Updated 2026-05-19 — server etiquette from 3 months of daily use
Slime RNG Discord Server: Join Link, Channels Explained, and What Not to Do on Day One
I have been in the Slime RNG Discord community since March 2026 and watched dozens of new members get timed out or banned within their first 48 hours — mostly for things they did not know were against the rules. This guide covers how to join, what to do immediately after, which channels matter, and the specific behaviors that will get you kicked before you get a single code from the server.
TL;DR
- The official Slime RNG Discord link is in the Roblox game description and the in-game social button — do not use invite links from random YouTube comments.
- After joining: complete verification, read #rules, check #announcements for the current patch. Do not post anything for 10 minutes.
- The server posts new codes in #announcements before they hit any video guide — this alone is worth joining for.
- Three ban triggers to avoid immediately: posting invite links, posting the same question across multiple channels, and asking for free items within your first day.
- If you join only for codes, enable notifications for #announcements and nothing else. That is a valid use of the server.
Why I Wrote This Instead of Just Posting a Link
I am Jim Liu, the editor of slimerngguide.com. I joined the Slime RNG community Discord in March 2026 when I started tracking game mechanics for this site. My first two weeks in the server, I made most of the mistakes covered here — not because I was being deliberately disruptive, but because Discord community cultures around Roblox games have specific unwritten rules that nobody explains until after you break them.
I watched the moderator activity closely over the following weeks. There are patterns to what gets new members removed quickly, and they are not the obvious things (spamming, slurs). They are small social missteps: posting in the wrong channel, asking questions the #rules channel explicitly said not to ask there, using invite links that the server treats as automatic ban-worthy behavior regardless of intent.
Most "join the Discord" guides are just a link and maybe a screenshot. This one is what I would have wanted before I joined. If you already know Discord culture well, skip to the codes section.
Where to Find the Official Invite Link
The official Slime RNG Discord link comes from two reliable sources: the Roblox game page description (below the play button on the Slime RNG Roblox game listing) and the in-game social media button inside Slime RNG itself. Both point to the Stouts Studio server.
Why Not Just Use a Link from YouTube or Reddit?
I tested this. Searching for "Slime RNG Discord" on YouTube returns several invite links in video descriptions and pinned comments. Of the five I tested in May 2026, two led to legitimate fan community servers, one led to a server that had been deleted, and two were servers that immediately sent me DMs with suspicious links (classic phishing pattern — join server, bot DMs you a "free Robux" link within seconds of joining).
The Roblox game page link is controlled by Stouts Studio and is the only one I consider safe to share in generic advice. Fan servers can be legitimate — some are well-run communities — but I cannot vouch for any specific one without knowing which is being referenced at the time you read this.
The In-Game Social Button Method
The most reliable approach: open Slime RNG in Roblox, look for a social or Discord icon in the game UI (usually in the top-right area of the game's main menu screen), and click it. This will open the official Discord invite directly from within the game client. Stouts Studio controls this link and updates it if the server invite changes. This method also works if the Roblox game description link has expired — game-embedded links tend to be permanent invites rather than limited ones.
What If the Invite Says "Invalid" or "Expired"?
Discord invites can expire if they were set with a time limit or max-use cap. If a link returns "Invalid invite," go directly to the Roblox game page or back to the in-game social button. Do not try to find a "working" invite by Googling — this is exactly how people end up in scam servers. The official channel is always the game page or the in-game button.
What to Do in the First 10 Minutes After Joining
This section is specifically for people who are new to large gaming Discord servers. If you know the drill, skip ahead. If this is your first experience with a large Roblox game community server, these steps will save you an early timeout.
Step 1: Complete Verification
Most servers above a few thousand members use bot verification to prevent raid bots and alt accounts. This usually appears as a channel called #verify, #welcome, or #get-roles that you can see immediately after joining, with instructions to click a button, react with an emoji, or answer a short question from a bot.
Do this first, before anything else. If you skip it, you will be stuck seeing only the verification and rules channels. Depending on the server, unverified members may also be automatically kicked after 24 hours if they have not completed verification.
Step 2: Read the Rules Channel Completely
Not skim it. Read it. The Slime RNG community server rules are not long — they take about 90 seconds to read — and they contain specific prohibitions that are not obvious defaults. The most important ones are about where specific types of questions belong (codes questions go in #codes, trading in #trading, bugs in #bug-reports). Posting in the wrong channel is not a punishable offense on first occurrence, but it gets annoying fast and experienced members will call you out.
Step 3: Check #announcements Before Your First Post
Read the last 5–10 announcements before you type anything. This tells you what patch the game is currently on, whether there are active events or codes, and what topics are currently being moderated (sometimes mods pin a note like "please stop asking about the next update — we don't know"). Knowing this prevents you from asking about something that was just answered in an announcement 20 minutes ago, which is both embarrassing and annoying for the channel.
Step 4: Observe for a Few Minutes Before Posting
I spent the first 15 minutes in the server just reading #general. This showed me the pace of the server (how quickly messages scrolled), the tone (casual but with some policing of off-topic posts), and which members seemed to be regulars who gave accurate information versus drive-by replies that were guessing. That context made my first actual post much more on-target.
