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Broken Blade Beginner Guide 2026 — Everything New Players Need to Know
Last checked & updated: June 18, 2026

Broken Blade Beginner Guide (June 2026) — Start Here

By Earnaldo Team · June 18, 2026 · 9 min read

Broken Blade is a Norse-mythology action RPG on Roblox built around cooldown-free combat, weapon crafting, and a brutal Boss Rush mode. It throws a lot at you fast — weapons, materials, races, elements, blessings — and most new players waste hours doing the wrong things. This guide cuts through that.

By the end you'll know exactly what to do in your first session, how the combat actually works, the mistakes that quietly slow you down, and the fastest way to get strong. Before you start, redeem the active Broken Blade codes for a free head start.

Table of Contents

  1. Your First 30 Minutes
  2. Core Mechanics Explained
  3. 10 Beginner Mistakes to Avoid
  4. Best Starter Strategy
  5. When to Spend Robux
  6. FAQ

Your First 30 Minutes

Don't sprint past the tutorial. Broken Blade's tutorial teaches the attack-and-parry rhythm that the entire game runs on, and skipping it means relearning it the hard way against enemies that actually hit back.

The moment you spawn in, open Settings and redeem every active code — entries like BB1KLIKES, BB5KLIKES, and BBDC5K hand you free rewards that make the opening grind smoother. Codes rotate and expire, so do this first while they're live.

Next, pick Sword as your starting weapon type. Sword is the safest beginner choice because its wide swings clear groups of enemies quickly, which means faster material farming and faster quest completion. Run the basic enemy waves to stockpile crafting materials, then head to the forge as soon as you've got a stack.

Your first real goal is the Light Scar. It's widely considered the strongest early-game weapon, and crafting plus fully upgrading it costs roughly 665 materials. That sounds like a lot, but it carries you through a huge portion of the game, so it's the best place to point your early grind.

Pro tip: Don't craft three half-finished weapons. Funnel every material you collect toward the Light Scar until it's done. A single fully-upgraded weapon beats three weak ones every time.

Core Mechanics Explained

Combat is the heart of Broken Blade, and it's simpler than it looks once you understand the loop. There are no long ability cooldowns — your limiter is mana.

Press Z to attack and spam it as fast as you can until your mana bar empties. When you're out, you can't keep swinging, so you need to refuel. That's where parrying comes in: press C or X to parry an incoming attack. A clean parry negates the damage and instantly refills your mana.

That attack-until-empty, parry-to-refill cycle is the whole skill ceiling of the game. Players who learn to parry on reaction never run out of steam in a fight, while players who only attack hit a wall the moment their mana drains. Practice parry timing on weak enemies before you take it into boss fights.

Progression layers on top of combat through three reroll systems: your race, your element, and your blessing. You don't touch these early — race and element rerolls unlock at level 500, and blessings at level 1,000. The items to reroll them drop from specific bosses: the Nivaron Boss for races, the Velik Boss for elements, and the Gelaros Boss for blessings. For now, just know they exist and they're the long-term chase.

The core gameplay loop is straightforward: defeat enemies, collect crafting materials, craft or repair a better weapon at the forge, then upgrade it with Element Materials. Repeat that, level up, and you steadily push into harder content.

10 Beginner Mistakes to Avoid

Most early frustration in Broken Blade comes from a handful of avoidable errors. Here are the ones that trip up new players the most.

# Mistake Do This Instead
1Spreading materials across many weaponsCommit to one weapon path
2Skipping the tutorialLearn the parry timing it teaches
3Never parrying, only attackingParry to refill mana mid-fight
4Ignoring codesRedeem them in Settings on day one
5Switching weapon types repeatedlyPick Sword and stick with it
6Rushing bosses underleveledFarm waves until your weapon is upgraded
7Obsessing over your starting raceRerolls don't unlock until level 500
8Hoarding Element MaterialsSpend them upgrading your main weapon
9Buying Robux upgrades on day oneWait until you know you enjoy the game
10Quitting before the Light ScarPush to your first crafted weapon first

If you only fix one thing on this list, make it number one. Splitting materials across multiple weapons is the single biggest reason beginners feel stuck — you end up with a backpack full of weak gear instead of one weapon that actually clears content.

