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Weekend Playbook Friday, May 29, 2026

Best Roblox Games to Play This Weekend — May 2026 Playbook

Your May 2026 weekend Roblox playbook is here. From Brookhaven's latest home update to RIVALS Season 3 duels and the forest horror of 99 Nights, here's exactly what to load up this weekend.

Best Roblox Games to Play This Weekend — May 2026 Playbook

The Best Roblox Games to Play This Weekend in May 2026

With nearly 574K people already in Brookhaven as you're reading this, the weekend rush is clearly underway. May 2026 has been a stacked month — new seasons, horror spikes, and a couple of wildcard games that nobody saw coming — and this weekend in particular has some very good reasons to clear your Saturday afternoon. Here's everything worth loading up right now, ranked by who's actually playing.


#1 Brookhaven 🏡RP

Brookhaven just dropped two new modern homes — both with courtyards and what the update describes as "unique design" — plus seven new props for exterior and interior styling. If you've been sitting on a half-finished build waiting for the right aesthetic pieces, this update is probably the nudge you needed. With 573,779 players on at peak, servers fill fast, so either grab a private server (prop saving and admin tools are genuinely worth it here) or jump in early.

This is a solo-or-duo game at heart, though squads of three or four can pull off some genuinely creative RP scenarios if everyone's on the same page. The new props are the main draw right now — they're the kind of modern-minimalist stuff that was missing before. Watch out for public servers getting cluttered with random prop spam that kills the vibe of any serious build.

Verdict: If you're a builder or a regular RPer, the new home update alone makes this weekend worth logging in.


#2 [🛻] Adopt Me!

Adopt Me! is mid-Summer Camp arc right now — you're helping a truck along a tour route, earning Compass Coins, and working toward the Bison and cowboy-themed pet wear. It's a solid event structure: enough daily tasks to keep you coming back without demanding your entire weekend. At 301,216 concurrent players and over 29 million favorites, the trading scene stays active around the clock, which matters if you're hunting specific pets.

Best played with at least one friend — trading is smoother when you have a trusted partner, and the Summer Camp quests feel more worth doing when you're doing them together. Expect the Bison to become a mid-tier trade commodity within a week or two once the event window closes, so if you want it for keeps rather than trade value, grab it now. Solo players can absolutely grind Compass Coins fine, but the fun-per-hour goes up noticeably with company.

Verdict: The Summer Camp event has a clear expiry date, so this weekend is genuinely one of the better windows to knock out the rewards.


#3 RIVALS

Season 3 — the Fame Season — is live, and the patch notes are in-game rather than published externally, which means you'll want to load in just to read what changed. The core loop is still 1v1 to 5v5 FPS duels where first to five wins, but new contracts and the updated weapon unlock system through keys give this season more to chase than just your win streak. At 295,462 players and a 94.1% approval rating, it's the highest-rated competitive shooter on this list by a margin.

Duo and squad formats (up to 5v5) are where RIVALS really opens up — the 1v1 pad is great for warming up or settling arguments, but the team modes have way more variance and comeback potential. Contracts are the thing to focus on right now: they're the fastest path to exclusive rewards before the season rotates. Watch out for the leaderboard grinders in public lobbies — if you're newer, stick to arranged matches with friends until your mechanics are sharp.

Verdict: Season 3 is the best version of RIVALS yet; if you've been sleeping on it, this weekend is the time to start.


#4 99 Nights in the Forest 🔦

The description for this game is three sentences long and that's intentional. You build a camp with friends. Something is watching you. At 236,343 players and 90.5% approval, it's clearly doing something right without explaining itself — which is kind of the whole vibe. The horror here is atmospheric and slow-building rather than jumpscare-heavy, and it rewards groups who actually communicate instead of just running off in separate directions.

Squads of three to four are the sweet spot. Going solo is technically possible but significantly less fun and significantly more unsettling (again, intentional). Best when your group is actually using voice chat or at least staying in proximity — the tension collapses if people scatter. The 25-player max cap keeps servers from becoming chaotic, which is part of why the atmosphere holds up.

Verdict: The best horror-adjacent group experience on Roblox right now, and a perfect Saturday night game.


