Volleyball Legends Tier List (2026) — Best Styles Ranked
Volleyball Legends has over 30 styles to roll for, and picking the right one can mean the difference between dominating the court and getting shut down every rally. This tier list ranks every style from S to C based on stats, role effectiveness, rarity, and how they perform in actual matches as of March 2026.
Whether you're saving your rolls for a shot at the 0.1% Secret rarity Sanu or trying to figure out if your Timeskip pull was worth the hype, this breakdown covers everything you need. We've tested these styles across all roles — Blocker, Server, Spiker, Setter, Libero, and All-rounder — so you can make informed decisions about which styles to invest in. If you're new to the game, check out our Volleyball Legends hub first.
Table of Contents
S Tier — Best Styles in Volleyball Legends
These are the styles that consistently outperform everything else. If you've rolled any of these, you're sitting on the best the game has to offer. S Tier styles excel in their designated roles and bring enough versatility to carry matches on their own.
Sanu
Sanu is the only Secret rarity style in Volleyball Legends, sitting at a brutal 0.1% roll rate. You'll recognize it by its dark blue color scheme. It was a former S-tier powerhouse back when the meta was less developed, and it still holds that position today — which says a lot about how well-rounded its stat spread really is.
Sanu delivers strong numbers across spiking, defense, and stamina. It thrives in any role, making it the ultimate all-rounder, but it's best used as a Blocker where its defensive stats shine brightest. If you roll Sanu, you don't need to think twice about equipping it.
Timeskip Oigawa
Timeskip Oigawa excels at blocking and aerial abilities. This style is built for front-line players who want to dictate rallies with raw power and court presence. Every stat that matters for controlling the net — block height, timing windows, positioning — Timeskip Oigawa handles them with ease.
Best used as a Server, this style can set the tone for entire rallies before anyone touches the ball. The serving power combined with net dominance makes it one of the most oppressive styles to play against.
Timeskip Kagayomo
If you're running Setter, Timeskip Kagayomo is the definitive pick. No other style comes close to its precision and speed when setting up plays. It enables coordinated team play at the highest level and directly boosts your attacker's performance through faster, more accurate sets.
The gap between Timeskip Kagayomo and the next best setter is significant. This style turns average spikers into threats and good spikers into unstoppable forces. Best role: Setter.
Timeskip Hinoto
Timeskip Hinoto is the top pick for aggressive play. Its jump and spike stats are among the highest in the game, making it the go-to choice for anyone who wants to end rallies with raw attacking power. Best used as a Spiker.
Paired with a strong setter like Timeskip Kagayomo, Timeskip Hinoto becomes nearly impossible to defend against. The spike angles and power it generates put constant pressure on opposing blockers. If you like putting the ball down hard, this is your style.
The Twins (Osuma & Atasumi)
The Twins bring unique synergy mechanics that no other style in the game can replicate. When used in the right team composition, Osuma and Atasumi create coordination advantages that translate into consistent point generation. Their dual-character design rewards players who communicate well with their teammates.
Bokuto
Bokuto is the definition of consistency. With excellent spike and block stats, this style performs well in nearly every situation. It doesn't have the extreme ceiling of some Timeskip variants, but it rarely underperforms either. A reliable choice for players who value steady output over flashy peaks.
Kimiro
Kimiro is the best Libero in Volleyball Legends. Its bump and dive stats are unmatched, making it the premier defensive specialist. If your team needs someone who can keep rallies alive and dig out attacks that should be unreturnable, Kimiro is the answer. Every serious team benefits from having a Kimiro player anchoring the back row.
Butoku
Butoku holds Godly rarity with a 0.49% roll rate. It's a powerful all-rounder with particularly strong serving abilities. While it doesn't specialize as hard as some other S Tier picks, its stat distribution is high enough across the board that it fits comfortably into any team composition and any role you assign it.
A Tier — Excellent Styles
A Tier styles are genuinely strong and can hold their own in competitive play. They're outclassed by S Tier in raw stats or specialization, but you won't feel disadvantaged running any of these. Several are base versions of Timeskip styles that got power-crept by their upgraded forms.
Kagayomo (Base)
Base Kagayomo is still a good setter. It handles the role competently and you can build effective team strategies around it. The problem is that Timeskip Kagayomo exists and does everything better. If you haven't rolled the Timeskip version, base Kagayomo is a perfectly solid placeholder.
Oigawa (Base)
Base Oigawa carries Godly rarity at 0.49% roll rate. It's a strong style with good blocking and aerial stats, but the Timeskip version surpasses it in every meaningful category. Still, a Godly pull is a Godly pull — you won't be disappointed running base Oigawa.
Uchishima
Uchishima is a solid blocker with decent all-around stats. It doesn't reach the heights of the S Tier blockers, but it's dependable in its role and brings enough secondary value to justify a team slot.
Hirakumi, Kosumi, Iwaezenim & Azamena
Hirakumi offers a good balance of offense and defense. Kosumi is a reliable spiker that gets the job done. Iwaezenim brings strong attacking power, and Azamena delivers decent overall performance. None of these will carry a team alone, but they all contribute meaningfully.
Saguwuru (VBL Original)
Saguwuru (VBL Original) has a unique playstyle that sets it apart from the standard roster. It's a strong alternative for players who want something different, and its original design gives it niche advantages that the base Saguwuru lacks.
B Tier — Good Styles
B Tier styles are functional but won't give you an edge against skilled opponents running higher-tier picks. Some of these are actively debated in the community, and a few could move up depending on future balance patches.
