Two of Roblox's gym games share a theme but play nothing alike. My Gym is a tycoon from My Softworks where you build and run a fitness center for paying NPC members. Gym League is a bodybuilding simulator from 1v2 Studios where you train your own character to compete against millions of other lifters. This comparison puts them side by side so you can pick the gym game that fits how you actually want to play.
The short version: one is a calm, build-and-manage tycoon you grind on your own plot, and the other is a massive, competitive muscle simulator with over 786 million visits and busy servers. Below we break down gameplay, progression, player counts, monetization, and replay value, then give a clear verdict on which one earns your time in 2026.
| Category | My Gym | Gym League |
|---|---|---|
| Genre | Gym-management tycoon | Bodybuilding simulator |
| Place ID | 76163423410722 | 17450551531 |
| Developer | My Softworks | 1v2 Studios |
| Total Visits | 1M+ (newer, growing) | ~786 million |
| Favorites | Growing | ~3.9 million |
| Concurrent Players | Modest (newer title) | ~3,600 live |
| Rating | New release | ~96.7% |
| Core Loop | Place machines, hire staff, expand floors, earn Cash | Train muscles, compete, unlock bodies, reroll auras |
| Competition | No (solo tycoon) | Yes (bodybuilding contests) |
| Mobile-Friendly | Yes | Yes |
| Free-to-Play | Yes | Yes |
My Gym is a management tycoon at placeId 76163423410722. You claim an empty plot, then place workout machines that NPC gym members pay to use. Every machine pulls in members, every member spends Cash, and you collect that Cash to reinvest in a bigger gym.
The loop is build, collect, reinvest. You fill a floor with machines, hire workers to keep vending stocked and members happy, then add trainers to raise how much members spend. As your gym grows you expand across three floors and start attracting influencers and celebrities for extra foot traffic.
It is a deliberate, hands-off-friendly game. You can leave it earning while you plan your next machine or floor, which suits players who like watching a business scale rather than grinding reflexes. The depth comes from deciding when to upgrade, when to hire, and when to open the next floor.
Gym League is a bodybuilding simulator at placeId 17450551531 with realistic muscle physics. Instead of running a business, you train your own character, lifting weights to build strength and grow your avatar's muscles over time. The goal is to get as strong as possible and compete.
The loop layers in several systems: you train muscle groups, join competitions against other players, unlock new bodies, reroll auras, and open new gyms as you progress. The competitive bodybuilding contests are the heart of it, giving every training session a target beyond just bigger numbers.
It is a more active, more social game than a tycoon. With a max of 8 players per server and an average session around 11 minutes, it is built around showing up, training, and measuring yourself against a huge community of other lifters.
Both games front-load early wins, but the shape of their progression is very different once the novelty fades.
My Gym hooks you with cheap early machines and a visibly filling gym. The first floor builds fast, then each upgrade and the jump to floor two and three costs more Cash, so the climb steadies into a satisfying reinvestment rhythm. Trainers and the celebrity draw give you mid-game goals, and the income curve keeps rising as long as you keep filling space.
Gym League hooks you with fast early strength gains, then opens a much longer ladder. Training never really stops, and the competition rankings, body unlocks, aura rerolls, and new gyms give competitive players a goal stack that stretches across hundreds of hours. With over 786 million visits, plenty of players are deep into that grind.
For pure depth and long-term goals, Gym League pulls ahead, mostly because its competitive ranking gives the grind a point beyond personal numbers. My Gym is the calmer climb, which some players prefer because there is no one to beat and nothing to lose.
Neither game chases realism, though Gym League leans into stylized muscle physics that make your character's growth visible and a little comic. Its presentation is built around showing off a bulked-up avatar in competitions, so the visual payoff is your own character.
My Gym's visual appeal is the gym itself: a plot that fills with machines, decorations, members, and eventually celebrities across three floors. The newer build has clean, readable tycoon menus designed for placing and upgrading, with the satisfying clutter of a busy fitness center as your reward.
Audio in both is functional rather than memorable, mostly menu clicks, lifting and sell sounds, and ambient gym hum. The look you prefer comes down to taste: a growing business versus a growing bodybuilder.
Edge: Gym League, for the more distinctive visual hook of watching your own character physically transform as you train.
This is the most lopsided category. Gym League has racked up over 786 million visits, more than 3.9 million favorites, an all-time rating around 96.7% from over a million upvotes, and roughly 3,600 concurrent players as of June 2026. It is a blockbuster with full servers, active competitions, and a steady code cadence.
My Gym is the newer, smaller game. It recently crossed its 1 million visit milestone, which its 1MVISITS code celebrates, and it is still growing its audience under My Softworks. It works fine as a solo or small-server tycoon, but it does not yet have the bustling population of its rival.
If a living community, active competitions, and busy servers matter to you, Gym League wins on raw numbers by a wide margin. If you just want a quiet tycoon to build on your own, player count matters far less and My Gym serves perfectly.
Both games are free to play and sell optional passes that speed things up rather than gate core content. My Gym's shop typically offers convenience passes like a 2x Money multiplier and auto-collect or auto-restock helpers, with My Softworks setting the live Robux prices, so confirm any number in the in-game shop before buying.
