Two of Roblox's biggest games couldn't be more different. Jujutsu Shenanigans drops you into a chaotic anime brawler packed with Domain Expansions and cursed energy clashes. Fisch hands you a rod and says "catch 400 species of fish, build an aquarium, and trade your rarest catches with strangers." Both have enormous player bases, but they're built for completely different kinds of players. We've put serious hours into both and broke down every dimension that matters -- so you can stop wondering and just pick one.
| Stat | Jujutsu Shenanigans | Fisch |
|---|---|---|
| Place ID | 9391468976 | 16732694052 |
| Genre | Anime Fighting / PvP | Fishing Simulator |
| Concurrent Players | ~15,000 | ~80,000 |
| Total Visits | 2B+ | 4B+ |
| Solo Friendly? | Partial | Yes |
| Trading System | No | Yes |
| Content Volume | 20+ cursed techniques | 400+ fish species |
| Skill Ceiling | Very High (PvP mastery) | Moderate (collection depth) |
| Anime / IP Tie-in | Jujutsu Kaisen | Original IP |
| Seasonal Events | Occasional | Frequent (every 6-8 weeks) |
| Mobile Friendly? | Partial | Yes |
| Best For | Competitive PvP fans | Casual & collector players |
The moment you load into Jujutsu Shenanigans, someone probably hits you with a Black Flash before you've finished reading the controls. That's the game in a nutshell: fast, intense, and merciless to newcomers. Combat is built around a combo system where you string light attacks into technique finishers. Each cursed technique plays differently -- Infinity makes you nearly untouchable for brief windows, Hollow Purple is a ranged nuke, and Domain Expansion is the high-risk, high-reward ability that can flip an entire fight in two seconds.
Matches are short by design. Most PvP rounds resolve in under two minutes, and there's minimal downtime between them. If your energy budget for a gaming session is "30 minutes of pure adrenaline," JJS delivers that better than almost anything else on the platform. The flip side: if you're not in the mood to get outplayed constantly while learning, those first 10-15 hours are going to sting.
Fisch asks for the opposite energy. Pick a spot, read the water, cast your line, and wait. When a fish bites, a short minigame plays out -- the tension mechanic scales with the fish's rarity, so hooking a Legendary feels genuinely different from pulling up a common Perch. Between casts, you're making decisions: which bait, which rod tier, which biome, which trading partners to approach. It sounds simple. It isn't.
The depth comes from layering. Rod upgrades gate access to deeper water and rarer species. Seasonal events introduce fish that don't exist in regular rotations. The trading market creates a live economy around rare catches that fluctuates based on what the community is hunting that week. Most sessions don't have a natural stopping point -- you'll look up and realize two hours have gone by.
Edge: Fisch — The layered loop has more long-term staying power. JJS's session highs are higher, but Fisch keeps you coming back more consistently over weeks and months.
There's no gear treadmill in JJS. Progression is about unlocking and mastering cursed techniques, not accumulating stats. New techniques cost in-game currency earned through wins and challenges. The roster currently includes 20+ techniques, each with a distinct playstyle -- close-range burst, zoning, defense, crowd control. Unlocking them all takes time, but the real investment is the hundreds of hours it takes to actually execute each one well under pressure.
This design has an honest tradeoff. It keeps the game fair at a given skill level -- a veteran can't just grind their way to being unkillable -- but it also means the new-player experience is rough. You're facing people who've played for 200+ hours with their own first week of fumbling. The skill gap is visible, and it's steep.
Fisch's progression tree is extensive in a way that very few Roblox simulators match. Rod upgrades span roughly 12 tiers, each opening access to new fishing zones with harder catches and better rewards. There are 8+ distinct biomes across the map -- freshwater lakes, deep ocean trenches, arctic zones, seasonal locations. Each biome has its own fish catalog, and some species only appear during specific in-game weather or time-of-day conditions.
The aquarium system adds another layer: you're not just cataloguing fish, you're displaying them in a customizable space. Getting a full aquarium filled with rare species is a prestige marker the community genuinely respects. With 400+ fish in the current catalog, most players have a completion percentage they're actively working to improve.
Edge: Fisch — 400+ species, 12 rod tiers, 8 biomes, an aquarium build system, and a live trading economy give Fisch a content volume that JJS simply doesn't match. JJS is mechanically deeper per unit of content; Fisch just has more of it.
The JJS community mirrors its game: intense. Discord servers run active tournaments with bracket formats and prizing. Tier list debates about which technique is currently broken are a constant fixture. The anime fanbase adds a layer of lore discussion that keeps engagement up even during quiet update periods. Content creators still post regular JJS videos, which sustains new player flow.
The darker side is real though. High-skill-gap lobbies mean newcomers often spend early sessions getting farmed by veterans who have learned every counter to every technique. Chat during matches can get hostile. This isn't unique to JJS -- it's a universal PvP problem on Roblox -- but it's more pronounced here than in most games because the skill floor is genuinely high.
Fisch attracts players across a wide age and experience range, and the result is a community that's noticeably warmer than the Roblox average. The shared hunt for rare fish creates organic cooperation -- veterans routinely help newcomers identify catches and understand trade values. Trading channels in the community Discord are active around the clock. Seasonal events create collective goals that the entire player base rallies around simultaneously.
With 80K concurrent players on any given day, servers are always full. You'll never wait for a trading partner or find yourself in a dead lobby. The sheer scale of the active community means there's always something happening -- a rare fish sighting, a market fluctuation on a newly nerfed species, a seasonal drop.
