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Tower Heroes Roblox tower defense gameplay showing tower placement on a colorful map

Tower Heroes Free Robux Guide (2026) — Best Towers, Codes & Strategy Tips

Published: March 30, 2026  |  Updated: March 30, 2026  |  By Earnaldo Team

Tower Heroes by Pixel-Bit Studio has quietly become one of the most polished tower defense experiences on Roblox, surpassing 512 million visits since its February 2020 launch. Unlike many tower defense games that lean heavily on gacha mechanics, Tower Heroes rewards strategic thinking, precise tower placement, and smart upgrade pathing. Whether you are grinding solo or coordinating with a team of four in co-op, this guide covers everything you need to dominate every map and difficulty setting.

Table of Contents

  1. What Is Tower Heroes?
  2. Tower Tier List — Best Towers Ranked
  3. Placement Strategy & Upgrade Priorities
  4. All Active Codes (March 2026)
  5. How to Redeem Codes
  6. Game Passes — What They Cost & Whether They Are Worth It
  7. Beginner Guide — First 10 Hours
  8. Advanced Strategies for Hard Mode
  9. Co-Op Matchmaking Tips
  10. Frequently Asked Questions

What Is Tower Heroes?

Tower Heroes is a cooperative tower defense game where you and up to three teammates place towers along enemy paths to prevent waves of creatures from reaching the end of the map. Each tower has a unique attack style, upgrade tree, and special ability that changes how it functions at higher levels. The game features dozens of original maps ranging from simple single-lane tracks to complex multi-path layouts that force you to split your defenses.

What sets Tower Heroes apart from other Roblox tower defense games like Anime Defenders is its emphasis on original character design rather than anime-inspired units. Every tower in the game is a unique character with personality, custom animations, and lore. The visual style leans colorful and approachable, but the gameplay on medium and hard difficulties is genuinely challenging and demands careful resource management.

The game runs on a wave-based system where each map has a set number of enemy waves. Enemies grow stronger with each wave, introducing faster units, enemies with more health, and eventually boss creatures that require focused fire from multiple towers. You earn coins during each match by defeating enemies, and those coins are spent placing new towers and upgrading existing ones. The core loop is simple to understand but deeply rewarding to master.

Tower Heroes map overview showing tower placement positions along the enemy path
Tower Heroes features dozens of original maps with unique layouts and environmental hazards that affect tower placement decisions.

Tower Tier List — Best Towers Ranked (March 2026)

The Tower Heroes meta has shifted significantly over the past several months, with balance patches and the addition of new towers like Mako reshuffling the rankings. Here is the current tier breakdown based on performance across all difficulties and map types.

S-Tier — The Best of the Best

Yasuke remains the undisputed king of burst damage in Tower Heroes. His special ability increases his burst count to 6 hits, boosts damage by 1.3x, extends range by 1.14x, and reduces cooldown by 0.85x for 20 seconds. On top of that, his sword gains Dragon Flames during the ability, dealing 5 damage per tick to every enemy struck. Dragon Flames stacks with Spectre's damage buff, making the Yasuke-Spectre combination the single strongest two-tower synergy in the game. Yasuke is most effective on medium and hard difficulty where his expensive cost is justified by the massive DPS he outputs at max upgrades.

Voce brings unmatched area control with powerful sound-wave attacks that hit multiple enemies in a cone. Voce excels on maps with tight curves where enemies cluster naturally, allowing each attack to hit four or five targets simultaneously. At max upgrade, Voce's damage output against grouped enemies rivals Yasuke's single-target burst.

Spectre is the most important support tower in the game. Spectre increases the damage of all nearby towers within its range, and this buff applies to both direct attacks and damage-over-time effects. Placing a single Spectre in the center of a tower cluster can increase your team's overall DPS by 25-40% depending on how many towers are in range. Every serious loadout should include Spectre.

Discount Dog solves one of Tower Heroes' biggest challenges: economy. This tower generates bonus coins during matches, allowing you to place and upgrade your other towers faster. On longer maps with 30+ waves, Discount Dog pays for itself multiple times over. Place it early in the match for maximum value.

Hotdog Frank rounds out S-tier with consistent high DPS and a straightforward upgrade path. Frank does not have the flashy abilities of Yasuke, but his reliable damage output and moderate cost make him effective on every map and difficulty. Frank is the tower you place when you need dependable damage without managing ability cooldowns.

