Complete guide
Brawl RNG wiki — fighters, boxes, codes and drop rate guide (May 2026)
Jim Liu · Last updated 2026-05-13
This Brawl RNG wiki is the central reference for the Roblox game by ChillyTea Studios. Whether you are pulling your first box, trying to understand the difference between a Mega Box and an Omega Box, hunting a Legendary fighter, or looking for active codes before a session, this hub links every answer. The game is built around a simple but deep RNG (random number generation) mechanic: you press 1 through 5 to open boxes, each box gives a random fighter, and you collect fighters sorted by rarity from Rare up to Legendary. What the game does not hand you upfront is a complete explanation of how it all fits together. That is what this brawl rng wiki is here for.
I have organised this page as a true hub. Each section explains one piece of the Brawl RNG system in enough detail to make practical decisions, then links to the dedicated page that covers the topic in full depth. Use the section headers below to jump directly to the area you need, or read top to bottom for a complete overview of how the game works.
What is Brawl RNG
Brawl RNG is a Roblox game created by ChillyTea Studios. The name tells you the core loop: it is a brawler-themed RNG experience where the primary activity is opening boxes to pull randomised fighters. There is no direct combat between players in the traditional sense — the game is about the pull itself. You build a collection of fighters sorted into rarity tiers from Rare to Legendary, and the satisfaction comes from hitting rare outcomes through strategy, patience, and a working knowledge of how the different box types behave.
The 1-5 skill button pattern is the mechanic that governs how you interact with the box opening screen. Pressing the appropriate numbered key triggers the opening animation for that box slot. Experienced players develop a rhythm around this — pressing too quickly can interrupt animations, while developing a consistent cadence makes longer sessions less exhausting. This brawl rng wiki assumes you already know how to open a box; if you are brand new, the beginner guide covers the interface in more detail.
ChillyTea Studios updates Brawl RNG with new fighters, box variants, and event cycles. The May 2026 version of this brawl rng wiki reflects the current state of the game. When major updates change rarity structures or add new box types, I revise the relevant sections. The key things that have stayed consistent across updates: box rarity hierarchy (Box < Mega Box < Omega Box), the Rare-through-Legendary fighter rarity scale, and the codes system as a way to earn free openings.
Fighter rarity tiers in Brawl RNG
Brawl RNG uses five rarity labels for fighters: Rare, Super Rare, Epic, Mythic, and Legendary. This brawl rng wiki maps those labels onto an S/A/B/C/D planning scale because it is easier to build a strategy around letters than to keep five rarity names in your head during a session. The table below explains what each tier means for box planning.
| Tier | Fighter rarity | What it means for your plan |
|---|---|---|
| S | Legendary | The highest rarity in Brawl RNG. Legendary fighters are the main chase target for serious players. Their pull chance from standard Box is very low; premium openings like Omega Box improve the odds. S-tier fighters are the headline rewards of major events. |
| A | Mythic | Mythic fighters offer strong progression value and appear within realistic range for dedicated Mega Box and Omega Box sessions. A-tier is the sweet spot for planned hunting — rare enough to feel meaningful, achievable enough to plan around. |
| B | Epic | Epic fighters noticeably improve an early or mid-game account. B tier is where most accounts make their first real collection gains beyond starter content. Mega Box openings make the most sense when targeting this tier. |
| C | Super Rare | Super Rare fighters fill out the collection and teach the reward loop. C tier is the natural result of regular Box volume and smaller code batches. It is not a disappointment — it is the expected outcome that builds account foundation. |
| D | Rare | Rare fighters are the starter tier. Every new account will collect Rare results through normal play. D tier teaches the game mechanics without burning premium resources. Do not save Omega Boxes for Rare pulls. |
The full tier list page goes deeper into how each rarity maps to specific known fighters, which box types are worth spending on each tier, and how events shift the value of individual fighters. This brawl rng wiki section is the overview; the tier list is where you go to make a specific opening decision.
Read the full Brawl RNG tier list →
Box types in Brawl RNG — how each one works
There are four box types in Brawl RNG: Box, Mega Box, Omega Box, and Star Drop. Each has a different odds profile and a different strategic role. The biggest mistake new players make is treating all box types as interchangeable. An Omega Box is not just a fancier Box — it has a meaningfully different expected outcome that justifies a different strategy. Here is how this brawl rng wiki breaks down each type.
