Skip to main content

BloxDrop Review - Is It a Scam or Legit?

I tested BloxDrop for 25+ hours across multiple accounts. The spam bots, gambling mechanics, and undisclosed odds make this a hard pass for Roblox players.

By Gamically · · 5 min
BloxDrop Review - Is It a Scam or Legit?

BloxDrop is a Robux gambling and rewards site that uses aggressive bot spam to advertise inside Roblox games. I tested it for over 25 hours across multiple accounts. The verdict: it's technically functional, but the gambling mechanics, undisclosed odds, and marketing to children make it something I can't recommend.

Those "I just won from BloxDrop!" messages you see in Blox Fruits and Pet Simulator 99? Automated bots. Not real players sharing real wins.

What Is BloxDrop?

BloxDrop is a third-party website where you can gamble Robux on casino-style games like slots, crash, mystery packs, and case openings. You can also earn coins through surveys, offers, and minigames, then convert those coins to Robux.

The site operates outside of Roblox's ecosystem. You deposit Robux through their system, gamble with site currency, and withdraw winnings back to your Roblox account.

How BloxDrop Works

You create an account using your Roblox username (not password). The site gives you a starting balance through promo codes and daily bonuses. From there, you can:

  1. Deposit Robux to gamble
  2. Complete surveys and offers for coins
  3. Play minigames like word scrambles
  4. Participate in coin rains (free giveaways)

The gambling games include crash (bet on a multiplier before it crashes), coinflip, case openings, and slots. Each game takes a house edge, though the exact percentages aren't published anywhere I could find.

The Bot Spam Problem

This is the biggest red flag. BloxDrop uses automated accounts to spam promotional messages inside Roblox games. These bots join servers, post messages like "Just won 500 Robux on BloxDrop!" and leave before you can even see them in the player list.

I saw these bots in Jailbreak, Blox Fruits, Pet Simulator 99, and Bloxburg. The messages always follow the same pattern: fake excitement, a promo code, and the website URL.

This violates Roblox's Terms of Service. Using the site means supporting a business model built on spam that makes the Roblox experience worse for everyone.

The Gambling Reality

BloxDrop is gambling. Slots, crash games, mystery packs, case openings. These are casino mechanics with real money value (Robux costs real money).

The site doesn't publish house edges or odds. When I asked in their Discord, I got vague answers about "fair" games. Without published odds, you can't make informed decisions about expected value.

I tracked 100 crash game rounds. The multiplier crashed below 2x about 60% of the time. Players betting on 2x or higher lost more often than they won. This matches typical crash game house edges of 3-5%, but without official numbers, I can't verify.

User Experiences

Trustpilot shows a 4.0 rating with mixed reviews. Some users report successful withdrawals and positive experiences. Others claim rigged games and withdrawal issues.

Reddit discussions are split. Some users defend the site as "legit" while others call it a scam. The common thread: people who gamble tend to lose, people who stick to surveys and offers sometimes get small payouts.

One pattern I noticed: positive reviews often mention specific promo codes, suggesting some might be incentivized.

Security Concerns

ScamAdviser gives BloxDrop a low trust score. GridinSoft flagged it as potentially suspicious. MalwareTips reported high CPU usage when visiting the site, which could indicate crypto mining scripts or poor optimization.

The site doesn't require your Roblox password, which is good. But connecting your account to any third-party service carries risk. If BloxDrop gets hacked, your username and associated data could be exposed. For safer ways to get free stuff, check out Roblox game codes instead.

Who BloxDrop Targets

The marketing clearly targets children. Roblox's primary audience is under 18. The bot spam appears in games popular with kids. The site uses bright colors, gamification, and "free Robux" messaging that appeals to younger users.

Gambling sites targeting minors is a serious ethical issue. Even if the site technically works, exposing kids to casino mechanics normalizes gambling behavior.

The Math Doesn't Work

I deposited 500 Robux and tracked my results over 50 gambling sessions. Final balance: 127 Robux. That's a 74% loss.

The surveys and offers paid better. I earned about 200 coins (roughly 20 Robux equivalent) over 3 hours of survey completion. That's less than minimum wage in most countries, but at least it's not gambling. If you want a survey-only option, CashBlox skips the gambling entirely.

The coin rains give small amounts to random participants. I caught 3 rains over my testing period and received a total of 15 coins.

Verdict: Avoid

BloxDrop technically functions. Some people do withdraw Robux. But the combination of gambling mechanics, undisclosed odds, bot spam, and marketing to children makes this a site I can't recommend.

If you're over 18 and understand you're gambling with negative expected value, that's your choice. But for the Roblox audience, which skews young, this site does more harm than good.

The bot spam alone should disqualify it. Every time you see those fake "I just won!" messages, remember: that's BloxDrop making your gaming experience worse to drive traffic to their gambling site.

Safer Alternatives

If you want free Robux without gambling:

  • Roblox Premium gives you a monthly Robux allowance
  • Creating and selling UGC items earns Robux legitimately
  • Microsoft Rewards lets you earn Roblox gift cards through searches
  • GPT sites like CashBlox or Swagbucks offer gift cards for surveys (slow but legitimate)

None of these are fast, but they don't involve gambling or supporting spam operations. You can also grab free game codes for in-game rewards without any risk.

Contents