[🏆] Kick a Lucky Block is a Roblox tycoon-simulation by No More Flops where you kick lucky blocks, roll for brainrot collectibles, survive the tsunami you just unleashed, and build up a plot-based money machine. Released on 7 April 2026, the game crossed 1.2 billion visits in under three months and regularly sits above 90,000 concurrent players — one of the fastest-growing experiences in Roblox’s brainrot genre. This guide covers the core gameplay loop, brainrot rarities, upgrade priority, the active Block Cup Event, and everything a new player needs to hit the ground running.

Kick a Lucky Block at a glance

Stat Value
Developer No More Flops (verified)
Genre Simulation / Tycoon
Total visits 1.2B+
Favourites 21.2M+
Approval rating 95.9%
Active players ~96,000+ concurrent
Server size 5 players
Created 7 April 2026
Last updated 21 June 2026
Platform Roblox (PC, mobile, console)
Price Free to play

What is Kick a Lucky Block?

Kick a Lucky Block is built around a four-step loop. You kick a lucky block, which immediately rolls a brainrot — a randomised collectible character modelled on internet meme culture. The moment the block breaks, a tsunami is triggered, so you need to survive the wave. Once you’ve made it through, you place the collected brainrot on your plot to start earning money passively. That money then funds weights — equipment that trains your character’s legs so each subsequent kick travels further, unlocking access to rarer block clusters and better brainrot pools.

The loop compounds over time. More weight means longer kicks, which means access to harder blocks, which means better brainrots, which means more plot income. Every session is a question of how far up that progression you can push before you log off.

The brainrot theme connects [🏆] Kick a Lucky Block to a wider genre of Roblox games in 2026 built around collecting fictional “brainrot” characters — meme-style figures with absurd naming conventions. The game’s specific spin is the physics kick-and-tsunami format, which makes each block-break feel distinct from pure spin-wheel or slot-based brainrot games.

Core gameplay loop step by step

1. Find and kick a lucky block

Lucky blocks are positioned across the map at varying distances. Your kick range is limited by your current weight level — early characters can only reach nearby blocks, while heavily upgraded players can send kicks across much longer distances. Each kick expends your character’s action for a moment, so positioning matters even in the opening minutes.

2. Roll a brainrot and survive the tsunami

Every lucky block kick triggers a brainrot roll and releases a tsunami. The wave follows immediately, so survival is built into the act of kicking. Early sessions with low weight often involve staying close enough to a safe point to dodge the wave consistently. As your weight grows and kick range extends, surviving becomes easier because you have more positioning options before the water arrives.

3. Place your brainrot on your plot

The brainrot you rolled gets placed on your plot once the wave has cleared. Plot placement is the passive income engine — each brainrot on your plot generates money over time, and the better the brainrot, the higher its income contribution. Managing which brainrots occupy plot space becomes part of the mid-game strategy, particularly once Eternal-tier brainrots enter the picture.

4. Use money to buy weights

Money from your plot funds weight purchases. Each weight tier increases your character’s kick power and range. The weight system is the main progression gate: players who invest consistently in weights unlock better block locations faster than those who ignore the upgrade path. There is no combat or direct competition between players in a server — the five-player sessions are co-operative by default.

Brainrot rarities and what to know about Eternal tier

Kick a Lucky Block’s brainrots sit on a rarity ladder, with Eternal as the highest confirmed tier. Eternal brainrots — including named variants like Espresso Shockantoni Eternal and Ronaldino Messini Eternal, which have featured in content creator videos with tens of thousands of views — are rare enough that players treat getting one as a significant event. The naming convention mashes internet meme vernacular (espresso, Ronaldinho references, absurdist surnames) into the Eternal tier label.

Below Eternal sit multiple common and uncommon tiers that fill your plot during early play. Most new players will accumulate a range of lower-rarity brainrots quickly; the progression narrative is built around replacing those lower-rarity occupants with better ones as your luck and kick range improve.

The game has also introduced a Mutations system, added in a dedicated update, which applies random attribute modifiers to brainrots. A mutated version of a brainrot can outperform a higher-rarity unmutated one under the right conditions, which gives lower-rarity brainrots lasting relevance beyond the pure rarity hierarchy.

Crates are a separate source of brainrots and items. They are earned through play or the shop and provide an alternative to pure lucky-block kicking for building out your collection.

Kick styles and equipment upgrades

Kick styles are a cosmetic and functional addition introduced after the game’s initial launch. Different kick animations change how your character interacts with lucky blocks without altering the core physics — they are primarily a personalisation layer but signal the game’s ongoing content expansion.

The barbell is the key equipment item in the weights category. Unlocking the best barbell tiers is the weight-progression endgame: maxed-out barbells deliver the highest per-kick force multiplier in the game and are what top leaderboard players build toward. The “OG Barbell” specifically refers to the original best-in-class barbell that was available before subsequent updates, which players who earned it early consider a status marker.