Box
The default opening unit in Brawl RNG. Box results skew toward Rare and Super Rare outcomes. Best used during early account setup when you are learning the reward loop, not when you are chasing Legendary fighters.
Strategy: Open freely using regular-play earnings. Do not ration Box openings in the early game — the volume teaches you the animation flow and helps you understand what a lucky session feels like.
Mega Box
Mega Box sits above the standard Box with better odds across the Epic and above tiers. Community data suggests the probability of hitting A-tier targets meaningfully improves compared to regular Box openings.
Strategy: Save Mega Boxes for planned A-tier hunts rather than casual volume opening. A batch of Mega Boxes is more efficient than the same resource value spent on standard Boxes when chasing Mythic fighters.
Omega Box
Omega Box is the highest-value regular box type in Brawl RNG. Community estimates put S-tier outcomes within realistic range for multi-Omega sessions. ChillyTea Studios has not officially confirmed exact percentages.
Strategy: Treat Omega Boxes as S-tier resources. Before opening a batch, decide your target tier. An Omega Box spent on casual grinding is usually a missed chance at a Legendary fighter. Pair Omega openings with active code batches to maximize total attempts.
Star Drop
Star Drop is tied to event cycles and does not fit cleanly into the regular Box upgrade chain. The reward pool can include exclusive event fighters not accessible through normal box types. ChillyTea Studios adjusts Star Drop contents with each event rotation.
Strategy: Use Star Drops during their relevant event window. Hoarding them across events can misalign your openings if the reward pool changes. Check the active event status before committing a large Star Drop batch.
Drop rate mechanics — what the community estimates
Drop rates in Brawl RNG have never been fully published by ChillyTea Studios. What this brawl rng wiki presents below are community-derived estimates based on large opening samples shared across Reddit, YouTube, and Roblox community hubs. These numbers are not official. They are directionally useful for planning box spending decisions, but they should not be treated as precise developer data.
| Box type | Rare (D) | Super Rare (C) | Epic (B) | Mythic (A) | Legendary (S) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Box | ~55–65% | ~25–30% | ~8–12% | ~2–4% | <1% |
| Mega Box | ~20–30% | ~35–45% | ~18–25% | ~5–10% | ~1–3% |
| Omega Box | ~5–15% | ~20–30% | ~30–40% | ~15–20% | ~5–10% |
| Star Drop | Varies by event | Varies | Varies | Varies | Varies |
All percentages above are community estimates. Star Drop varies by event. These are not confirmed developer numbers.
The core takeaway from the community data is that the jump from Box to Mega Box is the most important upgrade in the Brawl RNG box economy. Moving from Mega Box to Omega Box is the second most important. If you are deciding where to invest, moving up one box tier is almost always more valuable than opening more of the same box type. This brawl rng wiki recommends treating Omega Box as your S-tier attempt currency and planning sessions accordingly.
The luck mechanic in Brawl RNG refers to the RNG seeding behaviour the game uses. There is no confirmed pity system — no guarantee that after a certain number of opens without a Legendary you will definitely receive one. The community has debated whether a soft pity mechanic exists at around 50–100 Omega Box opens, but ChillyTea Studios has not confirmed this. The safe assumption is that every open is independent of previous results unless the developer confirms otherwise.
Codes system — how to redeem and what codes give
Brawl RNG codes are alphanumeric strings released by ChillyTea Studios through official channels — typically the game's Roblox description, the developer's Discord, or milestone announcements (like like-count goals on the game page). Each code can be redeemed once per account. When you redeem a valid code, the reward lands in your inventory immediately. Rewards range from regular Boxes up to Mega Boxes and, during special events, Omega Boxes.
How to redeem a Brawl RNG code: open the game in Roblox, locate the Codes button in the main interface (usually in the lower panel or side navigation), paste or type your code into the input field, and confirm. A confirmation message appears when the code is valid and unused. If the code shows as invalid, it has likely expired — Brawl RNG codes do not remain active indefinitely, and many expire within days of release.
This brawl rng wiki tracks active codes on a dedicated page that is updated whenever new codes drop. The wiki page you are reading is the overview hub; the codes page is where you check for currently active strings. Because codes can expire within hours of a big community push, checking before each session is the best habit to develop.