A-Tier — Amazing Towers

Branch, Scientist, Beebo, and Sparks Kilowatt sit in the A-tier thanks to their versatility and consistency. These towers work well on every map and difficulty, have reasonable costs, and upgrade efficiently. Beebo in particular is a standout for beginners because its mechanics are simple and its damage scaling is smooth from early to late waves.

Mako is the newest addition to A-tier, climbing the rankings quickly after release. Mako's aquatic-themed attacks deal splash damage and apply a slow effect to enemies, which pairs well with high-DPS towers that benefit from enemies spending more time in range. Mako has shifted the meta toward more control-oriented strategies, especially on maps with long straightaways.

Sparks Kilowatt deserves special mention for its chain lightning attacks that jump between nearby enemies. On maps where enemies move in tight formations, Sparks can hit six or seven targets with a single attack, making it one of the best wave-clearing towers in the game.

Tower Heroes tier list showing S-tier towers Yasuke, Voce, Spectre, Discount Dog, and Hotdog Frank
The S-tier lineup of Yasuke, Voce, Spectre, Discount Dog, and Hotdog Frank dominates Tower Heroes across all difficulties.

B-Tier and Below

B-tier towers are situationally useful but struggle on hard mode. These include many of the starter towers that new players unlock first. They are perfectly fine for clearing easy and normal difficulties while you build your collection, but they fall off sharply once enemy health pools scale up in the later waves. Towers in C-tier and below generally have niche uses in specific challenge modes or modifier setups but are not recommended for standard play.

Tier List Tip: Tower rankings change with each major update. Follow the official Pixel-Bit Studio Twitter and the Tower Heroes Wiki for the latest balance changes and new tower releases.

Placement Strategy & Upgrade Priorities

Knowing which towers to use is only half the equation in Tower Heroes. Where you place them and when you upgrade them often matters more than raw tower quality. A well-placed A-tier tower will consistently outperform a poorly positioned S-tier tower.

Step-by-Step Placement Guide

  1. Before queuing into a match, build a balanced loadout with at least one cheap DPS tower (Beebo or Sparks), one heavy hitter (Yasuke or Hotdog Frank), one support (Spectre), and one economy tower (Discount Dog). Fill remaining slots with area damage or situational picks.
  2. At the start of every match, place your economy tower first. Discount Dog generates bonus coins each wave, so placing it on wave 1 means maximum value across the entire game. Follow up with one cheap DPS tower to handle the first few weak waves.
  3. Before spending coins on a third tower, scout the map for the best chokepoint. Look for curves, U-turns, or spots where the enemy path runs close to itself. These areas let towers hit enemies multiple times as they loop around, effectively doubling your damage output.
  4. Place Spectre in the center of your chokepoint cluster once you have two or three damage towers positioned. Make sure Spectre's range circle covers all your DPS towers. A single Spectre buffing three damage towers is more valuable than placing a fourth damage tower.
  5. Focus upgrade spending on your primary DPS tower first. A fully upgraded Yasuke with Dragon Flames active deals more damage than three partially upgraded towers combined. Only spread upgrades to other towers after your main damage dealer is maxed.
  6. During boss waves, activate all tower special abilities simultaneously for maximum burst. Bosses have massive health pools that require focused fire, and staggering your abilities wastes potential damage during the window when they are most vulnerable.
  7. In the final waves, sell any economy towers that are no longer generating meaningful value and replace them with additional damage towers. The coins from selling plus the coins you have banked should fund a final power spike for the toughest enemies.

All Active Tower Heroes Codes (March 2026)

Tower Heroes codes give you free skins, pets, stickers, and other cosmetic rewards. Pixel-Bit Studio releases new codes during updates, milestones, and special events. These codes expire regularly, so redeem them as soon as possible. We verify this list frequently, but check the Tower Heroes Wiki codes page for the latest additions.

Code Reward Status
BANANA Fruit Bug Pet, Banana Slug & Sour Lemons Stickers Active
NEWDAY Juniper Hi & Popcorn Splash Stickers Active
HEROES_PS PlayStation Sticker Active
CAKEHEROES Blorps Sticker & Cake Pet Active
LIVECHAT Cat Video Sticker & Stream Integration Active
BYTEPLUSH Two Byte Plushes Active
Code Tip: Tower Heroes codes are tied to updates and events. Milestone codes (like follower count celebrations) can expire in as little as 24-48 hours, while event codes typically last until the event ends. Bookmark this page and check back regularly.

