Safety guide Β· 2026
How to Spot Fake Roblox Code Sites
Hundreds of sites claim to have working Roblox codes. Most are fake β designed to waste your time with survey loops, steal your account credentials, or serve you malware. Here is how to tell the difference quickly.
Warning signs of a fake code site
1. "Human verification" before seeing codes
This is the most common scam pattern. The site promises codes but forces you to complete a survey, download an app, or "verify you are human" before revealing them. Legitimate code sites do not do this. The survey is the product β you are being used to generate ad revenue with no codes at the end.
2. Codes with no working/expired status
Real code pages show you whether each code is currently working. If a site just lists codes with no success rate, no "last checked" date, and no community feedback, you have no way to know if the codes are valid. Most will be expired.
3. Promises of free Robux
No website can give you free Robux. Roblox does not have a third-party code system for currency β only game developers can distribute in-game currency for their specific game. Any site claiming to give free Robux is lying and is likely trying to steal your Roblox login credentials.
4. Asking for your Roblox password
Never enter your Roblox password on any site other than roblox.com. Any site asking for your username and password to "verify" or "activate" codes is a phishing site. Your account will be stolen.
5. Lists of 50+ codes for the same game
Most games have only a handful of active codes at any time. A site listing 50 codes for a single game is almost certainly padding with old, expired, or completely fabricated codes to look comprehensive.
How to verify codes safely
- 1
Check the official source first
Most game developers post codes on their official Discord server, Twitter/X account, or YouTube channel. A code announced on the developer's own channel is guaranteed to be real (though it may expire quickly).
- 2
Use community-voted code trackers
Sites that show community success rates tell you immediately whether a code is working based on real player attempts. A code with 85% working rate from 40 recent votes is reliably valid. A code with 10% working rate is expired β do not waste time on it.
- 3
Check when the code was last verified
Codes expire without warning. A code verified working yesterday has a much higher chance of still being valid than one that was last checked six months ago. Always look for a "last checked" or "last updated" date.
- 4
Vote after you try a code
On McRome, every code has a working/not working vote. Taking five seconds to vote after you try a code helps every other player who checks that page. Community voting is what makes code tracking reliable.
What McRome does differently
Every code on McRome shows a working rate calculated from real player votes. We do not list codes without community data. We do not run survey gates. We do not ask for your Roblox login. Codes with low working rates are clearly flagged so you can skip them without trying.
If you find a code that is listed as working but is actually expired, you can vote it down or email us at contact@mcrome.com and we will update it.