Best Starter Strategy

Here's the cleanest path from spawn to a comfortable mid-game. Follow it in order and you'll skip the trial-and-error most players grind through.

Start on Sword, farm early enemy waves until you can craft and fully upgrade the Light Scar, then use that weapon to push into tougher content and keep leveling. Your only resource priorities at this stage are crafting materials and Element Materials, and both should flow into your one main weapon.

As you climb toward level 500, you'll start thinking about weapon types beyond Sword. Katana becomes the go-to for single-target boss damage — the Moon Cut katana is an easy upgrade that needs 100 Moon Pieces from Nida Village. Buster has the highest damage ceiling through the Dragon Slayer, but it's gated behind rare Sacrifice Pieces and Crimson Beherits, so treat it as an endgame project rather than a starter swap.

Once you hit level 500, the race and element grind opens up, and the best targets are well documented. Aesir is the top race and Thunder or Fire are the best elements — our full Broken Blade tier list ranks every option, and the best weapons guide breaks down which to chase.

Earn Free Robux for Broken Blade

Want luck boosts, extra storage, or gamepasses to speed up your Broken Blade grind? Earnaldo lets you earn free Robux by completing simple tasks — no surveys, no shady downloads, just real rewards you can spend however you want.

When to Spend Robux (and When Not To)

Broken Blade is fully playable as a free player. The whole game is built around farming materials and crafting, so nothing important is locked behind a paywall — a patient free player reaches the endgame the same as anyone else.

That said, some Robux gamepasses genuinely save time. Luck-style boosts and extra storage are the most useful, because they smooth out the parts of the grind that are pure repetition. If you've already put in a few hours and know you like the game, those are reasonable buys.

What you shouldn't do is spend on day one. Don't buy convenience passes before you've even crafted the Light Scar — you don't yet know whether the loop clicks for you. Play first, confirm you enjoy it, then decide where Robux actually helps. And if you'd rather not spend your own money, earning Robux for free covers the same gamepasses.

Where to go next: Once you've found your footing, the Broken Blade hub links every guide we have, and the Broken Blade guide covers progression tips in more depth. Keep the codes page bookmarked for fresh rewards.

Frequently Asked Questions

What weapon should beginners pick in Broken Blade?

Pick Sword. It clears groups of enemies fast, which makes early material and quest farming quick. At the forge, craft the Light Scar — it's the strongest early-game weapon, needs roughly 665 materials to craft and fully upgrade, and carries you through a large chunk of the game.

How does combat work in Broken Blade?

Press Z to attack and spam it until your mana runs out. Press C or X to parry an incoming attack — a clean parry negates the damage and instantly refills your mana. The fight loop is attack until empty, then parry to refuel, so parry timing is the key early skill.

What is the fastest way to level up in Broken Blade?

Defeat enemy waves for crafting materials, craft and upgrade a stronger weapon at the forge, then keep pushing into tougher content. Commit to one weapon path — spreading materials across several weapons is the biggest thing that slows beginners down.

When can you reroll your race in Broken Blade?

Race and element rerolls unlock at level 500, and blessings at level 1,000. Race items drop from the Nivaron Boss, element items from the Velik Boss, and blessing items from the Gelaros Boss. Until level 500, your starting race doesn't matter much.

Are there codes for Broken Blade?

Yes. Codes like BB1KLIKES, BB5KLIKES, and BBDC5K are redeemed in the Settings menu for free rewards. They rotate and expire, so redeem them early and check our Broken Blade codes page for the current working list.

Do you need Robux to be good at Broken Blade?

No. The game is built around farming and crafting, so free players can reach the endgame through grinding alone. Gamepasses like luck or extra storage save time but are optional — spend on convenience only after you know you enjoy the game. Earnaldo lets you earn that Robux for free.