How to Redeem Codes in Tower Heroes

Redeeming codes in Tower Heroes takes about 30 seconds. Follow these steps exactly to make sure each code works.

  1. Open Tower Heroes on Roblox and wait for the main lobby to load completely.
  2. Look for the Codes button on the left side of your screen. It is usually represented by a blue bird icon or a ticket icon depending on the current UI version.
  3. Click the Codes button to open the code redemption window. A text input box will appear in the center of your screen.
  4. Type or paste your code exactly as shown in the table above. Codes are case-sensitive, so BANANA must be typed in all caps.
  5. Press the Redeem button. If the code is valid, a success message will pop up and your rewards will appear in your inventory immediately. If you see an error, double-check spelling or the code may have expired.
Tower Heroes code redemption screen showing the text input box and redeem button
The code redemption interface in Tower Heroes is accessed through the button on the left side of the main lobby screen.

Game Passes — What They Cost & Whether They Are Worth It

Tower Heroes offers a range of game passes that unlock additional towers, cosmetic features, and gameplay modes. Unlike many Roblox games, Tower Heroes does not sell power directly through game passes. Every pass either unlocks a new tower with a unique playstyle or adds a quality-of-life feature. Here is the complete breakdown.

Tower Unlock Passes (500 Robux Each)

Bunny Tower + Pink Egg Skin (500 Robux) — Bunny Tower offers a mid-range DPS option with a unique bouncing attack that can hit enemies behind cover. The Pink Egg Skin is purely cosmetic. This tower sits in B-tier but has a loyal fanbase that enjoys its unique attack pattern.

Scarecrow Tower + Purple Hatsy Skin (500 Robux) — Scarecrow provides area-denial abilities that slow enemies passing through its zone. Useful on maps with long straightaways where slowing enemies gives your DPS towers more time to attack. Pairs well with Mako for a double-slow strategy.

Wafer Tower + PB&J Skin (500 Robux) — Wafer is a support tower that heals other towers in its radius, extending their effectiveness during long matches. Niche but valuable in hard mode where tower survivability matters more.

Lure Tower + Evil Lure Skin (500 Robux) — Lure redirects enemies toward it, pulling them off the main path and into range of your damage towers. This is one of the most unique mechanics in Tower Heroes and creates strategies that are not possible with any other tower. Experienced players rate Lure highly for its creative potential on certain maps.

Quality-of-Life Passes

Sandbox Mode (500 Robux) — The single best investment for players who want to improve. Sandbox Mode lets you test any tower on any map with unlimited coins and no wave timer. Use it to practice placement strategies, test new loadouts, and learn map layouts without risking a real match. If you only buy one game pass, make it this one.

More Modifier Slots (200 Robux) — Modifiers change gameplay by adding difficulty tweaks like faster enemies or reduced tower range. More modifier slots let you stack additional challenges for higher rewards. At 200 Robux, this is the cheapest gameplay pass and offers strong value for players who enjoy challenge runs.

Custom Spectre Music (100 Robux) — A purely cosmetic pass that lets you change the background music that plays when Spectre is placed. The cheapest pass available and a fun personalization option for Spectre mains.

Shoulder Hero (150 Robux) — Adds a small tower hero companion that sits on your character's shoulder in the lobby. Purely cosmetic with no gameplay impact.

Bundle Passes

DOORS x Tower Heroes Bundle (399 Robux) — This crossover bundle with the popular Roblox horror game DOORS includes exclusive content from both games. At 399 Robux it offers decent value if you play both titles. The bundle includes a unique tower and cosmetic items themed around the DOORS universe.

Spending Tip: Tower Heroes is fully completable without any game passes. The free towers include S-tier options like Spectre and Hotdog Frank. If you do want to spend Robux, Sandbox Mode at 500 Robux gives the most long-term value by accelerating your skill development, followed by More Modifier Slots at 200 Robux for increased rewards on challenge runs.

Beginner Guide — Your First 10 Hours in Tower Heroes

Tower Heroes has a steeper learning curve than it first appears. The early maps on easy difficulty are forgiving enough to complete with almost any tower combination, but medium and hard mode demand genuine strategy. Here is how to spend your first 10 hours to build a solid foundation.

Hours 1-3: Learn the Basics

Start by playing every map on easy difficulty. Do not worry about optimal tower placement or tier lists yet. The goal is to learn each map's layout, understand how enemy pathing works, and get comfortable with the wave-based economy system. Pay attention to which spots on each map give towers the longest line of sight to the enemy path. These are your future chokepoints.

