Anime Defense X and Anime RNG TD chase the same itch: roll for anime fighters, place them along a lane, and hold off waves while you pray for a legendary pull. They share a genre and a core idea, but they pull in different directions once you get past the first few worlds. This is a head-to-head look at how they actually play in June 2026.
Both games drop the classic fixed tower shop and replace it with an RNG roll, so your roster is decided by luck rather than a menu. Between them they have racked up more than 32 million visits and over 115,000 favorites, which tells you the RNG-defense format has a loyal audience on Roblox. Anime Defense X sits at placeId 128769272902160 and was once known as Anime Defense RNG, while Anime RNG TD lives at placeId 93774312410805 and has been live since November 2024.
The short version: Anime RNG TD is the bigger, older title by lifetime numbers, while Anime Defense X is the more feature-stacked progression grind. Below we break down gameplay, the RNG and luck systems, player counts, game pass prices, and who each game is actually for, so you can pick the one worth your next few weekends.
| Category | Anime Defense X | Anime RNG TD |
|---|---|---|
| Genre | Anime RNG tower defense | Anime RNG tower defense |
| Place ID | 128769272902160 | 93774312410805 |
| Developer | Anime Defense Studios | BestBunny |
| Released | ~2025 (as Anime Defense RNG) | November 2024 |
| Concurrent Players (recent peak) | ~148 (30-day peak) | ~328 (30-day peak) |
| All-Time Peak Players | ~5,554 | ~4,697 |
| Total Visits | ~2.95 million | ~29.2 million |
| Favorites | ~41,300 | ~74,300 |
| Core Loop | Roll units, upgrade luck, traits, medals, prestige across worlds | Roll towers & traps, upgrade damage, raise luck, clear waves |
| Key Features | Potions, traits, medals, Premium +0.25 Luck, prestige | HatchLuck, Fast-Hatch, group rewards, escalating waves |
| Game Passes | ~10 passes, 199-899 Robux | ~11 passes, 19-749 Robux |
| Mobile-Friendly | Yes (PC, mobile, console) | Yes (PC, mobile, console) |
| Free-to-Play | Yes | Yes |
Anime Defense X hands you the full RNG-defense buffet. You roll to collect characters, then build a lane defense out of whatever you pull, and the deeper systems are where it earns its name. You level up towers for better stats, roll for traits that change how a unit performs, and apply medals on top of that, so two players holding the same character can field very different versions of it.
Luck is the spine of the whole thing. You raise your luck stat to improve roll odds, drink potions for temporary luck spikes before a big roll session, and chase rarer characters that simply do not show up at low luck. Once you clear enough levels you prestige, which resets progress in exchange for unlocking new worlds and a stronger long-term ceiling.
That layered design means a session has more to manage than just placing units. You decide when to bank potions, when to reroll traits, which medals to commit, and when to push for prestige. It runs on PC, mobile, and console with up to four players per server, so co-op runs stay small and coordinated rather than chaotic.
Anime RNG TD keeps the loop tighter and more readable. You roll to get new anime towers and traps, place them along the path, upgrade their damage, and improve your luck to pull better towers over time. The enemies arrive in escalating waves, and the early ones are a warm-up where almost any tower copes.
The difficulty curve is where it bites. By around wave fifteen the enemy health pools and movement speeds climb hard, and a roster you threw together on luck alone starts leaking enemies past your line. That pressure is the point: it pushes you to roll for stronger towers and slot in traps to plug the gaps before the next wave overwhelms you.
It also leans on the classic Roblox engagement hooks, asking you to join the BestBunny group and like the game for reward boosts. With fewer overlapping systems than Anime Defense X, it's the easier of the two to pick up cold, and a new player can understand the entire loop inside one or two runs.
These two hook you on different timelines. Anime RNG TD grabs you fast because the loop is legible from wave one: roll, place, upgrade, survive. You feel the spike in difficulty around wave fifteen, and that wall is what keeps you rolling for a better roster, so the early hook is strong and the mid-game becomes a luck chase.
Anime Defense X starts slower but runs deeper. The first hour is mostly learning what luck, potions, traits, and medals each do, and the real pull arrives when you hit your first prestige and a new world opens up. Players who like a long ladder of systems to optimize tend to stick with it longer, because there's always another dial to turn.
