Attack on Titan Revolution: Roblox Parent Guide
Your kid is fighting titans with 20 strangers in every server, and the source material is bloodier than most anime your teen watches.
Teen titan combat, live updates
This is a fangame based on Attack on Titan, the extremely violent anime about humanity fighting giant humanoid monsters. Kids customize their **ODM gear** (grappling equipment), grind for **XP and Gold**, and team up in **20-player servers** to take down titans or steal **Shifter abilities** in raid mode. The game itself tones down the gore, but the chat and the fandom do not.
Why kids play Attack on Titan Revolution
Skill-based grappling combat
The **ODM gear** lets kids swing through 3D space like Spider-Man, which feels amazing when you nail it. Mastering movement and titan takedowns is genuinely satisfying. It is not pay-to-win, which your kid will tell you matters.
Endless progression grind
Kids unlock **Upgrades, Perks, Artifacts, Families, and Cosmetics** through play, not just spending. The carrot is always visible. That is why they will ask for one more round at bedtime.
Raid mode shifts the power
In **Raids**, players fight boss titans to steal the ability to **transform into a Shifter** themselves. Becoming the titan instead of the hunter flips the script. Your kid wants that power fantasy, and the game delivers it in co-op format.
Active updates and codes
The developer drops **new codes at community milestones** like 1.3M likes, which kids track obsessively in Discord. Regular updates keep the fandom engaged. Your kid is not just playing a game, they are in a live-service loop.
What parents should watch for
Source material is extremely violent
Attack on Titan the anime features **limb loss, decapitation, and people being eaten alive**. Common Sense Media rates it 17+ for extreme violence. This Roblox game dials down the blood, but your kid is still role-playing in a world where humans get torn apart by monsters, and the fandom brings that energy into chat.
20-player servers, unfiltered vibes
Every match drops your kid into a server with 19 strangers. The game has moderation rules that ban obscene sexual language, but **enforcement is reactive, not preventive**. If someone is gross in chat before a mod shows up, your kid saw it.
Grind pressure and Robux shortcuts
Progression is earned through play, but **Robux buys cosmetics and likely boosts** that skip the grind. Kids will compare gear and feel the gap. If your kid asks for Robux because everyone else has a certain skin, that is this game working as designed.
Discord and external communities
The game pushes kids to **join the community Discord for codes and updates**. That means your 11-year-old is one click away from unmoderated voice channels with teens and adults. External platforms are where the real parenting happens, not in Roblox itself.
Parent takeaway
This game is fine for teens who can handle mature anime themes and know how to mute toxic players. For younger kids, the violence and open chat make it a harder sell unless you lock down settings and stay close. If your kid is under 13 and obsessed with Attack on Titan, treat this like letting them watch the show: have the conversation about what is fantasy and what is not, then decide together.
Read the full Attack on Titan Revolution parent guide on Roblox Ready