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Last updated: June 10, 2026

Untitled Robot Boxing Free Robux Guide — Combat Tips, Active Codes, and Robot Upgrade Guide for 2026

By Earnaldo Team • June 5, 2026 • 13 min read

Untitled Robot Boxing gameplay showing two mechanical fighters squaring off in a 1v1 bout

Untitled Robot Boxing by cocoa and games is one of the most exciting fighting games to blow up on Roblox in 2026. You pilot a mechanical fighter through 5-round, 2-minute bouts inspired by the Real Steel universe — managing light attacks, heavy punches, high blocks, low blocks, dashes, and weaves all at once while trying to read your opponent and find openings. With 12 million visits and 3,000+ concurrent players right now, this one's trending hard and doesn't look like it's slowing down.

This guide covers everything you need to know: how the round system and controls work, the full combo input breakdown, how to block properly, robot upgrade priorities, active codes to redeem today, and how to stretch your Robux further. Whether you're fresh off your first bout or already grinding ranked, there's something useful here.

Table of Contents

  1. What Is Untitled Robot Boxing and Why Is It Growing So Fast?
  2. Full Controls Breakdown — Every Input Explained
  3. How Combat Actually Works — Frames, Combos, and Footwork
  4. Blocking Guide — High Block vs. Low Block
  5. Robot Upgrades — What to Prioritize
  6. Active Untitled Robot Boxing Codes (June 2026)
  7. How to Redeem Codes
  8. Ranked Tips — How to Climb Without Getting Stuck
  9. How to Get Free Robux for Untitled Robot Boxing
  10. Frequently Asked Questions

What Is Untitled Robot Boxing and Why Is It Growing So Fast in 2026?

Untitled Robot Boxing drops you into the cockpit of a giant mechanical fighter and pits you against another pilot in a strict 1v1 format. Matches run five rounds of two minutes each. You're trying to knock your opponent's health bar down to zero within that window — if both robots survive all five rounds, the fighter who dealt more total damage takes the win.

The Real Steel inspiration is obvious and the developer leans into it hard. Your robot has weight to it. Punches have impact. You can't just button-mash your way to wins because every attack comes with recovery frames your opponent can punish. There's genuine depth to the combat system: learning when to throw a heavy, when to switch from high block to low block mid-combo, and when to dash out instead of trading hits are the skills that separate 50-win players from 500-win players.

The growth numbers tell their own story. The game crossed 12 million visits recently and is still climbing. Peak concurrent player counts are hovering above 3,000 at time of writing and trending upward. That's remarkable for a game that's still relatively new — it means real word-of-mouth is driving it rather than a single viral spike. The cocoa and games Discord is active, community tournaments are already running, and the developer keeps patching and adjusting. This isn't a flash-in-the-pan.

Two large mechanical robots facing off in an Untitled Robot Boxing arena
5-round bouts with 2-minute rounds — every exchange counts when the clock is ticking

Full Controls Breakdown — Every Input Explained

The controls in Untitled Robot Boxing are more layered than they look at first glance. There are directional modifiers that change how the same base input behaves, which means a single key can do multiple things depending on what else you're pressing. Here's the full map.

InputActionNotes
ILight attackFast, low damage, quick recovery — your bread-and-butter jab
JLight attack (variant)Second light attack input — combine with I for rapid strings
KHeavy attackSlower, higher damage, longer recovery — use to end combos
LHeavy attack (variant)Second heavy input — different animation and angle than K
FHigh blockBlocks standing attacks and mid-level punches
VLow blockBlocks sweeps, low hooks, and downward heavy variants
Space + WASDDashLonger repositioning movement — creates distance or closes gap
Shift + WASDWeaveShort defensive slip — used inside active exchanges
D + attackForward variantTriggers the forward-direction version of the move
S + attackDownward variantTriggers the downward version — good for getting under high blocks

The D and S modifiers are where the depth really kicks in. A standard K heavy goes straight. A D+K heavy lunges forward and hits at a different angle, which can catch opponents who side-stepped expecting the normal version. An S+K downward heavy swoops low, going right under a high block if your opponent doesn't switch to V in time. Learning these variants — not just that they exist but which situations call for which — is what turns average combos into reads that actually land.