During these early games, experiment with every tower you have unlocked. Each tower has a distinct attack animation, range, and upgrade tree. Understanding how each tower feels to play helps you make better decisions later when you need to choose between them under pressure. Try towers you think look interesting rather than strictly following tier lists at this stage.

Hours 3-6: Build Your Core Loadout

By hour three, you should have a feel for which towers suit your playstyle. Now it is time to start building toward a core loadout. Every strong loadout in Tower Heroes follows the same formula: one economy tower, one or two DPS towers, one support tower, and one area damage tower. Fill your remaining slots with situational picks.

Beebo is the best starter DPS tower because it is cheap, reliable, and scales smoothly into late waves. Pair Beebo with Sparks Kilowatt for area damage and you have a solid foundation that works on every map. Add Spectre as soon as you unlock it for the damage buff, and Discount Dog for economy. This four-tower core will carry you through easy and normal difficulty on every map.

Tower Heroes beginner loadout showing Beebo, Sparks Kilowatt, Spectre, and Discount Dog selected
The recommended beginner loadout of Beebo, Sparks, Spectre, and Discount Dog provides a balanced foundation for every map.

Hours 6-10: Tackle Medium Difficulty

Medium difficulty is where Tower Heroes gets interesting. Enemies have significantly more health and speed, bosses hit harder, and the margin for error shrinks. This is the difficulty level where tower placement and upgrade order start mattering more than tower selection alone.

Focus on mastering one map at a time on medium. Learn exactly where to place each tower for maximum coverage, which wave to start upgrading your main DPS, and when to sell your economy tower for a final push. Each map has its own rhythm, and learning that rhythm is the single biggest factor in consistent wins on medium and above.

If you are struggling, try co-op. Tower Heroes' matchmaking system pairs you with other players, and having four players means four separate loadouts covering different roles. A team with one player focused on economy, one on support, and two on DPS will clear medium difficulty comfortably even with basic towers.

Advanced Strategies for Hard Mode

Hard mode in Tower Heroes is where the game truly tests your understanding of its systems. Enemies have massive health pools, move faster, and boss waves can end a run in seconds if you are not prepared. Here are the strategies that separate good players from great ones.

The Yasuke-Spectre Core

The most reliable hard mode strategy centers on Yasuke and Spectre. Place Spectre at the map's primary chokepoint first, then position Yasuke within Spectre's buff range. When you activate Yasuke's special ability, the Dragon Flames effect deals 5 damage per tick to every enemy hit, and Spectre's damage buff amplifies this tick damage. Against boss enemies with thousands of health points, this combination shreds through health bars faster than any other setup.

The key to maximizing this synergy is timing. Yasuke's ability has a 20-second duration with a cooldown after. Learn which waves have the toughest enemies and save your ability activation for those specific moments. Wasting Dragon Flames on a wave of weak enemies means it might not be available for the boss that follows immediately after.

Modifier Stacking for Maximum Rewards

Modifiers are Tower Heroes' endgame progression system. Each modifier makes the game harder in a specific way, such as increasing enemy speed by 20%, reducing tower range by 15%, or removing your ability to sell towers. In exchange, harder modifiers multiply your end-of-match coin and experience rewards.

Experienced players stack three or four modifiers to farm coins efficiently. The More Modifier Slots game pass (200 Robux) lets you add extra modifiers beyond the default limit. Popular modifier combinations include speed increases paired with Mako's slow effect (which partially counters the speed boost) and health increases paired with Yasuke's burst damage.

Economy Optimization

On hard mode, every coin matters. Place Discount Dog on wave 1, and do not upgrade it beyond level 2 because the coin generation increase from higher levels does not justify the upgrade cost. Instead, save those coins for your DPS tower upgrades. A common mistake is spending coins on tower upgrades during low-threat waves when you could bank them for a larger power spike during the mid-game transition when enemies start scaling sharply.

Another advanced economy technique is selling and replacing towers as the match progresses. Early-game towers like Beebo become less effective in later waves, so selling them to fund a fully upgraded Yasuke or Voce is often the correct play. The sell price is 70% of total investment, so you do not lose everything. Knowing exactly when to transition from your early-game setup to your late-game powerhouses is what separates consistent hard mode winners from players who stall out in the mid-game.