Edge: Fisch — An active, positive trading community is a genuine competitive advantage. JJS's competitive scene is real and dedicated, but the toxicity barrier in public PvP lobbies makes the early experience harder than it needs to be.
Both games run well on modern hardware. Jujutsu Shenanigans performs smoothly in one-on-one situations, but large-scale fights with multiple Domain Expansions triggering simultaneously can cause noticeable frame drops on lower-end PCs and older phones. The combat animations are detailed and that detail has a cost.
Fisch is considerably lighter. The relaxed gameplay loop doesn't demand much from the processor, and it runs cleanly on phones and tablets with minimal compromises. The fishing minigame is genuinely well-adapted to touchscreen input -- a rarity for Roblox games that weren't originally designed mobile-first.
Fisch operates on a predictable rhythm: a major seasonal event every 6-8 weeks, with smaller fish additions and balance patches dropping between them. The dev team publishes road maps and communicates actively in the community Discord. You generally know what's coming and when.
Jujutsu Shenanigans updates in bursts. A major technique addition or rework drops, the community spends a few weeks adjusting, then there's a quiet period. The game is actively maintained and hasn't gone dark, but the schedule is less predictable than Fisch. If you need a game with a reliable content drip, Fisch wins.
Edge: Fisch — Consistent update cadence, better mobile performance, and a dev team that communicates clearly give Fisch the advantage in this category.
Neither Jujutsu Shenanigans nor Fisch pays Robux directly -- they use their own in-game currencies (Cursed Energy in JJS, coins and gold in Fisch). If you want actual Robux rewards for your playtime, you need a platform built for that.
Earnaldo lets you earn free Robux by completing tasks and offers tied to a wide range of Roblox games. You can run Earnaldo alongside your JJS grind or your Fisch fishing sessions and stack rewards without changing how you play. The Jujutsu Shenanigans free Robux guide breaks down the best earning strategies for JJS specifically, while the Fisch free Robux guide covers Fisch. And if you want working promo codes to boost your Fisch progression, check the Fisch codes page -- it's updated daily.
Earnaldo rewards you for playing Roblox games -- including Jujutsu Shenanigans and Fisch. Sign up free, complete tasks, and cash out to Robux.
Want to use Fisch as a decompression session after intense JJS PvP. Plenty of players run both -- the contrast is almost therapeutic. You come out of a brutal Domain Expansion loss, boot Fisch, cast a line, and feel your blood pressure return to normal within five minutes.
On the numbers that matter most -- player count, total visits, content volume, update consistency, mobile support, and community quality -- Fisch is the stronger all-around game in 2026. Its 80K concurrent players, 400+ fish species, seasonal event cadence, and genuinely welcoming trading community make it one of the best-designed experiences on Roblox right now. If you're recommending one game to someone new to the platform, it's Fisch.
That said, Jujutsu Shenanigans offers something Fisch can never replicate: the raw satisfaction of landing a perfectly timed Domain Expansion and turning a losing fight around. For players who live in competitive PvP and want a game that rewards hundreds of hours of mechanical practice, JJS deserves serious time. These games serve fundamentally different needs. The smartest answer is that both belong in your library -- just played in different moods.
Fisch is significantly more popular by every metric: roughly 80K concurrent players vs. Jujutsu Shenanigans' 15K, and 4B+ total visits vs. 2B+. That said, 15K concurrent is still a healthy active population for a fighting game -- lobbies are never empty.
Fisch has broader progression with 400+ fish species, 12 rod tiers, 8 distinct biomes, an aquarium display system, and seasonal events that regularly add new content. Jujutsu Shenanigans' progression is narrower -- it's centered on unlocking and mastering 20+ cursed techniques -- but it's mechanically deeper per unit of content. If you want more to do overall, Fisch wins. If you want a system that rewards hundreds of hours of skill refinement, JJS wins.
Yes, completely. The game works as a pure fighting game regardless of your anime knowledge. Familiarity with JJK adds flavor -- you'll recognize the techniques and appreciate the lore callbacks -- but it's not required to enjoy the mechanics or compete at a high level.
Yes, and it's one of the most active player economies on Roblox right now. Players trade rare fish, rod gear, and aquarium items. Trade values fluctuate based on seasonal availability and community demand, which adds a market meta-game layer on top of the core fishing loop.
Fisch is far better for solo play. You can fish, upgrade your rod, fill your aquarium, and complete your fish catalog entirely without interacting with another player. Jujutsu Shenanigans is technically playable solo, but it's designed around PvP -- playing against AI bots or in empty lobbies gets stale fast.
Neither game pays Robux directly. For actually earning free Robux, Earnaldo is the more reliable route -- you run it alongside whichever game you're playing and collect rewards. Check the Fisch free Robux guide or the JJS free Robux guide for game-specific strategies.
This article was written by the Earnaldo team in May 2026 based on active playtime in both games. Player count and visit figures reflect Roblox data as of May 14, 2026 -- these numbers shift as both games receive updates and the platform evolves. We don't accept payment from developers for favorable coverage. Our comparisons are based on actual time spent in each game.
For more Roblox game guides, codes, and earning strategies, browse the full Earnaldo blog.
Step-by-step strategies for stacking Robux rewards during Fisch sessions in 2026.
CodesEvery working promo code for Fisch, updated daily with expiry tracking.
GuideThe best Robux-earning strategies for JJS players in 2026.