Check the active Brawl RNG codes list →
Beginner first steps in Brawl RNG
New players should follow a specific sequence to avoid the most common mistakes that waste premium resources. This brawl rng wiki recommends the following first-session path, pulled directly from the beginner guide:
- 1. Claim every active code immediately. Before you open a single box, redeem all current codes so your first real session starts with every free resource you are entitled to. Codes do not stack retroactively if you miss them.
- 2. Open regular Boxes to learn the 1-5 button pattern. The first twenty or thirty Box opens are about learning the interface — where the animation starts, how long it takes, what the reward screen looks like, and what D and C tier results feel like so you can recognise A and S tier when you hit them.
- 3. Build a Mega Box stash before chasing Epic targets. Once you understand the loop, start accumulating Mega Boxes rather than spending them immediately. A batch of ten or more Mega Boxes is a more rational starting point for an Epic hunt than one or two random openings.
- 4. Do not open Omega Boxes without a plan. Omega Boxes are the most valuable resource in the game. New players who spend them during the tutorial phase before understanding drop odds usually regret it. Wait until you have read the tier list and have a clear S or A tier target in mind.
- 5. Check the fighters page to understand the current rarity landscape. Knowing which fighters exist at each rarity tier helps you set realistic targets and avoids chasing outcomes that are not available in the current game version.
Read the full Brawl RNG beginner guide →
How I built this Brawl RNG wiki — methodology notes
This brawl rng wiki is built from three evidence types: in-game observation, community data from Roblox and Discord opening samples, and the game's own publicly accessible information (rarity labels, box type names, event announcements). I label confirmed information as confirmed. I label estimates as estimates. I do not invent exact percentages where ChillyTea Studios has not published them.
The drop rate table earlier in this page shows community estimates, not developer-confirmed data. The fighter tier table is based on confirmed rarity labels from the game's own UI language. The box type descriptions reflect how each box behaves in practice across multiple opening sessions tracked by the brawl rng wiki community.
When ChillyTea Studios updates the game and changes rarity structures, adds new box types, or publishes official drop data, this wiki will be updated to reflect the new information. The May 2026 version reflects the current live state of Brawl RNG. Pages that have been updated since the last major game patch are marked with their revision date.
More Brawl RNG guides on this wiki
This hub links to every major Brawl RNG resource on this site. Use these four pages to go deeper on specific topics the wiki overview covers at a summary level.
The live codes tracker updated whenever ChillyTea Studios releases new redemption strings. Check here before every session.
Brawl RNG tier listFull S/A/B/C/D ranking for fighters and box planning decisions, with methodology notes and box strategy per tier.
Fighter rarity indexThe confirmed rarity labels for individual Brawl RNG fighters. Cross-reference with the tier list when planning premium box sessions.
Beginner guideStep-by-step first session guide covering codes, box economy, and account progression from zero to a stable mid-game state.
Brawl RNG wiki — frequently asked questions
What is Brawl RNG in Roblox?
Brawl RNG is a Roblox game by ChillyTea Studios where players use a 1-5 skill button pattern to open boxes and pull randomised fighters. The core loop is opening Box, Mega Box, Omega Box, and Star Drop types to collect fighters sorted into Rare through Legendary rarity tiers.
What are the box types in Brawl RNG?
There are four main box types in Brawl RNG: the standard Box (lowest cost, lowest odds), Mega Box (higher odds than Box), Omega Box (premium opening with the best odds), and Star Drop (event-linked with flexible reward pools). ChillyTea Studios has not published complete exact drop percentages for every box type.
How do you redeem codes in Brawl RNG?
Open Brawl RNG in Roblox, find the Codes button in the main UI (typically at the bottom or side of the screen), type or paste the active code into the input field, and confirm. Successful redemption delivers boxes or other rewards to your inventory immediately. Active codes expire without warning so check the codes page regularly.
Are Brawl RNG drop rates officially published?
No. As of May 2026, ChillyTea Studios has not released a complete official drop rate table for every fighter across all box types. The community estimates in this wiki are based on observed opening patterns and community sampling, not confirmed developer data. Treat percentages as rough guides rather than guaranteed numbers.
What should a new Brawl RNG player do first?
Claim every active code first so you start with free boxes. Open regular Boxes to learn the reward screen animations and the 1-5 skill button pattern. Stabilise with Rare and Super Rare fighters before spending premium resources like Omega Boxes. Read the beginner guide for a structured account progression path.