The Block Cup Event

As of late June 2026, Kick a Lucky Block is running its Block Cup Event, with Part 2 scheduled for 28 June 2026 at 1:00 AM UTC. Block Cup events are developer-hosted competitions tied to a seasonal theme — the World Cup-adjacent framing fits the game’s “kick” mechanic. These events typically offer access to limited brainrots, crates, or exclusive cosmetics that are not available through standard play.

The No More Flops team has run admin abuse events alongside standard updates — sessions where the developers join a server with elevated powers to interact directly with players and drop rare items. These events have generated some of the game’s highest-viewed content-creator uploads. Whether the Block Cup Part 2 includes an admin session is unconfirmed, but joining the No More Flops Roblox group and watching the game’s event notices is the reliable way to catch scheduled sessions.

Tips for new players

  • Upgrade weights as your primary spend. Everything else in the game is downstream of kick range. Early money should go to weights before anything else.
  • Use the five-player server size. With only five slots per server, you’re never in a crowded environment. That low server size means more block clusters per player and less wave-chaos during tsunami survival.
  • Prioritise plot real estate management early. Once you start rolling consistently, you will fill your plot quickly with low-rarity brainrots. Knowing which brainrots to replace — and when — avoids stagnant income from a plot full of common drops.
  • Look for crates as a supplement. Crates provide brainrots outside the kick-and-roll loop. Using them at the right moment can accelerate plot quality without waiting for lucky block luck to come through.
  • Check the game’s event tab regularly. The Block Cup and admin events appear as notifications in the Roblox game page event section. These are time-limited opportunities that regular check-ins can capture.
  • Mutations can flip value expectations. A well-mutated common brainrot can outperform an unmutated rare. Do not dismiss lower-rarity drops before checking their mutation status.

Zones and secrets

The game has distinct map zones — including at least one area players refer to as the Cursed Zone — with properties that differ from the standard map. Secrets are a deliberate design element: content creators have built entire videos around exposing them, and multiple updates have added new hidden elements. Early exploration of the full map rather than farming a single block cluster will surface these faster.

More Roblox brainrot and tycoon games

If [🏆] Kick a Lucky Block has you interested in the wider brainrot-collection format on Roblox:

The Roblox section of GameLand Insider collects guides across the platform’s top trending games.

Kick a Lucky Block FAQ

What is Kick a Lucky Block?
[🏆] Kick a Lucky Block is a Roblox simulation-tycoon by No More Flops where you kick lucky blocks to roll random brainrot collectibles, survive the tsunami each kick triggers, and place brainrots on a plot to generate passive income. Weight upgrades increase kick range and unlock access to better block clusters over time.

What are Eternal brainrots?
Eternal is the highest confirmed rarity tier in Kick a Lucky Block. Eternal brainrots — like Espresso Shockantoni Eternal and Ronaldino Messini Eternal — generate the highest plot income and are rare enough that getting one is a notable moment in a session. They appear through lucky block rolls and crates, with probability heavily weighted toward lower tiers.

What is the Block Cup Event?
The Block Cup is a seasonal event tied to No More Flops’ developer-hosted competition format. Part 2 is scheduled for 28 June 2026. Block Cup events typically offer limited brainrots or exclusive rewards not available through standard play. Check the Roblox game page event tab for countdown timers and reward details.

Are there codes for Kick a Lucky Block?
Codes for [🏆] Kick a Lucky Block do exist and are announced through No More Flops’ official channels — the Roblox group and the game’s community Discord. Codes rotate and expire, so they are not permanently available. The fastest way to catch active codes is to join the No More Flops Roblox group (18 million+ members) and monitor the group wall for announcements.

How many players are in each server?
Kick a Lucky Block servers hold a maximum of 5 players. The small server size means generous block access per player and manageable tsunami chaos.

Who made Kick a Lucky Block?
[🏆] Kick a Lucky Block was made by No More Flops, a Roblox group with a verified badge and over 18 million members. The group owner goes by the username adamdguy (display name JamesDin). The game launched on 7 April 2026 and crossed 1.2 billion visits in under three months.

What are mutations in Kick a Lucky Block?
Mutations are random modifiers applied to brainrots. A mutation can improve a brainrot’s income generation or other properties, making mutated lower-rarity brainrots potentially more valuable than unmutated higher-rarity ones. Mutations were added in a dedicated update after the game’s initial launch.

Does Kick a Lucky Block have a leaderboard?
Yes. A leaderboard tracks player progress, likely based on kick power, brainrot collection, or earnings. Reaching the top of the leaderboard requires sustained weight upgrades and efficient brainrot plot management.