#5 [BLACK DEATH] Jujutsu Shenanigans

The BLACK DEATH update is the current patch, and if you know Jujutsu Kaisen you already have a rough idea of what's in here. The combat system runs off M1 combos, four skills, a dash, block, and an awakening — it's not complicated to pick up but has enough depth that mastering a moveset takes real time. Destruction physics are a big part of the appeal; the environment actually responds to fights in a way that feels satisfying rather than decorative.

This is a duo-or-squad game where you and your crew mess around, chain combos on each other, and figure out new tech. The 20-player server cap keeps matches from becoming a complete mess. Watch out for players who've clearly sunk hours into specific character kits — the skill gap between a fresh player and someone who knows their awakening timing is steep. That said, the chaos of a full lobby is half the fun.

Verdict: If your friend group likes fighting games and anime, this is the one to pull up this weekend.


#6 Blox Fruits

Blox Fruits has a level cap of 2800 and a fruit roster that's genuinely enormous at this point — enough content that whether you're a returning player or grinding your first account, there's always a next thing. The current draw is the full open-world sail-and-boss-fight loop, which holds up well for weekend sessions when you have a few hours rather than twenty minutes.

Best with one dedicated partner who's at a similar progression point — the 12-player max per server is low compared to the rest of this list, which keeps the boss farming from getting too contested. Expect other players to camp popular boss spawns during peak hours this weekend; early morning or late night sessions are less competitive if you're trying to actually grind. Solo is fine for questing but the boss fights are noticeably more fun with someone else.

Verdict: A reliable weekend grind with enough new-player and veteran content to justify loading in regardless of where you left off.


#7 Slime RNG

Slime RNG has a 98.2% approval rating on 702,056 votes — that's not a typo, it's just genuinely very well-liked. The loop is exactly what it sounds like: roll for rare slimes, upgrade them, fight enemy slimes, unlock new worlds. It's the kind of idle-adjacent game that pairs well with a call with friends or a second monitor. Playing with others gives you a luck bonus, which makes the multiplayer framing feel purposeful rather than tacked on.

Perfect for a duo or small group who wants something low-stakes to chat over. Best when you treat it as a background hang rather than a focused session — the satisfaction comes from occasionally hitting a rare roll, not constant active play. The 10-player server cap makes it feel chill rather than crowded. Watch out for it eating more time than expected; the world unlock progression has a sneaky "one more roll" quality to it.

Verdict: The chill pick of the week — great for a voice call or when you want something on while doing something else.


#8 +1 Speed Keyboard Escape | Candy & Chocolate

Every step you take gives you +1 Speed. The floors are candy and chocolate keyboard keys. The sounds are described as ASMR. This game is exactly as unhinged as it sounds, and somehow has a 98.2% approval rating on nearly 2.75 million votes. It's a speed-runner at its core — you're racing against up to 21 other players to become the fastest on the server, with the catch that one wrong move resets your progress.

This is a full-lobby game — more players means more chaos and better competition. The tension between building speed and not falling is simple but genuinely effective as a party game. Expect lobbies to fill quickly on weekends, especially with kids who've never seen it before discovering it. Best when you're competitive about leaderboard placement; if you're just vibing, you might lose interest before you've built up enough speed to feel properly fast.

Verdict: A wildcard that's surprisingly hard to put down once you've built up real speed — worth a look even if it sounds too simple.


This Weekend's Playbook: Who Should Play What

For builders and RPers: Brookhaven's new homes and props are the move — jump in early before public servers get messy.

For competitive players: RIVALS Season 3 is the best it's ever been; get into contracts before the season ends.

For groups who want something tense: 99 Nights in the Forest with three to four friends on voice chat — ideally Saturday night.

For anime fans: [BLACK DEATH] Jujutsu Shenanigans is peak chaos in the best way, especially with people who already know the source material.

For something low-key: Slime RNG for a duo hang, or +1 Speed Keyboard Escape if you want something everyone in the call can jump into with zero explanation.

For ongoing progression: Blox Fruits and [🛻] Adopt Me! both have live events and long-term hooks — worth time this weekend even if just to knock out event rewards before they rotate out.

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Stats were pulled from the Roblox public API on publish day and may have shifted since.

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