Plain-English definitions for every term you'll see on a robruh listing card or in a Roblox-account thread elsewhere on the internet. Each entry links back to whichever category page it's most relevant to, so you can jump from definition to current stock in one click.
RAP
Also: Recent Average Price
Roblox's running average of recent sale prices for a given limited item. Each limited has its own RAP that updates as new trades happen. An account's total RAP is the sum across every limited it owns. We surface the total on item-user listing cards so you can compare the asking price to the on-account inventory at trade-ladder value.
Used loosely to mean an old, established Roblox account — typically one created in 2007–2010 with a clean username, real history, and badges that newer accounts can't earn. Buyers and sellers throw the word around constantly; on robruh it usually shows up as shorthand for 2007/2008 join-date accounts and rare-name accounts that have been continuously held since registration.
A Roblox catalog item with a capped quantity that can be traded between accounts. Limiteds have RAP, can rise and fall in value, and are the entire reason the trade economy exists. Headless Horseman, Korblox Deathspeaker, dominus hats, valks, and most offsale collectibles are all limiteds. Buying an item-user account from us gets you the limiteds attached to it; you can keep them, transfer them to your main, or sell them for Robux.
The Headless Horseman package — specifically the head — is one of the most coveted limiteds in Roblox history. Originally released around Halloween 2013 for 31,337 Robux, it's been out of circulation for years. Owning a headless account is a strong status signal because the head visually removes the avatar's head, making the player obviously distinct in any game lobby. High-RAP item-user accounts often have headless attached.
The Korblox Deathspeaker package — specifically the leg pack — pairs with headless as one of the iconic high-status looks on Roblox. Deathspeaker legs replace the avatar's legs with a glowing skeletal effect; combined with a headless head, this is the classic "trader" or "OG" look. Korblox shows up frequently on item-user accounts in our catalog.
A series of high-RAP limited hats released over the years on Roblox — Dominus Frigidus, Dominus Empyreus, Dominus Aureus, etc. Each Dominus is in the trader-tier RAP bracket, sometimes by hundreds of thousands of RAP. An account with a Dominus attached usually qualifies as a stacked item-user listing. Some Dominuses are obtainable through events; the rarest were timed catalog releases that have been gone for years.
Short for Valkyrie Helm — one of the original limited hats, originally awarded to top contestants in early Roblox events. Several variants exist (Valkyrie Helm of Empyrean Knighthood, etc.). Valks generally sit in the mid-to-high RAP range and turn up as part of stacked item-user inventories.
An automatic badge Roblox awards to accounts that have been on the platform for one full year or more. Every 2007 and 2008 join-date account has it, and the badge appears on the public profile. It's the most basic age signal Roblox exposes — but it's also the one that can't be faked or bought separately.
A username acquired after the original owner's account was deleted, banned, or closed and Roblox eventually released the name back into the registration pool. Someone watching for it claims it the moment it becomes available — the result is a fresh-account holder of a username that previously belonged to someone else, often without the original join-date or inventory history. Namesnipes can be valuable, but they're not the same as a continuously-owned OG name; pricing reflects that.
An item that's no longer available for direct purchase on the Roblox catalog. Offsale items either sold out (limited-quantity), were discontinued, or were timed releases. Once an item is offsale, the only way to get one is from another player — usually through a trade, sometimes through an account purchase. "Offsale hat" is shorthand for any catalog hat that meets this criterion.
Slang for an account safe to use as your daily main: the credentials are clean, no email is attached to a previous owner, the join date matches what was advertised, and there's no lingering recovery risk. Every account on robruh is mainable by default — that's the entire point of selling unverified.
An account with no email address attached. This is the safest state for a buyer to receive a Roblox account in — there's no recovery hook tied to a previous owner, so once you put your own email on it and change the password, the account is locked to you. Every robruh listing is sold unverified.
Slang for an account with substantial inventory — usually limiteds, RAP, or rare collectibles. "Stacked" implies the account has more on it than the average listing in its tier; you'll see the term used in Discord and trade threads to flag a listing worth a deeper look. On robruh, the item-users category is the stacked tier.
Slang for stealing or tricking ownership of a Roblox account, usually via phishing, social engineering, or compromising a recovery email. Beamed accounts are stolen accounts — Roblox can and does reverse them when the original owner reports the theft, which is why nobody serious in the trade space buys or sells beamed inventory. We don't list, source, or knowingly sell beamed accounts. Anything that looks beamed gets refused at intake. Mentioning the term here so buyers know what to avoid elsewhere.
RAP loss
Also: RAP loss trade, taking a RAP loss
When you trade a higher-RAP item for a lower-RAP item or items. Traders sometimes accept RAP loss in exchange for items they consider undervalued by the RAP system. Relevant when buying an item-user account: the listed RAP is point-in-time, and the underlying value can shift if you take a deliberate RAP loss to consolidate inventory.
Trade ladder
Also: Ladder, trader ladder
Informal hierarchy of what trades fairly for what in the Roblox limiteds market, maintained by trading communities and reflected in tools like Rolimon's. Trade ladder values often differ from RAP because RAP is backward-looking (recent sales) while ladder values reflect what active traders are currently willing to accept. Useful when valuing a stacked item-user account against its stated RAP.
Roblox's paid membership. The current name is Premium; older Roblox players will know it as Builders Club (BC), Turbo Builders Club (TBC), or Outrageous Builders Club (OBC). Premium is required for trading limiteds, so most stacked item-user accounts have or have had Premium attached. You don't strictly need Premium to use a robruh account, but you do need it on at least the sending side to trade limiteds out.
Robux
Also: R$
Roblox's in-game currency. You earn Robux from selling clothing, group products, gamepasses, etc., and can spend it on catalog items, in-game purchases, and Premium. Limiteds technically settle in Robux when traded, though most large trades happen item-for-item. Robux earnings on Premium accounts can be cashed out via Roblox's DevEx program, which is why Premium-attached, item-stacked accounts have a real-world value floor beyond the RAP.
Join date
Also: Account age, registered date
The date a Roblox account was first registered. Visible on the public profile and used as the canonical age signal. 2006 is when Roblox went public, 2007 is the rarest tier most buyers will ever see, 2008 is the OG sweet spot. Every robruh listing card shows the join date so you can verify before buying.