✅ Last Updated: June 2026 | Verified this week
Would You Rather Tower is a Roblox tower obby by the verified solo dev AlyanaSaun where up to 32 players climb a vertical tower broken into floor-by-floor would-you-rather choices. Each floor presents two options, and the pick decides which obstacle path you run next, so instead of one fixed route the climb is part platforming and part decision. One choice might send you across a narrow beam run while the other drops you into a jump-pad section, and the lobby splits across the two paths on every floor on the way to the top. The 32-player cap keeps the climb busy without choking the choices, and the difficulty curve ramps from forgiving early floors to tighter obstacle runs higher up.
The game launched on Roblox in January 2026 and has crossed 46.2 million visits with 54.9 thousand favorites in its first few months. AlyanaSaun carries a verified badge on the dev profile, which is a strong signal for kid-friendly content and steady moderation, and ships fresh floors and new would-you-rather prompts on a regular cadence that keeps the climb from going stale on a fixed set of choices. This wiki covers how to play, the tower layout, the choice-reading tactics, the most useful tips for new players, and the most-asked questions, plus links to the codes and scripts pages at the bottom.
Would You Rather Tower Overview
| Would You Rather Tower Overview |
| Game Name |
Would You Rather Tower |
| Developer |
AlyanaSaun (verified user) |
| Genre |
Obby / Tower Obby / Platformer |
| Platform |
Roblox (PC, Mobile, Console) |
| Max Players |
32 |
| Release |
January 2026 |
How to Play Would You Rather Tower
- Open Would You Rather Tower on Roblox and wait for the tower lobby to load. The first time in, you spawn at the base of the tower with the other climbers and a clear view of the first floor’s two would-you-rather options.
- Read both options on each floor before you commit. Each floor shows two paths, the two choices usually trade a shorter-but-tighter route against a longer-but-safer one, and a quick read of which obstacle run sits behind each option saves a fall on floors you have not learned yet.
- Pick the path that matches your platforming comfort. The lobby splits across the two choices on every floor, but the popular pick is not always the easier one, so choose the obstacle type you clear most reliably whether that is beam runs, jump pads, or timed gaps.
- Watch other climbers run the path you did not take. Because the lobby splits across both options, there are usually players on the other path at the same time, and watching where they fall teaches you which choice is the safer one next time that floor comes up.
- Take the climb in steady sections rather than rushing. The floors get tighter near the top and the choices get trickier as the obstacle runs stack up, so a steady pace through the lower floors banks the rhythm you need for the harder choices higher up.
- Reach the top floor to finish the climb. The top of the tower is the win, a clean run rewards the choice-reading you built on the way up, and every new attempt gets easier as you learn which option is the safer pick on each floor.
Would You Rather Tower Gameplay: The Tower, the Choices, and the Climb
The tower climb is the heart of Would You Rather Tower. Up to 32 climbers spawn at the base of a vertical tower and work their way up floor by floor, but the twist that sets it apart from a standard obby is that each floor is a would-you-rather choice. Rather than a single fixed route, every floor offers two options, and the pick decides which obstacle path you run next.
One option might be a narrow beam run that is short but unforgiving, while the other is a jump-pad section that is longer but more forgiving, so the climb is a steady mix of reading the two choices and committing to the path you think you can clear. The dev ships fresh floors and new would-you-rather prompts on a regular cadence, which keeps the route reading fresh rather than going stale on a fixed layout.
The choice mechanic is what makes the climb social. Because the 32-player lobby splits across the two options on every floor, there are always climbers on both paths at the same time, and that turns each floor into a shared talking point as players compare which side was the easier clear.
The smart way to read a floor is to look at both obstacle runs before you commit, weigh the shorter-but-tighter option against the longer-but-safer one, and pick based on your own platforming comfort rather than on which path the crowd takes. Watching where climbers on the other path fall is the fastest way to learn which choice is the safer pick for the next time that floor comes up, so the lobby itself doubles as a scouting tool.
The win condition is reaching the top floor of the tower. A clean run rewards the choice-reading you built on the way up, the floors get tighter and the choices get trickier as the obstacle runs stack up near the top, and every new attempt gets easier as you learn which would-you-rather option is the safer pick on each floor.
The 32-player cap keeps the climb busy without choking the choices, the early floors stay forgiving enough for new climbers to find their footing, and AlyanaSaun carries a verified badge on the dev profile, which is a strong signal for moderation and content stability. The freebie path runs through the in-game climb itself, the floor-by-floor progress, and the favorite bonus on the game page rather than through a code drop.
Tips for New Would You Rather Tower Players
- Read both would-you-rather options before you commit on each floor. The two choices usually trade a shorter-but-tighter route against a longer-but-safer one, and a quick read of the obstacle run behind each option saves a fall on the floors you have not learned yet.
- Pick the obstacle type you clear most reliably, not the path the crowd takes. The lobby splits across both choices, but the popular pick is not always the easier one, so choose the beam run, jump-pad, or timed-gap style you handle best.
- Watch climbers on the path you did not take. Because the lobby splits across both options, there are usually players on the other path at the same time, and watching where they fall teaches you which choice is the safer one next time that floor comes up.
- Take the climb in steady sections rather than rushing the whole tower. The floors get tighter near the top and the choices get trickier as the obstacle runs stack up, so a steady pace through the lower floors banks the rhythm you need for the harder choices.
- Learn the floors through repetition. The would-you-rather floors repeat across attempts, so the more you climb the faster you recognize which option is the safer pick on each floor, which is how the tower gets easier over time without any paid help.
- Hit Favorite on the game page so the next floor drop splash pings your feed. AlyanaSaun posts new floors and prompts to the game page first, the Favorite hit lines you up to catch them, and it is free.
Would You Rather Tower FAQ
What kind of game is Would You Rather Tower?
Would You Rather Tower is a Roblox tower obby by the verified solo dev AlyanaSaun. Up to 32 players climb a vertical tower broken into floor-by-floor would-you-rather choices, where each pick decides which obstacle path you run next. The win condition is reaching the top of the tower, and the game launched in January 2026.
Who made Would You Rather Tower?
Would You Rather Tower was made by AlyanaSaun on Roblox, a verified-badge solo dev. The dev profile ships fresh floors and new would-you-rather prompts on a regular cadence, and the focus is tower obby difficulty and choice variety rather than freebie marketing beats.
How does the would-you-rather choice work in Would You Rather Tower?
Each floor of the tower presents two would-you-rather options, and the pick decides which obstacle path you run next. One option might be a short but tight beam run while the other is a longer but safer jump-pad section, so the smart play is reading both runs before you commit and choosing the obstacle type you clear most reliably. The 32-player lobby splits across both paths, so you can watch the other choice play out at the same time.
Is Would You Rather Tower free to play?
Yes, Would You Rather Tower is free to play on Roblox and works on PC, mobile, and console. Lobbies cap at 32 players, which keeps the climb busy without choking the choices. There may be paid options inside the game, but the in-game tower climb and the would-you-rather floors run without spending a Robux.
Are there codes for Would You Rather Tower?
No, the dev has not added a code redemption box to the in-game menus yet. The win side of the game runs on the in-game climb to the top rather than on a code drop. We check the AlyanaSaun profile and the in-lobby splash text every week, and the moment a Redeem Code box appears in the in-game menus, the first working code lands on the Would You Rather Tower Codes page the same day.