Roblox
My Knife Farm Wiki, Codes, Guides, and Tier Lists
My Knife Farm is a Roblox tycoon-style experience built around a simple loop: open cases, place knives, earn passive cash, and reinvest that income into better upgrades and rarer drops. This wiki is written for players who want fast answers, fair warnings about codes and community links, and a path from your first case to a stable late-game build—without wading through outdated forum posts. Use the play button to jump to the official game page on Roblox, then return here for codes, strategy, and a structured look at what matters most in the economy.
Redeem the latest codes
We track active My Knife Farm codes for Gems, Luck boosts, and more so you can skip the slowest part of the early grind.
Learn the full game loop
From your first case pulls to endgame income, the beginner guide explains conveyors, economy, and what to do on day one.
Rarity, cases, and upgrades
See how knives, crates, and Gem upgrades work together, with strategies that line up with how Roblox sims usually scale.
How this site helps you
- Clear, bookmarkable pages for codes, the knife/tier list angle, and case opening strategy so you are not forced to dig through long videos every day.
- Frequent reminders to verify code rewards in-game, because simulators update often and third-party text can drift.
- Honest guidance for Discord: we explain how to find official community links without inventing a permanent invite that could break or mislead you.
What is My Knife Farm?
In broad terms, My Knife Farm is a knife-collecting farming sim on Roblox. You are not just clicking one button forever—you are buying cases, rolling knives, deciding what to place on the map, and turning those tools into a rising stream of money and Gem income. The presentation often looks like a modern tycoon, but the real hook is the chase for higher rarity, stronger mutations, and the satisfying jump when a good drop finally lines up with a Luck boost or a new case tier you finally unlocked.
Players search for the game under names like “my knife farm roblox” because the experience sits in a crowded category: idle income, gacha-style pulls, and constant small updates. That is exactly why a focused wiki still matters. Patch cadence, code drops, and community announcements can all move faster than a single YouTube video, so we keep pages structured the way a player actually searches: codes first, loop second, and long-term itemization third.
If you are brand new, treat this site as a companion to the in-game interface. The Roblox page itself is the source of truth for play links and discoverability, while this wiki is here to help you make better purchase decisions, save boosts for the right moments, and understand why some knives are worth keeping even if they are not the flashiest on paper.
How the game loop works
The loop almost always comes back to four verbs: case, place, earn, and upgrade. You spend soft currency and Gems in ways that the game’s shop layout makes obvious, you pull knives from the case pool that matches your progress point, and you turn those results into a stronger “floor” of passive income. The conveyor or presentation layer is the visual front-end of that system; the strategic depth is the sequence of which crate you are targeting, which rarity band you are fishing in, and whether you are holding boosts for a burst session or using them the moment you get them just to recover momentum after a bad streak.
Money and Gems usually play different roles. Money is your day-to-day engine for the obvious stuff in front of you. Gems tend to be the longer-horizon currency for upgrades and premium-feeling power spikes, which is why codes that grant either resource can feel dramatically different in value depending on your account's age. When you are unsure, a conservative rule of thumb is: protect your long-term rate (anything that makes your next hour richer) before you chase cosmetic speed that only feels good for sixty seconds at a time.
Understanding that split also explains why the term “my knife farm gems” is so common in search. Players are not just hunting raw numbers; they are trying to find the next upgrade that makes their case openings feel 'fair' again. This wiki sections those ideas into their own pages so you can go deep on knives, cases, and upgrades without this homepage turning into a wall of repeated notes.
Start here if you are new
If you are still building your first routine, go straight to the beginner guide. It is written to stand alone, which means you can learn the full loop, the early money mistakes, and a sensible first-week plan before you touch anything else. After that, keep the codes page bookmarked, because the fastest way to feel ahead in a Roblox sim is to redeem a working boost right before a planned opening session. That is not cheating the spirit of the game; it is the same pattern every active player uses when codes line up with milestones, weekend updates, and community celebrations.
Once the basics click, the knives and cases pages give you a mental model of rarity bands and which crates are worth your attention at different points. The upgrades page turns that into a purchase order, which matters more than it sounds, because a scattered build with evenly spread upgrades is usually weaker than a focused build with one or two high-impact levels completed first.
Finally, do not treat Discord as a requirement to enjoy the game, but if you like patch tracking, treat the Discord help page as a safety-first checklist for finding the real community. There are plenty of third-party listicles that will happily paste uncertain invite links, and the safer posture is: trust official surfaces first, and treat anything you find through random DMs or comment sections as unverified by default.
Why bookmark this wiki
Roblox discoverability is noisy, and a clean English wiki can save you from contradictory advice. We aim for a consistent tone: explain mechanics plainly, mark uncertainty where the game has not given exact public numbers, and point you to official or primary sources when a claim really matters. That is especially true for any topic that drifts into automation or third-party tools; this site is written for normal players who just want a fair shot at the same progression everyone else is chasing in public servers.
Search interest around 'my knife farm wiki' and 'my knife farm guide' usually spikes right after a content patch. When that happens, the players who are ready are the ones with a preloaded plan: codes queued, a rough upgrade path, and a sense of which crate tier they are pivoting to next. You do not need a perfect long-term build on day one; you need a stable loop and a list of the next two wins you are working toward, whether that is a new rarity band or a more reliable stream of soft currency to feed the case machine again.
Long term, a wiki only earns a bookmark if it stays readable. That is why the layout keeps navigation obvious, avoids bloat, and does not add decorative junk that would slow the page down on a phone. If a section goes stale, the fix should be a content update, not a redesign that hides the answer you were actually looking for.
Play on Roblox (official game link)
The official play surface is the Roblox experience page, which is the only link you should treat as the canonical 'where do I start playing' answer. The button above the fold on the homepage and repeated on key pages is there on purpose, because mobile and desktop users alike often land from search and just want a legitimate route into the right experience without wading through similarly named thumbnails.
Roblox's own ecosystem sometimes lists alternate entry points, including themed or tagged variants. If you see labels like an anime-tagged version in search results, treat it as a real branch that exists in the platform's index, not as a separate game with a totally different ruleset unless the game itself tells you so. The safest approach is to start from a known good link, then explore variants once you are already comfortable with the main loop. That is how you avoid the classic trap of following an outdated portal from an old short video.
Once you are in-game, come back to this wiki when you are planning rather than when you are panicking. A calm, written plan for spending boosts beats burning them the moment a notification shows up, and it is the difference between feeling like the economy is 'rigged' and realizing you were one solid session away from a breakthrough the whole time.
Play on the official Roblox page
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▶ My Knife Farm overview and gameplay context
FAQ
▸ What is My Knife Farm in one sentence?
▸ Is My Knife Farm a tycoon game?
▸ Where do I find the latest My Knife Farm codes?
▸ What should I upgrade first?
▸ Is there an official Discord server?
▸ What does an '[ANIME]' or tagged variant mean?
Related pages
- My Knife Farm codes
Active codes, redemption steps, and case-sensitivity help.
- Beginner guide
Day-one loop, economy basics, and the first week plan you can actually follow.
- Knives & rarity
Tier list framing, rarities, mutations, and what to keep or sell.
- Cases & crates
Which case tiers to chase at different points in your run.
- Upgrades & Gems
Gem purchase order, permanent gains, and common traps.
- Advanced tips
Efficiency, safety notes, and long-term roadmaps for serious players.
- Discord & community
How to find official links without getting tricked by fakes.