Regretevator [ ELEVATOR SIMULATOR ]: Roblox Parent Guide
A chaotic elevator ride through random floors where your kid collects coins, survives hazards, and chats with nine strangers per server.
Random floors, tight servers, weekly updates
Your kid joins nine other players in an **elevator** that opens onto a new random floor every round: puzzle rooms, hazard survival, NPC interactions, or secret hunting. They collect **coins** to buy items and emotes, then ride again. Weekly updates mean new floors and mechanics drop constantly, so the game your kid plays this month will feel different next month.
Why kids play Regretevator [ ELEVATOR SIMULATOR ]
Every elevator ride is a surprise
Kids never know if the next floor will be a maze, a horror sequence, or a hangout lounge. That **randomized floor selection** is the entire hook. It is why your kid will ride the same elevator thirty times in a row.
Collecting coins and stickers feels like progress
Every floor awards **coins** based on survival and interaction. Kids spend those on items, emotes (press **G**), and **stickers** they can slap around the lobby. The weekend **coin multiplier events** (Friday through Sunday) make grinding feel like a limited-time opportunity.
Tight servers mean real friend groups
Ten-player servers are small enough that your kid recognizes the same usernames across rides and starts treating strangers like temporary teammates. They will ask to add someone as a Roblox friend after surviving a tough floor together.
Weekly updates create constant FOMO
**The Axolotl Sun** developer team ships new floors, NPCs, and items every single week. Your kid knows something new is always one update away, which is why they check back obsessively and beg for Robux when a new gamepass drops.
What parents should watch for
Thirteen gamepasses and a death tax
This game monetizes everywhere: **13 Robux gamepasses** (VIP, Double Inventory Slots, RED JUICE item), coin purchases for Robux, and a **30 Robux fee to keep your items if you die**. The weekend coin multiplier also applies to coin purchases, so your kid will argue that buying coins on Saturday is smart math. That death-retention fee is the killer, it turns every tough floor into a spending decision.
Small servers, constant chat with strangers
Ten players ride the **elevator** together every round, and the chat runs nonstop. Your kid is locked in a moving box with nine strangers for minutes at a time, which creates a forced-intimacy vibe that can turn into oversharing, roleplay, or requests to move the conversation to Discord. The official **Axolotl Sun Discord** is linked in the game description, and your kid will ask to join it.
Non-transparent moderation tiers
The Axolotl Sun developer team uses **moderation staff levels** that neither the community nor the mods themselves fully understand (who has which permissions is unclear). That opacity means your kid cannot tell if a mod in the Discord or in-game is actually empowered to act, or if they are just a badge with no teeth.
Horror floors with no content warnings
Some random floors are horror sequences: jumpscares, chase mechanics, dark mazes. There is no way to filter those out before the elevator doors open. If your kid is sensitive to sudden scares, this game will catch them off guard at least once per session.
Parent takeaway
Regretevator is a well-loved chaos machine with layered spending traps and forced stranger chat every single round. Lock down chat and messaging, set a monthly Robux cap that accounts for the 30 Robux death fee, and tell your kid the Discord is off-limits until you have read the server rules yourself.
Read the full Regretevator [ ELEVATOR SIMULATOR ] parent guide on Roblox Ready