New Player Tip: Don't try to master all the directional variants at once. Spend your first 20 matches just using I, J, F, and V. Get comfortable with the rhythm of light attacks and blocking before adding heavies and directional modifiers into the mix. Building the foundation right makes everything else click faster.

How Combat Actually Works — Frames, Combos, and Footwork

The single biggest misconception new players have about Untitled Robot Boxing is that it rewards the person who throws more punches. It doesn't. It rewards the person who throws the right punches at the right moment. Every attack in the game has a recovery animation — the brief period after your punch lands (or whiffs) where your robot can't do anything. During that window, you're completely open.

Understanding Recovery Frames

Light attacks (I and J) have short recovery windows — fast enough that you can chain several together before your opponent can interrupt. But if you throw a light and your opponent blocks it, the block stun is minimal. They're recovering almost as fast as you are. Throwing another light immediately might work, or it might get stuffed if they're faster.

Heavy attacks (K and L) deal real damage but come with noticeably longer recovery animations. A whiffed heavy is a gift to your opponent. They see the opening and they'll punish it. A heavy that connects, especially at the end of a combo string when your opponent is in hit stun, is devastating. The rhythm of good Untitled Robot Boxing is: establish with lights, find the opening, close with a heavy.

Building Combo Strings

The cleanest basic combo in the game right now is I, I, J, K — two fast light jabs, a light cross, then a heavy to close it out. The three light attacks keep your opponent in light hit stun long enough that the heavy connects before they can block. Once you can land that string consistently, start experimenting with inserting the D modifier: I, I, J, D+K lunges forward so if they tried to back-dash after the third light, the forward heavy catches them anyway.

Against players who've learned to block high reliably, mix in S+K to go low. The goal is to make your opponent uncertain about which block to hold. If they don't know whether to press F or V, they'll guess wrong half the time, and that's all the opening you need.

Close-up of robot boxing combat showing punch animations and hit effects
Landing a heavy at the end of a light combo string is the core damage loop — learn it early

Footwork: Dashes and Weaves

Dashes (Space + WASD) are your primary spacing tool. A backward dash creates distance when your opponent is pressuring you, buying time to reset and breathe. A forward dash closes ground when your opponent is trying to back off after a combo. Lateral dashes (Space + A or Space + D) reposition around their attack axis — if someone throws a straight heavy and you dash to the side, you're outside their recovery window and can punish from an angle they didn't expect.

Weaves (Shift + WASD) are different. These are short slips meant for use during active punching exchanges. If your opponent starts a combo and you weave instead of blocking, you're moving your hitbox out of the way without the block animation — which means you come out of the weave faster than you'd come out of a blocked hit. Weaving takes practice to time correctly, but players who use it well look like they're dodging in slow motion while everyone around them is getting hit.

Advanced Tip: Weaves work on directional attacks too, but you need to weave in the correct direction. Against a D+K forward heavy, weave sideways. Against an S+K downward heavy, weave back. Weaving into the attack's path instead of away from it is the most common beginner mistake with the system.

Blocking Guide — High Block vs. Low Block

Blocking is probably the most undervalued skill in Untitled Robot Boxing. Most new players ignore it entirely, get destroyed in ranked for 30 matches, then realize blocking was the thing they were missing. Don't be that person. Learn to block before you touch ranked play — the game will feel completely different once you do.

When to Use High Block (F)

High block covers standing light attacks, straight heavies, and mid-level punches. It's your default defensive position in a neutral exchange. If you're not sure what your opponent is about to throw, F is your safer guess — most players default to standing attacks because they're faster and more reliable. High block handles the majority of incoming attacks from opponents who haven't started mixing in low variants.

The key thing to understand about F is that it doesn't protect you forever. Block stun is real — your opponent can keep chipping through your block with lights, and if they time a heavy correctly through your guard, you'll still take reduced damage. Block is a tool for surviving pressure, not a guaranteed shutdown.

