Guide

Release and Platforms

Jujutsu Legacy is a Roblox experience, so the most reliable release and platform data comes from Roblox public APIs rather than copied wiki text. The root place ID is 15694107053 and the universe ID is 5421640482.

At research time on July 3, 2026, the live title was [DABURA] Jujutsu Legacy. The API listed the game as RPG / Action RPG, max players 6, avatar type R6, and last updated on July 2, 2026, which makes this page the identity check before trusting any route or code claim.

Jujutsu Legacy Roblox icon

Official data

These rows come from public Roblox endpoints rather than a third-party article. That matters because live Roblox game pages can change title tags, update notes, badges, player counts, and group links without a normal patch-note article. The current guide treats this table as the release baseline for all other pages.

The creator and group relationship is also important. The official group API shows Jujutsu Legacy Official owned by the same user ID as the verified creator on the game page. That gives the group link enough confidence for a player-facing source page, while still keeping Discord-only claims out of static guide copy unless they can be checked publicly.

The root place ID and universe ID solve a real Roblox problem: multiple anime RPGs can share similar names, thumbnails, or update keywords. The root place ID 15694107053 points to the playable experience, while universe ID 5421640482 groups the game-level metadata such as badges, places, visits, and the current description roster.

The update timestamp is also a freshness check. At research time the API title was [DABURA] Jujutsu Legacy and the game had been updated on July 2, 2026. That date explains why Dabura and Light Manipulation deserve update coverage, while older claims about rosters, level caps, or code rewards should be treated as stale unless they match the current API.

FieldValue
Official URLhttps://www.roblox.com/games/15694107053/Jujutsu-Legacy
Creatorkauan123ro (verified badge in API response)
Universe ID5421640482
Root place ID15694107053
GroupJujutsu Legacy Official, 21,056 members at research
Created2023-12-20
Updated2026-07-02

Places and access

The Roblox places API lists the main Jujutsu Legacy place and a second place named The Strongest Raid. This matters for a wiki because raid pages should not be invented from search snippets; a separate place exists, but route mechanics still need in-game or official board confirmation before detailed raid claims are added.

The site links players back to the official Roblox page instead of embedding launch buttons that can become stale. Roblox handles device compatibility, account checks, age-verified social links, and server selection.

For SEO, this page keeps technical IDs visible because players and site operators use them to distinguish lookalike Jujutsu Roblox experiences. The root place ID, universe ID, and official group owner are more reliable than a thumbnail or a copied description when several games share similar anime-inspired names.

A second place is not enough to publish a full raid guide. A useful raid page needs entry steps, reward table, boss or wave structure, repeatability, and any level or item gate. Until those fields are public or tested, the correct player-facing move is to record the place and link it to the broader source ledger instead of creating a thin raid page.

For players, the practical takeaway is simple: use Release and Platforms to confirm you are reading the right game, then move back into Codes, Quest Route, Boss Drops, or Techniques for actual decisions. The page is a verification layer, not a launch hub designed to send users away from the guide.

Platform checks before trusting a guide

Check the title first. If a guide discusses the Dabura update but the game title, badges, or current technique roster do not mention the same update window, the guide may be mixing old and new data. The live title is the fastest signal because Roblox updates can change visible page text before third-party articles refresh.

Check the roster second. The current description lists 23 techniques and 5 vessels, so any page claiming a different active roster should either cite a newer source or be treated as outdated. Roster mismatch is especially dangerous before spending spins because a player can chase a technique or vessel that is not currently visible in the public description.

Check badges third. Badge descriptions do not give full mechanics, but they can expose fresh drop names and rarity language. The current badge set is why Light Manipulation, Ten Shadows V2, Heian Shrine, and Mythical Beast Amber V2 are discussed differently from plain roster techniques.

Check places last. A place can exist before the guide community has mapped the mechanics. The Strongest Raid is recorded because it appears in Roblox place data, but the site does not turn that into a raid guide until rewards, entry path, and repeat rules are available. This prevents the release page from becoming a doorway to unsupported pages.

These checks also reduce accidental coverage of the wrong Roblox game. Anime-inspired Roblox titles often share character names, update phrases, and thumbnails. Stable IDs, creator ownership, and the current roster are harder to fake than a copied title, so they should be checked before using any off-site claim to plan a grind.

How to use the IDs

Use the root place ID when you are checking whether a link launches the correct playable experience. Use the universe ID when you are checking broader metadata such as badges, visit totals, place list, and current public description. Those two IDs are related but not interchangeable, and mixing them can lead to wrong API results.

Use the creator and group fields as a trust check. The current data ties the verified creator name to Jujutsu Legacy Official, which is stronger than relying on a thumbnail or a copied description. If another page points to a different owner or group without explaining why, treat that page as a possible lookalike source.

Use the update date as the freshness gate. For static guides, anything written before the July 2026 Dabura update should be checked against the current roster and badge set before it influences spins, boss farming, or route planning. A guide can still be useful after an update, but only if the field it discusses has not changed.

What not to infer

Do not infer a complete update guide from the title alone. [DABURA] tells you the update theme, but it does not list every mechanic, move, boss route, or drop condition. The title is a freshness clue that should send you to the roster, badges, and source tables for confirmation.

Do not infer platform availability beyond Roblox from generic search snippets. The experience is a Roblox game, so account access, device behavior, private servers, and social links are handled by Roblox. This site records the relevant IDs and gameplay tables; it does not replace Roblox account or launch flows.

Do not infer that every place deserves a public guide. The Strongest Raid appears in place data, but a proper raid page needs tested entry steps and rewards. Recording the place here keeps the fact discoverable without creating an indexable page that would disappoint players looking for mechanics.

Do not infer that visit or favorite counts prove a guide page is fresh. Those numbers change over time and are useful for game identity, not for code validity or drop rates. For player decisions, current code dates, Trello rows, and badge descriptions are more actionable than popularity counters.