests they should be in the game. The expected anime pool section below is explicitly labeled unverified for this reason.

Anime IPs you can probably roll inside Roll an Anime

This is an expectation list, not a confirmed roster. The game's name and genre strongly suggest these franchises are in the pool — but until a screenshot, Discord post, or wiki update confirms a specific unit, we label it unconfirmed.

  • One Piece (verified — Luffy)
  • Naruto (partial)
  • Dragon Ball / DBZ — typical of Roblox shōnen gacha titles
  • Jujutsu Kaisen — typical of Roblox shōnen gacha titles
  • Demon Slayer — typical of Roblox shōnen gacha titles
  • My Hero Academia — typical of Roblox shōnen gacha titles
  • Bleach — typical of Roblox shōnen gacha titles
The list above is what players reasonably expect from the genre, NOT a confirmed roster. Treat every IP outside the verified table as unconfirmed until at least one source publishes a screenshot or Discord post.

Where character data lands here

  1. Watch the official Discord (discord.gg/9XChKGqSBK) #leaks and #general channels for character screenshots — that is where rlrblx posts pre-release teasers.
  2. Cross-check YouTube luck-test videos as they get tagged with character names.
  3. Update RoroWiki / Pro Game Guides character pages once at least 2 sources name the same unit.

The bar for a new Roll an Anime character to make this table is two independent confirmations — for example, a Discord pinned drop plus a screenshot in a wiki update. Anything below that gets flagged partial.

Why we will not fake a Roll an Anime tier list

Several sites publish "Roll an Anime tier lists" with names they cannot verify. A useful tier list needs a confirmed roster of at least a dozen units with reproducible cash-per-second numbers. The game launched 2026-04-02 — until two independent sources confirm the same unit by name, this page stays honest. That is also how we keep the mutation and rarity data trustworthy when the roster finally lands in bulk.

Roll an Anime best setup guide · Full rarity ladder · Mutation guide

Roll an Anime characters FAQ

How many rarity tiers are there?

Five: Common, Rare, Super Rare, Epic, and Godly. Higher tiers require better blocks to roll. Godly is the top tier and the payoff for endgame block upgrades. Rarity order: Godly > Epic > Super Rare > Rare > Common.

What are mutations and do they matter?

Mutations multiply a character's base cash output. The known range is Radiant (1.92×) at the low end to AdminAbuse (6.89×) at the top. A mutation can make a Common character out-earn a Godly. Since Update 1.6, characters can hold multiple mutations and gain mutations from active server events.

What is the highest mutation multiplier?

AdminAbuse at 6.89× (community-tracked, pinned in official Discord #general). This means a character with AdminAbuse earns nearly 7× its base cash rate. Multipliers are community-estimated — developer-confirmed figures are not yet published.

How do I get better characters?

Roll dice on higher-tier blocks. Better blocks unlock rarer roll pools. Start with the free Luffy from the WELCOME code, upgrade blocks progressively, and rebirth when progression stalls for permanent multipliers. See the blocks guide for official drop chances.

Which Roll an Anime characters are officially confirmed?

Luffy (One Piece) — confirmed by the developer in the official Discord with a screenshot, and verified by 7 independent trackers. Naruto is partial (single third-party source). No other unit names have cleared the two-source verification bar yet.