If you measure by raw retention numbers, Anime RNG TD's 29.2 million visits dwarf Anime Defense X's 2.95 million, which reflects both its earlier November 2024 launch and its quicker on-ramp. Anime Defense X counters with depth rather than reach, trading a gentler start for a richer mid and late game.
Both games run on the same anime-pastiche art direction you'd expect from the genre: colorful character models styled after popular shows, bright lane maps, and chunky damage numbers popping over enemies as they melt. Neither is trying to be a visual showcase; the look serves the roll-and-place loop rather than the other way around.
Anime Defense X has the slight edge in presentation because its trait and medal systems add visual variety to units, and its multiple worlds give the maps more flavor as you prestige into new ones. Anime RNG TD keeps its presentation cleaner and more uniform, which actually helps readability when waves get crowded and you need to track what's leaking through.
Audio in both is functional rather than memorable, with standard roll chimes, placement clicks, and wave alerts. You'll likely run your own music either way.
Edge: Anime Defense X, for the extra visual variety from traits, medals, and multiple worlds. It's a narrow win, and Anime RNG TD's cleaner readability is the better choice if cluttered screens bother you.
On lifetime scale, Anime RNG TD is clearly the larger community. It has logged roughly 29.2 million visits and about 74,300 favorites since launch, against Anime Defense X's roughly 2.95 million visits and about 41,300 favorites. Anime RNG TD also carries a strong 96.1% approval rating, while Anime Defense X edges slightly higher at about 97.1%.
Live activity tells a more even story. As of June 2026, both games sit in the low hundreds at their recent peaks, with Anime RNG TD around 328 in the past 30 days and Anime Defense X around 148. Anime Defense X holds the higher all-time peak of about 5,554 concurrent players, edging out Anime RNG TD's 4,697, so it has pulled bigger crowds at its best moments.
One caveat worth flagging: Anime RNG TD's Roblox page still displays a Christmas Event tag and its last major update reads as several months old as of June 2026, which suggests slower recent content cadence. Anime Defense X has shown more frequent code and shop activity, so if active developer support matters to you, that's a point in its favor.
Edge: Tie. Anime RNG TD wins on lifetime size and visits; Anime Defense X wins on recent update cadence and a slightly higher rating and all-time peak.
Both games are free to play and sell optional game passes that mostly speed up the grind rather than gate it. Anime Defense X lists around 10 passes priced roughly 199 to 899 Robux, including Lucky at about 349 Robux and Super Lucky at about 899 Robux, the latter being its priciest single pass. Premium Roblox members also get a small built-in perk of +0.25 Luck.
Anime RNG TD lists about 11 passes across a wider 19 to 749 Robux range. Its standouts are Fast-Hatch at around 49 Robux for quicker rolls, VIP at about 149 Robux, and HatchLuck at about 749 Robux for better pull odds. That cheaper floor makes it easier to dip a small amount of Robux into the game without committing to a big pass.
The pattern in both is that luck-and-roll passes are the most impactful purchases, since faster, luckier rolls translate directly into a stronger roster. Neither game forces a purchase to clear content, but both clearly reward spending on luck if you want to skip the grind.
Edge: Anime RNG TD, for the cheaper entry passes (from ~19 Robux) that let you spend a little without a 349-plus Robux commitment. Anime Defense X's Premium luck bonus is a nice touch, but its passes start higher.
Neither game is built around social play, but both support small co-op. Anime Defense X runs up to four players per server, so you can team up with friends to share a lane defense and push waves together, which makes its prestige grind a bit more bearable in a group.
Anime RNG TD leans on community engagement through its BestBunny group, asking players to join and like the game for reward boosts, which is more about retention than genuine social interaction. Trading systems are not a meaningful part of either game the way they are in pet or collectible titles, so your progress stays mostly personal in both.
Edge: Anime Defense X, for its structured four-player co-op servers that give friends a real reason to play together rather than just chasing group rewards solo.
Replay value comes down to what keeps you rolling. Anime Defense X has more long-term hooks by design: prestige resets, new worlds, trait rerolls, and medal optimization mean there's always another goal once you clear the current one. Players who enjoy min-maxing a deep system will get more weeks out of it.
