One of Us Roblox -- Guides, Codes & Tips (2026)
One of Us is a horror-flavored social deduction game built by Purple Monster Games on Roblox, pulling together six players into rounds where paranoia and deception do most of the heavy lifting. With 40K+ likes and a community that keeps growing, this hub page is your single destination for every guide, code list, and comparison article we have published for the game.
The setup in One of Us will feel familiar to anyone who has played a social deduction game before, but the horror presentation sets it apart from the more clinical takes on the genre. Six players load into a shared space and are secretly assigned roles. Most players are crewmates tasked with working through a checklist of tasks to keep things running, while one or more impostors quietly work to eliminate everyone before the tasks get finished. The tension comes from both sides: crewmates have to stay productive while watching their backs, and impostors have to look busy enough to avoid suspicion.
What makes One of Us worth paying attention to within the Roblox horror space is the atmosphere Purple Monster Games has built around those core mechanics. The maps lean into dread rather than cartoonish jump scares, and the sound design does real work in keeping players on edge during solo task runs. Emergency meetings break the silence and force players to talk, accuse, and defend themselves in real time. Getting that dynamic right in a six-player format is harder than it sounds, and One of Us handles it well enough that rounds rarely feel scripted or predetermined.
Voting is where the social deduction element becomes most visible. After a meeting is called -- whether because someone discovered a body or someone hit the emergency button -- every player gets to voice suspicions before the group votes on who to eject. A wrong vote loses the crewmates a body, and a correct vote brings them one step closer to winning. Reading the room, remembering who was near which task at which time, and staying calm when you are the one being accused all feed into what keeps players coming back round after round.
Quick Stats
All One of Us Guides & Articles
Tap any card below to jump to the full article. Each piece covers a different angle of the game, from earning free Robux to active codes to how One of Us stacks up against other titles in the same genre.
One of Us Free Robux Guide (2026) -- Tips, Codes & Strategies
How to earn free Robux while playing One of Us. Covers Earnaldo tasks, the best watch-to-earn methods, and strategies for putting that Robux toward skins and passes inside the game.
CodesOne of Us Codes (May 2026) -- All Active & Expired Codes
Every active and expired promo code for One of Us in one updated list, with step-by-step redemption instructions and notes on what each code rewards.
ComparisonOne of Us vs Murder Mystery 2 (2026) -- Which Roblox Game Is Better?
A head-to-head look at how One of Us and Murder Mystery 2 handle social deduction, atmosphere, and long-term replayability. Find out which game fits your crew and where your time is better spent.
Earn Free Robux on Earnaldo
Complete quick tasks and earn Robux for One of Us and any other Roblox game. No downloads, no catches -- just Robux you can spend however you want.
Why Play One of Us?
Social deduction games live or die by the quality of their player interactions, and One of Us earns its place in the genre by keeping each round tight and high-stakes. Six players is a deliberate choice. Larger lobbies can dilute accountability -- it becomes too easy to hide in the crowd or go multiple rounds without being suspected. At six, there is nowhere to disappear. Every player's movements and task completions are visible to everyone else, which means both impostors and crewmates have to be more deliberate about how they spend each moment of a round.
The task structure gives crewmates a clear purpose and a clock to work against. Rather than wandering aimlessly and waiting to stumble across something suspicious, each player has specific objectives to complete. This creates natural movement patterns across the map, which impostors can exploit or crewmates can use to establish alibis. When a meeting gets called and someone asks "what were you doing near the reactor," having a real answer matters. That accountability layer transforms what could be a passive game into something much more engaging.
Purple Monster Games has also kept the horror presentation grounded rather than relying on cheap shock value. The atmosphere builds slowly through lighting, sound, and the creeping realization that one of your teammates is not what they seem. That sustained tension is harder to design than a jump scare, and it makes winning -- whether as a crewmate who correctly identified the impostor or as an impostor who fooled everyone right to the end -- feel genuinely satisfying.
One of Us is also a strong pick if you are already playing Murder Mystery 2 and want something that covers similar ground with a different format. MM2 has twelve players per round, a longer history, and a developed trading economy. One of Us trades that scale for something more focused and more immediately personal. The two games complement each other well, and our comparison article covers exactly where each one wins and where it falls short.
We will keep adding content to this hub as Purple Monster Games updates One of Us with new maps, roles, and seasonal content. If there is a specific guide topic you want to see covered -- strategies for specific maps, role-by-role breakdowns, or anything else -- let us know in our Discord server and we will work it into the schedule.