This TikSound guide covers everything a new player needs: how to make songs by lining up notes, how Song IDs let you share and load tracks, and a few tips for cleaner results. TikSound is one of Roblox’s fastest-rising music games right now, so here’s how it actually works.
TikSound at a Glance
- Developer: Lucentum Games.
- Genre: Entertainment — Music & Audio (a song-building sandbox, not a round-based game).
- Platform: Roblox (PC and mobile).
- Status: Currently in [BETA], with updates shipping frequently.
- Players right now: roughly 4,000 concurrent, 2.6 million+ visits, and around a 95% like rating.
- The hook: you build a song one note at a time, watch it come alive as a visualizer, then share it — or load someone else’s — using a short Song ID.
What Is TikSound?
TikSound is a Roblox music-and-audio experience where the whole point is to create a song and visualize it. Instead of dropping a pre-made audio file in, you lay the track out yourself: you place notes in sequence, the game plays them back, and the sound is mirrored by an on-screen visualizer that reacts to what you’ve built.
That makes it less of a “game” in the win/lose sense and more of a creative toy — closer to a simple beat maker or a piano sandbox than an obby or a tycoon. The appeal is twofold: people who want to recreate a song they love can line the notes up until it sounds right, and people who just want to mess around can stack notes and watch the visuals respond. It sits in the same family as Roblox music titles like Cascade Piano, Visual Pianos, and Street Beats, but TikSound’s identity is the build-and-share loop around a single song.
Because it’s still in BETA, expect the interface and features to keep changing — the experience was last updated the same week this guide went up, and the developer is clearly iterating quickly.
How to Make a Song in TikSound
The core loop is “lay out the notes, play it back, adjust.” Here’s the honest, no-frills version of how that goes:
- Launch TikSound and start a blank track. When you join, you’re placed in your own creation space. There’s no obstacle or timer — you’re free to start building right away.
- Place notes in order. A song in TikSound is a sequence of notes lined up over a timeline. You add notes step by step; each one becomes part of the playback when you run the track.
- Play it back and listen. The reason the game is built around visualizing sound is that you’re meant to play your track, watch the visualizer react, and hear whether the notes land where you wanted.
- Adjust until it sounds right. Recreating a real song is mostly trial and error — nudge notes, re-listen, and repeat. Short, simple tunes (a recognizable hook or a game theme) are far easier to nail than a full multi-layered track, which is why most popular TikSound creations are short.
- Save your song. Once you’re happy, save it. Saving is what produces the Song ID other players use to load your track (more on that below).
Because the game is in BETA, exact button placement and menu labels can shift between updates, so treat the menu you see in-game as the source of truth over any older video. The underlying idea — line up notes, play, refine, save — is what stays constant.
Song IDs: How Sharing Works
The thing players search for most after “how to make songs” is Song IDs. A Song ID is a short code (you’ll see formats like 6887-32) attached to a saved song. It’s the game’s sharing system:
- To load a song, enter its Song ID, and TikSound pulls up that track so you can play or study how it was built.
- To share your own, save your song and pass along the ID it generates — that’s how creators let other people play their recreations.
This is also why you won’t find a reliable “master list” of TikSound Song IDs that stays accurate: IDs are generated per saved song and shared by their creators, usually in YouTube video descriptions, TikTok clips, or community Discords. The honest way to find real, working IDs is to follow a creator whose recreation you like and grab the ID they posted — not to copy a random list, which goes stale fast. We don’t publish invented IDs here for that exact reason.
Tips for Cleaner-Sounding Songs
- Start with something short and recognizable. A four-to-eight-second hook or a familiar game theme is much easier to get right than a full song, and it’s also more fun to share.
- Build in small chunks and replay often. Place a few notes, play them back, then continue. Catching a wrong note early beats untangling a long track later.
- Copy a reference by ear. If you’re recreating a real song, loop the original in your head (or on another tab) a phrase at a time and match it note by note.
- Study other people’s tracks. Loading a well-made song by its ID is one of the fastest ways to learn how a clean track is structured.
- Save versions as you go. Since saving generates an ID, you can keep a working version safe before you experiment with a riskier change.
Controls & Platform
TikSound runs on Roblox, so it plays on PC and mobile through the standard Roblox client. Voice chat and camera are not supported, and the maturity rating is Minimal, which keeps it accessible for a younger, all-ages audience. Servers hold up to 50 players, but creating is a solo, self-paced activity — you’re building your own song rather than competing against the lobby.
Who Should Play TikSound?
TikSound is for the player who likes the making part of games: anyone who’s enjoyed piano or beat-maker experiences on Roblox, music fans who want to recreate a favorite tune, and creative types who like watching audio turn into visuals. If you’re after codes, loot, or a competitive grind, this isn’t that — and that’s the point. It’s a calm, build-and-share sandbox, and the fast-growing visit count suggests a lot of people are enjoying exactly that.
More Fresh Roblox Guides
TikSound is one of several new Roblox experiences blowing up right now. If you like getting in early on a rising game, these are worth a look:
- Clean The Library guide — another calm, satisfying new release.
- Build A Ring Farm guide — a fast-growing farm-and-upgrade game.
- Bait A Brainrot guide — one of the bigger brainrot-genre hits.
- Find The Dumpling guide — a quick, casual hidden-object game.
You can also browse the full GameLand Insider games hub for the latest Roblox guides.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does TikSound have codes?
No. TikSound is a music-creation sandbox, not a reward-grind game, so there’s no code redemption system. If a video promises “TikSound codes,” it’s almost certainly mislabeled content for a different Roblox game. We’ll note it here if that ever changes.
How do you make a song in TikSound?
You build a song by placing notes in sequence on a timeline, playing it back to hear and see it on the visualizer, adjusting until it sounds right, and then saving it. Short, recognizable tunes are the easiest place to start.
What is a Song ID and how do I use it?
A Song ID is a short code (such as 6887-32) tied to a saved song. Enter someone’s Song ID to load their track, or save your own song to generate an ID you can share. Real IDs come from the creators who made the songs, usually posted in their video descriptions or Discord.
Is TikSound free to play?
Yes. Like the vast majority of Roblox experiences, TikSound is free to join and play. It may offer optional in-experience purchases, but building and sharing songs doesn’t cost anything.
Is TikSound the same as Cascade Piano or Visual Pianos?
They’re in the same Roblox music-and-audio family, but they’re different experiences by different creators. TikSound’s specific identity is creating a song, visualizing it, and sharing it through a Song ID, rather than free-playing a piano.