Anime RNG TD's replay loop is simpler and more about the dopamine of the roll itself. The escalating waves give you a clear skill-and-luck check, and chasing a legendary tower keeps you hatching, but with fewer overlapping systems the long-term ceiling is lower than Anime Defense X's. Its slower recent update pace also means less fresh content to pull you back.
For a quick, satisfying TD you can understand instantly, Anime RNG TD holds up. For something you'll still be optimizing a month from now, Anime Defense X has the longer tail.
The most impactful purchases in both games are the luck and roll passes, and those cost Robux, anywhere from about 19 Robux for Anime RNG TD's cheapest pass up to 899 Robux for Anime Defense X's Super Lucky. You don't have to spend your own money to get them. Earnaldo lets you earn free Robux by completing simple tasks, then put it toward whichever passes you want.
Complete simple tasks on Earnaldo and withdraw real Robux to spend on luck passes in either game.
Want to go deeper on either game first? Read our Anime Defense X free Robux guide for luck and prestige tips, or the Anime RNG TD free Robux guide for roll and wave strategy. You can also browse the Anime Defense X hub and the Anime RNG TD hub for codes and full coverage.
Choose Anime Defense X if you want depth: luck upgrades, potions, traits, medals, and a prestige loop across multiple worlds, plus four-player co-op and a developer that's still pushing updates and codes as of June 2026.
Choose Anime RNG TD if you want a simpler, faster roll-and-defend loop, the cheapest game pass entry (from about 19 Robux), and a proven, far larger community with 29.2 million visits behind it.
Overall: Anime RNG TD is the bigger, easier-to-learn game, but its update pace has slowed. Anime Defense X is the deeper, more actively maintained grind. If you only try one in 2026, pick Anime Defense X for longevity and Anime RNG TD for a quick, popular pick-up-and-play TD.
By lifetime totals, Anime RNG TD is bigger: about 29.2 million visits and roughly 74,300 favorites since its November 2024 launch, versus around 2.95 million visits and about 41,300 favorites for Anime Defense X. On live activity the two are closer. As of June 2026 both sit in the low hundreds of concurrent players on recent peaks, with Anime Defense X holding the higher all-time peak of about 5,554 players against Anime RNG TD's 4,697.
Both are anime tower-defense games where you roll RNG units instead of buying from a fixed shop, but they layer it differently. Anime Defense X (formerly Anime Defense RNG) stacks deep progression: luck upgrades, potions, traits, medals, tower leveling, and a prestige loop that unlocks new worlds. Anime RNG TD keeps it simpler around rolling anime towers and traps, upgrading damage, and improving luck across escalating waves.
Anime Defense X has the more layered luck system. You raise roll odds through luck upgrades, consumable potions, and a Premium bonus of +0.25 Luck, then refine pulled units with traits and medals. Anime RNG TD centers luck more squarely on the roll, with a HatchLuck pass (about 749 Robux) and a Fast-Hatch pass (about 49 Robux) that speed up and improve pulls. If you enjoy stacking modifiers, Anime Defense X gives you more dials.
As of June 2026, Anime Defense X lists about 10 passes priced roughly 199 to 899 Robux, including Lucky at around 349 Robux and Super Lucky at around 899 Robux. Anime RNG TD lists about 11 passes spanning a wider 19 to 749 Robux range, including Fast-Hatch near 49 Robux, VIP near 149 Robux, and HatchLuck near 749 Robux. Anime RNG TD has the cheaper entry points; Anime Defense X has the pricier top-end pass.
Yes. Both are standard Roblox tower-defense experiences that run on PC, mobile, and console through the Roblox app, so phone and tablet players can roll, place, and upgrade towers the same way. Anime Defense X supports up to four players per server, which keeps co-op runs small. Touch controls handle both games fine since neither relies on twitch aim the way a PvP shooter would.
Anime Defense X suits solo grinders better because its progression runs deep: prestige, worlds, traits, medals, and luck upgrades give a single player a long ladder to climb. Anime RNG TD is fully playable solo and its simpler loop is easier to pick up, but with fewer long-term systems it leans more on the roll chase to keep you coming back. Neither game requires a squad to make progress.
This comparison was last updated on June 15, 2026, using live stats and gameplay for both games as of that date. Player counts, visit totals, and game pass prices change over time, and developers may adjust luck systems and passes in future patches, so verify before relying on a number. Check the official pages for Anime Defense X and Anime RNG TD for the latest figures.