Be a Lucky Block Routes Guide
Choose the route that matches your actual build instead of forcing long runs that lower overall efficiency.
Routes are tied to bases, and bases are tied to speed thresholds. The rule is simple: run the longest route your speed can reliably complete, because longer routes pull from better brainrot pools and apply mutation bonuses more effectively. Short Starter Base loops are stable but cap out early; Diamond and Void routes are high-variance but exponentially more rewarding once your speed and block support them.
- Starter Base (speed 18+) is optimal for brand-new players or for stability farming on a fresh rebirth — it completes fast, keeps drops predictable, and avoids the risk of failing a long route with a weak block equipped.
- Candy Base (speed 40+) becomes the default midgame route once you have a Fairy Block (2x) or Freezy Block (3x) equipped. Candy mutation (+50%) makes this the first event window worth actively farming.
- Gold Base (speed 55+) with Gold mutation (+100%) is where midgame income really accelerates — if your speed is 55+ and you have a Lava Block (4x) or better, this route should be your primary grind target between mutation windows.
- Diamond Base (speed 70+) is the crossover point where long routes start paying off. Diamond mutation (+150%) on a long Diamond route with a Void Block (6x) equipped can yield S-tier brainrot pulls that short routes almost never produce.
- Void Base (speed 85+) is high-risk, high-return. If you cannot complete a Void route reliably (dying before the end), your effective luck is lower than someone at speed 70 running Diamond consistently — do not force Void until your speed comfortably clears the threshold.
- Devilivion's Base is event-dependent and unlocks the Devil Lucky Block (1.5x bonus) once you collect all 5 Devil brainrots. It is not a permanent route but a one-time event reward path worth completing during the Devil Event window.
FAQ
Why split strategy into multiple guide pages?
Players search for mechanics separately, so each page focuses on one progression problem.
Are these guides based on exact formulas?
They are based on the current planning dataset and should be refined as more live values are collected.
What should I read after a guide page?
Usually the calculator, codes page, or a related list page that supports the same decision.