When to Use Low Block (V)

Switch to V when you see the S modifier. If your opponent's robot dips slightly before the punch — which is the animation tell for S+attack variants — or if they've been mixing in downward heavies throughout the match, V becomes essential. An S+K going under your high block is one of the cleaner punish tools in the game, and opponents who learn to read high-blocking tendencies will exploit it repeatedly.

In mid-to-high-level play, the block game becomes a read-heavy guessing situation. Your opponent is watching whether you default to F or V between exchanges, and good players will pattern-recognize your block preference and mix accordingly. Start varying your defensive choices deliberately so you're not predictable.

Robot boxer in defensive stance showing blocking posture in Untitled Robot Boxing
Knowing when to switch between high block and low block is what keeps you in rounds

Robot Upgrades — What to Prioritize

Untitled Robot Boxing has a robot upgrade system that lets you improve your mechanical fighter's stats over time. You earn currency through winning bouts and completing matches, which you then spend on upgrades. Robux can accelerate this process, but knowing the right upgrade order matters more than the speed at which you acquire them.

Upgrade CategoryPriorityWhy It Matters
Stamina / DurabilityHighestMore health means you survive longer exchanges and don't get one-combo'd in Round 1
Attack PowerHighIncreases damage on both lights and heavies — heavies especially benefit from scaling
Recovery SpeedMedium-HighReduces recovery frame windows, letting you chain combos faster
Block StrengthMediumReduces chip damage through blocks — more relevant once you're actually blocking consistently
Movement SpeedMediumImproves dash distance and weave speed — important for footwork-heavy playstyles
Cosmetic SkinsLastNo gameplay impact — looks great but upgrade stats first

Stamina first, always. There's nothing more demoralizing than getting out-played mechanically but still losing because your robot's health pool was too thin to survive the exchanges you were winning. A durable robot gives you more room to make mistakes and keep learning during a match. Once your durability is comfortable, put points into Attack Power — every upgrade there makes your heavy punches hit harder, and heavies are where most of your kill pressure comes from.

Recovery Speed is the sleeper pick that experienced players prioritize earlier than newcomers expect. A faster recovery window means your combo chains are tighter and your opponents have smaller gaps to interrupt. It's essentially a multiplier on your existing mechanical skill — the same combo that gets interrupted 40% of the time at baseline might land 70% of the time with upgraded recovery frames.

Upgrade Tip: Don't spread your early upgrade currency across every category. Pick one stat and max it before moving to the next. Stamina to a comfortable level, then Attack Power up to where your heavies are genuinely threatening. Spreading thin leaves you mediocre across the board rather than strong anywhere.

Active Untitled Robot Boxing Codes (June 2026)

cocoa and games releases codes through their Discord server and on social media — usually tied to milestone events, updates, or community events. These give you free in-game rewards that help with progression without spending Robux. Here are the codes that are currently active as of June 2026.

CodeRewardStatus
ROBOTBOXINGFree in-game rewardsActive
COCOANgamesFree in-game rewardsActive
REALSTEELFree in-game rewardsActive
LAUNCH2026Free in-game rewardsActive
MECHANICFISTFree in-game rewardsActive
Important: Codes in Untitled Robot Boxing expire without warning. Redeem every code on this list as soon as you log in. For the most current and up-to-date codes, join the cocoa and games Discord server — that's where new codes always drop first. We update this page regularly, but the Discord is always the fastest source.

The cocoa and games Discord is genuinely worth joining beyond just the codes. It's where tournament signups happen, where the developer communicates about patches, and where the most competitive players in the game congregate. If you want to improve fast, watching how tournament players discuss strategy in those channels is educational on its own.

How to Redeem Codes in Untitled Robot Boxing

The redemption process takes about 15 seconds once you know where the button is.

  1. Launch Untitled Robot Boxing from Roblox and wait for the game lobby to fully load.
  2. Look for the Codes button on the right side of your screen — it should be visible in the lobby UI.
  3. Click the Codes button to open the redemption panel.
  4. Type or paste your code into the text field. Codes are case-sensitive, so match the capitalization exactly.
  5. Click Redeem to submit the code.
  6. Your reward appears immediately. Check your currency balance or inventory to confirm it went through.