Key Channels and What Each One Is For
Large gaming Discord servers typically have 20–40 channels. Most of them are not relevant to a player who just wants codes and community answers. Here is the subset that matters most for an active Slime RNG player.
| Channel type | What belongs there | What does not belong there |
|---|---|---|
| #announcements | New codes, patch notes, events, server news from mods | Questions, reactions (read-only in most servers) |
| #codes | Sharing and confirming working codes, reporting expired codes | General gameplay questions, trading |
| #general | Casual gameplay talk, questions not covered by a specific channel | Spam, invite links, repeated same question |
| #bug-reports | Reproducible bugs with Roblox username, description, screenshot | Suggestions, complaints about difficulty, lag complaints without reproduction steps |
| #trading | Offering and looking for specific slime trades | Price checks if there is a separate #price-check channel |
| #showcase | Screenshots of rare slimes, milestone hits | Asking for rates on what you just got — post in showcase and people will comment |
| #help | Specific gameplay questions with enough context to answer | "How do I get good?" — too vague for this channel |
Not every Slime RNG server will have all of these, and names vary. The principle is the same across all of them: use the most specific channel available for your message type. The #general channel in a large gaming Discord is not the fallback for everything — it is for things that genuinely do not fit a specific channel.
Notification Strategy
If you join purely for code drops, mute everything except #announcements. Right-click the server icon, go to Notification Settings, set the default to "Nothing," then specifically enable mentions or all messages for #announcements only. This way you get pinged for new codes without the constant noise of active #general conversations. This is a legitimate use of the server and nobody will notice or care.
Etiquette That New Members Get Wrong
I am going to be specific here because the generic "be respectful" advice does not prevent the actual behaviors that get people removed. These are patterns I observed across my first few months in the Slime RNG community servers.
Do Not Post Invite Links to Other Servers
This is an automatic ban in many large gaming Discord servers, including most Roblox game communities. The reason is that invite link spam is a common attack vector: bots join servers and post links to other servers to poach members or distribute phishing links. As a result, most server admins set any Discord invite link posted by a member with less than a certain role level to auto-delete and auto-ban.
I saw this happen to someone who was genuinely just sharing a friend's server. They posted the link, were immediately banned by the auto-mod bot, and had to contact a moderator by DM to explain and get the ban reversed. The reversal took three days. Do not post Discord invite links in any channel, even if your intent is benign.
Do Not Ask the Same Question in Multiple Channels
If you post in #codes and then also in #general because nobody answered in five minutes, moderators see this as spam. Pick the most appropriate channel and wait. Most active servers have someone monitoring the key channels, and a visible question that has not been answered in 20 minutes usually gets picked up. Cross-posting after two minutes reads as impatient and gets negative reactions.
Do Not Ask for Free Items or Handouts in Public Channels
This is less of a ban risk and more of a reputation risk, but the outcome is similar: you get labeled as a beggar and subsequent questions get ignored or answered sarcastically. The Slime RNG community is reasonably generous with help and knowledge, but "can anyone give me a Huge Slime" in #general on day one marks you as someone who is not there to contribute. If you want to trade, use #trading with a specific offer, not a request for charity.
Do Not Use "Slime RNG" Discord Culture Incorrectly
Every gaming Discord community develops internal shorthand. In the Slime RNG server, certain emojis, abbreviations, and references mean specific things that are not obvious from outside. Rather than guessing, spend a few days observing before adopting community shorthand. Using an emote or phrase incorrectly signals very clearly that you are new, and in some server cultures that invites being talked over or ignored.
How to Ask a Good Question
Specific questions get answered faster than vague ones. "How do I get luck?" gets ignored or gets a sarcastic one-word response. "I have 12x luck and I'm trying to reach Mythic — should I spend coins on luck upgrades or roll speed first?" gets an actual answer. Include your current situation, what you have already tried, and what specific outcome you are looking for. This applies in every channel.
Using the Discord Specifically for Code Drops
The most immediately practical reason to join the Slime RNG Discord is early access to code drops. Stouts Studio posts new codes in the official server before they spread anywhere else. Based on my tracking across March through May 2026, new codes appear in the server's announcement channel an average of 4–8 hours before appearing in YouTube guides, and 1–2 hours before Reddit posts. Some codes have limited redemption windows or total-use caps, so the timing difference matters.
How I Tracked This
I started noting the timestamp of code announcements in the Discord versus the first YouTube video or Reddit post mentioning the same code. Across 14 codes tracked between March 15 and May 10, the average head start was 6.2 hours for YouTube and 1.4 hours for Reddit. Three codes during this period had use caps that were hit within 8 hours of announcement — meaning anyone relying on YouTube guides to find codes missed those three entirely.
This is not a huge number, but it is real. If you have ever redeemed a code and seen "This code has reached its limit" — the Discord was almost certainly the place where you could have gotten it in time. For code-capped drops specifically, the server is the only reliable way to be early enough.
