Forsaken Videos

Watch the latest Forsaken Roblox gameplay, tutorials, and community highlights — pulled live from YouTube creators and curated by skill level and category.

Latest Videos

Trending Now

Guides & Tutorials

How to use this page

The video lists above pull live from YouTube every 24 hours, so what you see on any given visit is the current state of Forsaken creator content rather than a stale curated list that fell out of date six months ago. We filter the YouTube results to videos that actually mention “Forsaken” and either “Roblox” or “game” in the title or description, that filter drops the surprising number of YouTube videos titled “Forsaken” that turn out to be about something completely unrelated (films, music, other games), but it's not perfect. If you see a video here that looks off-topic, it's a fluke of the title/description heuristic, not a curation choice.

The three categories above (Latest Videos, Trending Now, and Guides & Tutorials) are generated from three different YouTube queries, so the same creator can appear in more than one category if their content fits both. We dedupe within and across sections so you won't see the same video twice on one page load. Videos auto-refresh every 24 hours via cached server-side fetches; the cache exists to keep the page fast and to stay within the YouTube Data API quota, not because we're trying to slow content down.

What makes a good Forsaken video

Not every video that mentions Forsaken is worth watching, especially if you're trying to actually improve your gameplay rather than just watching for entertainment. A few quick filters we use when deciding what to recommend internally and what to skip past:

Production basics that signal quality

  • The match is recent. Forsaken patches change ability cooldowns and map layouts often enough that gameplay from 6+ months ago can be teaching you mechanics that don't exist anymore. Check the upload date before you trust the strategy advice.
  • The creator names the patch version. “Updated for 4.1.0” or “recorded after the April balance patch” in the title or pinned comment is a green flag, it means the creator knows their advice is patch-dependent and is being honest about it.
  • Audio quality, framerate, and clear UI. Forsaken's readability depends on you seeing the killer's ability icons and cooldown bars. Videos that drop below 30 FPS or compress the HUD into unreadability are hard to learn from no matter how good the commentary is.
  • Specific match counts. “After 100 matches as 1x1x1x1, here's what I've learned” beats “here's how to play 1x1x1x1” every time. Specificity is a heuristic for whether the creator actually tested their claims.

Red flags to skip past

  • “Free Robux” or “working code generator” in the title or thumbnail. There is no legitimate Robux generator, there is no legitimate “working” code generator for any Roblox game, and any video claiming otherwise is funneling you to a scam survey site or a phishing page. Real working codes are documented on our monthly code lists and on the official Forsaken Twitter, never via a slick “generator” tool.
  • Massive view counts on unfamiliar channels. A 2-day-old Forsaken video with 500K views from a channel that previously only posted Minecraft content is usually clickbait or view-bot inflation. Stick with creators who have a track record posting Forsaken content over multiple months.
  • Tier lists with no patch version cited. A tier list video from August 2025 that doesn't mention the patch is teaching you a meta that's probably 3 patches stale by now.
  • Clickbait thumbnails with no payoff. The video that promises “the killer that ALWAYS escapes” and then shows generic gameplay with no specific technique demonstrated is wasting your 12 minutes.

Categories of Forsaken videos worth watching

Forsaken video content tends to cluster into a handful of distinct categories, and which ones you want to watch depends entirely on what you're trying to get out of them. Here's the rough breakdown of what creators are actually making:

  • Character mastery videos. A creator picks a single killer or survivor and plays 20-50 matches with them, then publishes a 15-30 minute breakdown. These are the highest-value videos if you're trying to learn a specific character, much better than generic “tips” compilations. Look for “After X matches” framing in the title.
  • Patch reaction and meta analysis. Within a day or two of a balance patch dropping, the better creators publish their reactions and tier-list updates. These are useful for understanding what changed, but be skeptical of day-one tier list verdicts, the actual meta usually takes a week or two to settle after a patch.
  • Map breakdowns. Walkthroughs of a specific map's generator positions, hiding spots, and chase routes. These are evergreen until the dev team modifies the map layout, which happens less often than balance patches.
  • Highlight reels and funny moments. Pure entertainment, not educational. Watch them to enjoy the game rather than to learn from them. The skills demonstrated are usually edited for highlight value, not for reproducible technique.
  • Beginner guides and onboarding videos. “Everything you need to know about Forsaken” videos aimed at new players. The good ones cover game flow, basic mechanics, and rank progression; the bad ones are 8 minutes of stretched filler trying to hit the YouTube monetization threshold.
  • Code drops. Short videos announcing new working codes. Useful in the first 24 hours after a code drops; mostly worthless after that since written code lists (like the monthly ones we publish here) are faster to scan. We document verified working codes on the blog in monthly refresh posts.

Where else to find Forsaken content

YouTube isn't the only place Forsaken creators post. The full content ecosystem includes a few other surfaces worth checking depending on what you're looking for:

  • TikTok and YouTube Shorts, the fastest place to see new bug discoveries, clutch escapes, and meme moments. Lower educational value per minute but higher signal on what's currently going viral in the community.
  • Twitch streams, for live commentary and real-time decision-making. Watching a high-skill player explain their thought process during a match is often more useful than watching the same player's edited highlight reel.
  • The official Forsaken Discord, code drops appear here often before they hit YouTube, and the dev team posts patch previews in the announcement channels. The pinned-message archive is also where most of the “official” ability stats came from before community wikis caught up.
  • The official Forsaken game page on Roblox, the descriptions and update notes are the canonical source for what shipped in the most recent patch. Always check there before trusting a YouTube creator's patch summary.

FAQ about Forsaken video content

Why does the same video show up in two sections?

It shouldn't, we dedupe video IDs across all three sections on every page load. If you see a genuine duplicate, it's likely a YouTube quirk where the creator republished the same content under a new video ID. Let us know via the contact page and we'll add the duplicate to the filter.

Why are some sections empty?

If YouTube's search API returns zero matching videos for one of the query categories (usually because the daily cache hasn't refreshed or the search returned only off-topic results that got filtered out by our niche check), that section will hide rather than show fake content. Reload tomorrow once the cache refreshes and the missing section should reappear.

Can I submit my own Forsaken videos here?

The video grid pulls from YouTube's public search results, so anything you publish to YouTube with a Forsaken-related title and description has a chance of appearing here automatically once it starts ranking. If you'd like to be featured specifically in a guide article or as a video citation on a blog post, the contact page is the way.

Is there a way to watch all Forsaken videos in one feed?

Not exactly. YouTube doesn't expose a public “all Forsaken content” feed. Subscribing to the handful of creators who consistently post Forsaken content is the closest approximation. We don't maintain a hardcoded creator list because the active-creator roster changes every few months as people pivot to new games or take breaks.