If a code returns an error, it's either already expired or you've already redeemed it on your account. Each code is one-time use per account. Don't waste time trying an expired code multiple times — check the Discord for updated working codes instead.

Untitled Robot Boxing lobby interface showing the codes redemption button
The Codes button sits on the right side of the lobby UI — easy to miss your first time in

Ranked Tips — How to Climb Without Getting Stuck in 2026

Ranked mode is where Untitled Robot Boxing gets genuinely competitive. The player pool gets sharper fast, and the bad habits that let you coast through casual matches will get punished consistently here. These tips are specifically for climbing rather than just surviving.

1. Learn to Block Before You Queue Ranked

This gets said once but it deserves its own section. The number one reason players plateau in ranked is that they never developed defensive habits in casual play. They got by on aggression, but ranked opponents have seen every aggression pattern and know how to punish it. Before you touch ranked, spend at least 15 to 20 casual matches actively practicing your blocks. Switch between F and V deliberately. Pay attention to whether your blocks are landing before the punch connects. If you're still getting hit through your block regularly, it means your timing is off — fix that first.

2. Stop Spamming Attacks in Recovery Windows

Recovery frames are where ranked matches are lost and won. When your attack whiffs or gets blocked, there's a brief window where you can't do anything. If you immediately mash another input, you queue up an attack that fires during or just after your recovery — which often means it comes out at the wrong moment and gets stuffed. Train yourself to wait. After a blocked attack or a whiff, either block or weave rather than throwing immediately. Wait for your opponent's counter to come, block or evade it, and then punish the end of their combo.

3. Don't Give Away Your Heavies

Throwing a K or L heavy on its own, with no setup, is one of the most punishable things you can do in this game. Experienced opponents see the startup animation and either block it, weave past it, and punish your recovery. Heavies need to be earned — land 2 or 3 lights first to put your opponent in hit stun, then close with the heavy. Or use a directional forward variant after a sidestep to hit from an angle they weren't covering. Random raw heavies stop landing around the same ELO level where everyone has 50+ ranked matches, so adjust your habits before you hit that wall.

4. Use Dashes to Reset, Not Just to Run

A lot of players use the backward dash purely as an escape button — they take a combo, dash back, and try to recover. That works, but it's reactive and predictable. Experienced opponents will just dash forward to close the gap again. Start using dashes proactively. Dash to the side during your opponent's attack setup, reposition to their flank, and attack from a new angle before they've finished their combo animation. Lateral repositioning is much harder to react to than backing away in a straight line.

5. Watch Tournament Footage From the Discord

The cocoa and games Discord has clips and VODs from community tournaments. Watch 2 or 3 matches from the top competitors in the current bracket. You'll notice immediately that they're doing things that most casual players never even attempt — delayed heavies, weave punishes on specific combo strings, block switching mid-exchange. Pick one thing you see in those clips and try to implement it over your next 10 matches. That's more efficient than grinding 100 matches with no direction.

How to Get Free Robux for Untitled Robot Boxing

Robot upgrades cost in-game currency, but some premium upgrades and cosmetic skins require Robux. If you don't want to pay out of pocket, Earnaldo lets you earn Robux for free by completing simple tasks — surveys, watching videos, trying app offers — and withdraw them directly to your Roblox account. It's a straightforward way to fund upgrades without spending real money.

Here's exactly how the process works:

  1. Create a free account at earnaldo.com and link your Roblox username.
  2. Head to the Earn page and browse the available tasks.
  3. Complete tasks — watch videos, fill out surveys, or try app offers to accumulate points.
  4. Stack your points until you hit the minimum withdrawal threshold shown on the Withdraw page.
  5. Withdraw your earned Robux — they get sent directly to your Roblox account.
  6. Spend your free Robux on robot upgrades, premium cosmetics, or game passes in Untitled Robot Boxing.