Gym League sells its own boosts and convenience passes tied to training, competitions, and progression, also priced in Robux and shown in-game. As with most Roblox games of this size, both lineups are convenience-focused rather than pay-to-win, so a free player can progress and compete in either title without spending.
| Pass / Purchase | Game | Cost | What It Does |
|---|---|---|---|
| Codes | My Gym | Free | Cash and 15-min 2x Money boosts |
| 2x Money / auto-collect passes | My Gym | Robux (see in-game shop) | Faster Cash and quality-of-life |
| Codes | Gym League | Free | Boosts and currency around updates |
| Training / convenience passes | Gym League | Robux (see in-game shop) | Faster gains and progression perks |
Edge: Even, since both keep monetization to convenience boosts you can earn around for free rather than power locked behind Robux.
This is where the genres split hardest. Gym League is built to be social and competitive. You share servers, compare physiques, and face other players in bodybuilding contests, so the entire point is measuring up against the community. Its 3.9 million favorites reflect how much of the appeal is the crowd.
My Gym is a largely solo experience. You build your own gym on your own plot, and while you can see your progress climb, there is no head-to-head competition with other players. The social layer is light by design, since the focus is your business, not a leaderboard.
Edge: Gym League, because its competitions and huge population make it a genuinely social game where other players are the point.
Replay value in My Gym comes from the build-and-scale loop: filling three floors, upgrading every machine, hiring trainers, and chasing the celebrity draw. It is a satisfying climb, but like most tycoons it reaches a natural ceiling once your gym is fully built and optimized.
Gym League stretches further for the right player. Endless training, competition rankings, body unlocks, aura rerolls, opening new gyms, and a developer that ships regular updates give it a goal ladder measured in hundreds of hours. The competitive angle alone keeps players coming back to climb.
That said, the two appeal to different appetites. My Gym is great in shorter, relaxed sessions where you tidy and expand your gym, while Gym League rewards the long, competitive grind. Neither is objectively deeper; they just refill the well differently.
Neither gym game needs Robux, but the convenience passes, like My Gym's 2x Money pass or Gym League's training boosts, do cost some. You can fund those passes for free instead of spending your own money. Earnaldo lets you earn Robux by completing simple tasks, so you can grab a pass in either game without opening your wallet.
Complete simple tasks on Earnaldo and withdraw real Robux for any game pass you want.
For game-specific tips, read our My Gym free Robux guide and the Gym League free Robux guide. You can also browse the full My Gym hub and the Gym League hub for codes, strategies, and updates on each game, plus the My Gym codes page and Gym League codes page.
Choose My Gym if you want a calm, solo tycoon where you build and manage a fitness center at your own pace, placing machines, hiring staff, and expanding floors without any competition or reflex grind.
Choose Gym League if you want the bigger, busier, competitive game: train your own character, compete against millions of other lifters in bodybuilding contests, and climb a deep progression ladder.
Overall: For sheer scale and long-term depth in 2026, Gym League is the stronger pick, with over 786 million visits and roughly 3,600 live players to My Gym's growing 1 million-plus. But they serve different moods, and My Gym is the better fit for players who want a relaxed build-and-manage tycoon over a competitive simulator.
No, they're two separate Roblox games with different developers, place IDs, and genres. My Gym is a gym-management tycoon by My Softworks at placeId 76163423410722, where you build and run a fitness center for NPC members. Gym League is a bodybuilding simulator by 1v2 Studios at placeId 17450551531, where you train your own character and compete. They share a gym theme but play nothing alike.
Gym League is far more popular as of June 2026, with over 786 million total visits, more than 3.9 million favorites, a rating around 96.7%, and roughly 3,600 concurrent players. My Gym is a newer, smaller gym tycoon still growing its audience, having recently crossed its 1 million visit milestone. For raw population, Gym League wins clearly.
My Gym is a tycoon: you build a fitness center, place workout machines for paying NPC members, hire workers and trainers, and expand across three floors to earn Cash. Gym League is a simulator: you train your own avatar's muscles by lifting, grow stronger, reroll auras, unlock bodies, and compete against other players in contests. One is about managing a business, the other about building a character.
My Gym suits solo players best because it's a single-plot tycoon you grind on your own, with no competition required. Gym League works solo too, since you train your own character, but its competitions and busy servers are built around comparing yourself to other players, so it shines more when there's a crowd to measure up against.
Yes, both use codes. My Gym's active June 2026 codes include ILiked, Boxing, and 1MVISITS, granting free Cash and 15-minute 2x Money boosts redeemed through the wallet menu. Gym League also releases codes around updates and milestones for in-game boosts and currency. Both tie codes to updates, so checking before a session keeps your rewards topped up.
Yes, both do. My Gym's long-term loop is filling three floors with upgraded machines, hiring trainers, and attracting influencers and celebrities. Gym League's is training muscles, unlocking new bodies, rerolling auras, opening new gyms, and climbing competition rankings against millions of players. Gym League's ladder runs deeper for competitive players, while My Gym's is a steadier solo climb.
This comparison was last updated on June 15, 2026 using live game data for both titles as of that date. Visit counts, player numbers, ratings, and game pass prices change over time, so verify before relying on a figure. Check the official pages for My Gym and Gym League for the latest, and share corrections in our Discord.