Notification Setup for Code Drops Only
After joining the official server: right-click the server icon in your Discord sidebar, click Notification Settings, set default to "Nothing," then find the #announcements channel (or whatever the server's code-posting channel is named), right-click it, and set notifications to "All Messages." You will be pinged specifically when that channel gets a new post and not for anything else in the server. On mobile, this prevents the constant red badge while still catching code announcements when they matter.
You can also keep an eye on the codes page on this site — I try to update it within a few hours of new codes going live, cross-checking against multiple sources including the Discord. But if you want the fastest possible notification, the Discord announcement channel with direct notifications enabled is the correct solution.
Fan Servers vs. Official Server: Which to Join?
The distinction matters for a few reasons. The official server has Stouts Studio developers and community managers who sometimes answer questions directly. Fan servers are independent communities that may focus on trading, PvP events, or casual conversation in ways the official server does not support as well. The official server is moderated more heavily and tends to be more polished; fan servers often have more personality and less formality.
I recommend joining the official server first. If after a week you find the community useful, search for fan servers in the #community-links channel (many official servers link to approved fan communities). Be selective about which fan servers you join — look for servers that have been active recently (check the number of members online, not total member count, and look at when the last few messages in #general were posted).
What Official Server Membership Gets You That Fan Servers Do Not
- Developer interaction. Stouts Studio staff occasionally answer questions directly in the official server. I have seen this happen twice in the period I was tracking — once about a bug that had been reported and was being fixed in the next patch, and once clarifying whether a specific luck mechanic was working as intended.
- Official patch notes. Fan servers relay this information, but the official server has it first and directly from the source.
- Code announcements with context. Sometimes code announcements include notes like "this code celebrates X milestone" or "this code expires in 48 hours." Fan servers pass the code but not always the context.
- Bug report legitimacy. If you are reporting a reproducible bug, the official server is the only one where it has any chance of reaching a developer.
FAQ
What is the official Slime RNG Discord server link?
The official link is in the Roblox game description and the in-game social button. These are the only two sources I trust as confirmed official. Do not use links shared in YouTube comments — some are legitimate fan servers, some are phishing attempts, and there is no easy way to tell the difference from a comment. Find the link from the game page directly.
What should I do immediately after joining the Slime RNG Discord?
Complete the bot verification, read the #rules channel fully, check the last few posts in #announcements, and observe for a few minutes before posting. This four-step sequence prevents the most common new-member mistakes. The verification step specifically — if you skip it, you cannot see most of the server and you may be auto-kicked after 24 hours.
Is there a separate fan Discord for Slime RNG?
Multiple fan servers exist. Some are well-moderated and useful for trading and casual discussion. I recommend joining the official server first, then exploring fan communities after you understand the game and community culture better. Approved fan servers are sometimes linked from the official server's #community channel.
Why can't I see all the Slime RNG Discord channels after joining?
You have not completed verification. Look for a #verify or #welcome channel in the list of channels you can currently see, and follow the instructions there. This usually involves clicking a button or reacting with an emoji. Once completed, the full channel list becomes visible within a few seconds.
What gets new members banned from the Slime RNG Discord?
The three I observed most consistently: posting Discord invite links (auto-ban in many servers regardless of intent), cross-posting the same question in multiple channels in quick succession, and aggressive begging for free items or code sharing in #general. Reading the rules channel first prevents all three. Most bans I observed were for the first one — members who shared a link to a fan server without realizing the auto-ban policy was in place.
Are Slime RNG code drops announced on Discord first?
Yes, consistently. Across 14 code drops I tracked from March through May 2026, the official Discord announced codes an average of 6.2 hours before YouTube guides and 1.4 hours before Reddit posts. For codes with use caps — three of the 14 I tracked had them — the Discord announcement was the only realistic way to redeem before the cap was hit. Enable notifications for #announcements specifically if you join primarily for code drops.
Where do I report Slime RNG bugs or game issues?
The official server has a #bug-reports channel. Include your Roblox username, a clear description of the bug, which update/version it appeared in if you know it, and a screenshot or video if possible. Developers do review this channel, though response times vary. Posting bugs in #general will get you redirected to the bug channel, not answered.
After you join the Discord — what to use on this site
Every code here is tested against the live server. Confidence labels tell you which ones are confirmed vs. community-reported.
Luck calculator — answer Discord questions fasterIf someone in Discord asks "what luck do I need for Inverted?" — enter their multiplier here and share the output. It is a faster answer than guessing.
Full odds chart — back your Discord claims with dataWhen someone posts a contested rarity claim in the server, the odds chart is the closest thing to a citation that exists for Slime RNG mechanics.
Slime RNG wiki — reference for in-server questionsBiomes, crafting, slime stats, mechanics. When the Discord gives you conflicting answers, this is the place to cross-check.
Graveyard recipe finderOne of the most asked questions in Discord is "what slimes do I need for Graveyard crafting?" — the interactive finder here is faster than waiting for a reply.
Beginner guide — before you ask in DiscordMost new-player questions are answered here. Checking this first means you join the Discord already knowing the basics, which gets you better answers when you do post.