Timeskip Kyamo is the most controversial placement on this list. Some players swear it belongs in S Tier for its set-up capabilities, and there's a real argument there. Its ability to create scoring opportunities is undeniable, but inconsistent performance in high-level play keeps it here for now. Feiko falls into the same category — strong set-up potential that doesn't always translate into wins.
Tsuzichiwa suffers from poor stat distribution that limits its ceiling. Ojiri is simply outclassed by the styles above it. Iwaezeni (base) is a weaker version of Iwaezenim, Saguwuru (base) is less effective than the VBL Original version, and Hinoto (base) can't compete with its Timeskip upgrade. These styles all work, but they're not what you want to be running when the competition gets serious.
C Tier — Average Styles
C Tier is where you'll find styles that lack the stats or utility to compete at higher levels. If you're still using these, it's worth saving your rolls for something better. You can grab Volleyball Legends codes to get free rolls and work toward better pulls.
Haibo lacks meaningful stats in any category. There's no role where it outperforms a higher-tier alternative. Yamegushi has extremely niche utility that rarely comes into play during actual matches. Tonoko offers very limited use cases, and Kito is the least effective style overall. These four are the styles you replace as soon as you roll anything better.
Tier List Summary Table
Here's the full ranking at a glance. Use this table as a quick reference when deciding which styles to prioritize.
| Style | Tier | Rarity | Roll Rate | Best Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sanu | S | Secret | 0.1% | Blocker / All-rounder |
| Timeskip Oigawa | S | — | — | Server |
| Timeskip Kagayomo | S | — | — | Setter |
| Timeskip Hinoto | S | — | — | Spiker |
| The Twins (Osuma & Atasumi) | S | — | — | Flex |
| Bokuto | S | — | — | Spiker / Blocker |
| Kimiro | S | — | — | Libero |
| Butoku | S | Godly | 0.49% | All-rounder |
| Kagayomo (Base) | A | Godly | 0.49% | Setter |
| Oigawa (Base) | A | Godly | 0.49% | Blocker |
| Uchishima | A | — | — | Blocker |
| Hirakumi | A | — | — | Flex |
| Kosumi | A | — | — | Spiker |
| Iwaezenim | A | — | — | Spiker |
| Azamena | A | — | — | All-rounder |
| Saguwuru (VBL Original) | A | — | — | Flex |
| Timeskip Kyamo | B | — | — | Setter |
| Feiko | B | — | — | Setter |
| Tsuzichiwa | B | — | — | — |
| Ojiri | B | — | — | — |
| Iwaezeni (Base) | B | — | — | Spiker |
| Saguwuru (Base) | B | — | — | — |
| Hinoto (Base) | B | — | — | Spiker |
| Haibo | C | — | — | — |
| Yamegushi | C | — | — | — |
| Tonoko | C | — | — | — |
| Kito | C | — | — | — |
How We Ranked These Styles
Our rankings are based on four primary factors: raw stat totals, role effectiveness, team synergy, and real match performance as of March 2026. Volleyball Legends tracks 8 core stats — Block, Bump, Dive, Jump, Serve, Set, Speed, and Spike (plus Spin) — and we evaluated each style across all of them.
Role effectiveness matters more than raw numbers. A style with slightly lower total stats but a perfect stat spread for its intended role will outperform a "higher stat" style that's spread too thin. That's why Kimiro sits in S Tier as a Libero despite not having the highest overall numbers — its bump and dive stats are exactly where they need to be.
We also weighted rarity appropriately. Sanu's 0.1% Secret roll rate and the three Godly styles at 0.49% (Kageyomo, Oigawa, Butoku) were evaluated on performance, not scarcity. A style doesn't earn a higher tier just because it's hard to get. That said, the rarest styles do tend to have the best stat distributions, which is reflected in the rankings.
Community consensus and competitive play data informed the more debatable placements. Styles like Timeskip Kyamo and Feiko sit in B Tier because, while they have vocal supporters, the data from high-level matches doesn't yet support moving them higher. We'll update these placements as the meta evolves. For a different Roblox anime sports experience, you might also want to check out how Volleyball Legends compares to The Strongest Battlegrounds.
Earn Free Robux While You Play
Want more Robux for Volleyball Legends rolls and other Roblox games? Earnaldo lets you earn free Robux by completing simple tasks — no surveys, no downloads, just real rewards.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sanu is widely considered the best style in Volleyball Legends as of March 2026. It's the only Secret rarity style with a 0.1% roll rate, and it delivers strong stats across spiking, defense, and stamina. Timeskip Kagayomo and Timeskip Hinoto are close competitors depending on your preferred role.
Sanu is the rarest style in Volleyball Legends with a 0.1% roll rate. It holds Secret rarity, which is the highest rarity tier in the game — above Godly (0.49%). Sanu is currently the only style with Secret rarity.
The three Godly rarity styles in Volleyball Legends are Kageyomo, Oigawa, and Butoku. Each has a 0.49% roll rate. These styles offer strong stats but are outperformed by their Timeskip variants and the Secret-rarity Sanu.
Yes, Timeskip Kagayomo is significantly better than base Kagayomo. The Timeskip version sits in S Tier as the definitive setter with unparalleled precision and speed, while base Kagayomo falls to A Tier. If you have the Timeskip version, there's no reason to run the base.
There isn't a single best role — it depends on your playstyle and your team composition. Spiker is the most popular for aggressive players, but Blocker and Setter are just as important for winning consistently. Kimiro as Libero is the top defensive pick, while Sanu works as a dominant all-rounder in any role.
The tier list can shift after any major game update or balance patch. New styles, stat adjustments, and ability reworks all affect rankings. We update this list after each significant change to keep it current. Community debate around styles like Timeskip Kyamo and Feiko shows that some placements are always evolving.