Get Free Robux for Untitled Robot Boxing

Complete simple tasks and withdraw Robux directly to your Roblox account — no credit card required. Put them toward robot upgrades and get back in the ring faster.

If Untitled Robot Boxing has you hooked on competitive Roblox fighting games, these guides cover other top titles in the space:

Frequently Asked Questions

How do rounds work in Untitled Robot Boxing?

Each match is a 5-round bout with 2-minute rounds. You pilot a mechanical fighter against one opponent and try to reduce their health bar to zero before the clock runs out. If both robots survive all five rounds, the fighter who dealt more total damage wins. It's a strict 1v1 format — no teams, no third parties, just you and your opponent managing every exchange across all five rounds.

What are all the controls in Untitled Robot Boxing?

Light attacks use I and J, heavy attacks use K and L. Block high with F, block low with V. Dash by holding Space with WASD for longer repositioning moves. Weave with Shift plus WASD for short defensive slips during active exchanges. D variants of any attack trigger a forward-direction version of the move. S variants trigger downward versions that can get under high blocks. Learning to combine these directional modifiers with your base attacks is the core skill expression in the game.

How do I redeem codes in Untitled Robot Boxing?

Click the Codes button on the right side of your screen when you're in the game lobby. A text field appears — type or paste your code and hit Redeem. Rewards are added to your account instantly. Codes are case-sensitive so enter them exactly as shown. For the most current active codes, join the cocoa and games Discord server where new codes always drop first.

Is Untitled Robot Boxing pay-to-win?

Not entirely. Robot upgrades do provide statistical advantages, and Robux lets you speed up acquiring them. But the core combat system is skill-based — blocking at the right moment, respecting recovery frames, and landing clean combos consistently matters more than raw stats at every level below the top competitive bracket. A well-played stock robot beats a poorly played upgraded one in the vast majority of matches. Upgrade your robot, but don't skip learning the fundamentals expecting stats to carry you.

What is the best way to win rounds in Untitled Robot Boxing?

Stop throwing random attacks and start learning recovery frame windows. Every attack — light or heavy — has a recovery period where you're vulnerable. The most reliable way to win rounds is to establish with 2 to 3 light attacks to build hit stun, then close your combo with a heavy. Mix in directional variants (D for forward heavies, S for downward heavies) to stop opponents from predicting your block-breaking patterns. And block deliberately between exchanges rather than mashing. It's less about aggression volume and more about attack quality.

Does Untitled Robot Boxing have tournaments?

Yes. The cocoa and games Discord hosts community tournaments for Untitled Robot Boxing with varying formats — single elimination brackets, round robins, and community events. Joining the Discord is how you find out about upcoming tournaments and register. Watching tournament footage is also one of the best ways to study advanced techniques from the top players in the current competitive bracket.

How do weaves work compared to dashes in Untitled Robot Boxing?

Dashes (Space + WASD) are longer-range repositioning moves for spacing and closing distance. Weaves (Shift + WASD) are short slips designed for use during active exchanges at close range. Weaving correctly moves your hitbox out of an incoming attack's path without the block animation, meaning you recover faster than a blocked hit and can punish immediately. The key is weaving in the correct direction — sideways against forward-direction attacks, backward against straight punches, rather than into the attack's trajectory.

Where can I find the cocoa and games Discord for Untitled Robot Boxing?

Search for the cocoa and games Discord through the game's description on its Roblox page or through the developer profile. The Discord is the official hub for code drops, patch notes, tournament announcements, and community discussions. New codes almost always appear there first before spreading to third-party tracking sites, so it's worth joining even if you only check it occasionally.

Bottom Line

Untitled Robot Boxing earns its 12 million visits. The Real Steel-inspired combat system has more depth than it shows in the first few matches — once you understand recovery frames, block switching, and directional move variants, the game opens up into something genuinely competitive. Redeem every active code, prioritize Stamina and Attack Power upgrades first, and spend your early sessions learning to block properly rather than grinding aggression. The mechanical skill you build in your first 50 matches will outperform any upgrade you can buy, so invest in both at the same time and you'll be climbing ranked before you know it.