Co-Op Matchmaking Tips

Tower Heroes' global matchmaking system is one of its strongest features. Playing with a coordinated team makes hard mode significantly more manageable, and the game is genuinely more fun with other players. Here is how to get the most out of co-op.

Before queuing, decide on your role. If you see your teammates loading in with DPS-heavy loadouts, switch to support or economy. The ideal four-player team has one economy specialist (Discount Dog plus cheap early towers), one support player (Spectre plus utility towers), and two DPS players (Yasuke, Voce, Hotdog Frank, or similar). Communicate through the in-game chat to coordinate tower types and avoid overlap.

Spread your towers across the map rather than stacking everything at one chokepoint. In co-op, enemies are stronger to account for four players, so you need coverage at multiple points along the path. Having one player defend the first curve and another defend the second curve is more effective than everyone piling onto the same spot. The exception is boss waves, where concentrating fire at a single chokepoint is essential for burning through the massive health pool before the boss reaches the exit.

Private lobbies are the best way to practice specific strategies with friends. You can set up custom matches on any map and difficulty combination, making it easy to rehearse hard mode strategies without the pressure of random matchmaking. If your friends are new to Tower Heroes, run them through easy difficulty first to teach map layouts, then gradually increase the difficulty as the team gets comfortable with coordination.

If you are looking for other cooperative Roblox experiences, check out our guides on Blox Fruits for action RPG co-op or Adopt Me for casual trading and collecting.

Want Free Robux for Tower Heroes Game Passes?

Earn Robux by completing simple tasks on Earnaldo. Use them to grab Sandbox Mode, tower unlock passes, or anything else in the Roblox catalog.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best towers in Tower Heroes right now?

The current S-tier towers are Yasuke, Voce, Spectre, Discount Dog, and Hotdog Frank. Yasuke dominates medium and hard difficulty with his Dragon Flames special ability that deals 5 damage per tick and stacks with Spectre's buff. In the A-tier, Branch, Scientist, Beebo, Sparks Kilowatt, and the newly added Mako offer strong versatility across all maps and difficulty levels.

How do I redeem codes in Tower Heroes?

Open Tower Heroes on Roblox, look for the Codes button on the left side of your screen (usually a blue bird or ticket icon), paste your code into the text box, and press Redeem. If the code is valid, a success message appears and your rewards are added to your inventory immediately. Codes are case-sensitive, so type them exactly as shown.

Are Tower Heroes game passes worth buying?

Sandbox Mode at 500 Robux is the best value for serious players because it lets you practice tower placement and strategies on any map with unlimited coins. The DOORS x Tower Heroes Bundle at 399 Robux unlocks unique crossover content. Tower unlock passes like Bunny Tower, Scarecrow Tower, Wafer Tower, and Lure Tower at 500 Robux each add new strategic options. None are required to complete any content.

What is the best beginner loadout in Tower Heroes?

New players should run Beebo for reliable DPS, Sparks Kilowatt for area damage, Spectre for the damage buff, and Discount Dog for economy. These four towers are accessible early, have low upgrade costs, and work well on every map. Fill remaining loadout slots with whatever towers you enjoy as you learn the game's mechanics.

How does Spectre work in Tower Heroes?

Spectre is a support tower that increases the damage output of all nearby towers within its range. Place Spectre in the center of your tower clusters to maximize the buff. It also amplifies damage-over-time effects like Dragon Flames from Yasuke, making the two towers an extremely powerful combination that forms the backbone of most hard mode strategies.

Is Tower Heroes free to play or pay to win?

Tower Heroes is fully free to play. All base towers can be earned through gameplay, and the game is balanced around free towers. S-tier picks like Spectre and Hotdog Frank are available to everyone without spending Robux. Game passes unlock additional towers and quality-of-life features, but skilled placement and upgrade timing matter far more than having premium content.

What are modifiers in Tower Heroes and how do I use them?

Modifiers are gameplay tweaks you apply to matches that change the difficulty and rewards. They can make enemies faster, increase their health, or add unique challenges like disabling tower selling. Harder modifiers multiply your end-of-match coin and experience rewards. The More Modifier Slots game pass at 200 Robux lets you stack additional modifiers for greater challenges and bigger payouts.

How does matchmaking work in Tower Heroes?

Tower Heroes features a global matchmaking system that pairs you with other players based on the map and difficulty you select. You can also create private lobbies to play with friends. Co-op matches allow up to 4 players, and coordinating tower types with your team is essential for beating harder difficulties where enemies have significantly more health and move faster.