I opened the Trello at 3:12 a.m. and realized the boss notes contradicted my build—my raid was about to implode. You have one choice: scramble through scattered Discord messages or follow a single, organized source. I mapped the official KAIZEN links below so you don’t waste another run.

At 3 a.m., a single Trello card saved an entire run — Roblox KAIZEN Trello and Other Links
I’ll be direct: start with the Trello. I’ve read every card, tested moves in-game, and watched the community patch notes unfold in real time. The Trello staff organized mechanics into searchable stacks so you can stop guessing and start building with confidence.
- KAIZEN Trello Board
- Roblox KAIZEN Official Discord Server
- Roblox KAIZEN Game Page
- Roblox KAIZEN Community Group
- KAIZEN Developer X Page
- KAIZEN YouTube Channel
The Trello is the closest thing to a game Bible: clear lists, change logs, and examples for builds. Think of it like a cluttered spellbook where every move, vow, and boss note has its own margin note.
What is the KAIZEN Trello?
Short answer: a living wiki built on Trello. I use it to check mechanics before I grind; you can too. It contains:
- A full FAQ on basic mechanics
- All Cursed Techniques and moves
- All Weapons, Fighting Styles, and Clans
- All Binding Vows and NPCs, Enemies, Bosses
- Raids, materials, accessories, and special mechanics
How do I get Kaizen codes?
Codes drop in a few places and the fastest route is usually Discord. I watch the official Discord and the developer X page for giveaways, then cross-check announcements on YouTube. If you miss a live drop, the Trello often archives the code list or points to where the devs posted it.
Where are the official Kaizen links?
You’ll find the essentials above, but here’s how I use each platform:
- Trello: Patch notes, confirmed mechanics, and everything I consult before a boss run.
- Discord: Real-time alerts, community support, and sneak peeks. It’s a lighthouse in a storm when an update lands mid-session.
- Roblox game page & community group: Direct joins, group perks, and developer posts (Lajebo Games).
- X & YouTube: Short announcements and dev teasers—good for catching codes and update trailers.
If you’re short on time, bookmark the Trello and pin Discord to a browser tab. I keep a small checklist before every run: card-read, build-confirmed, raid-ready. That habit has saved me hours.
Final tip: stay curious and conservative with Binding Vows at first—try a build on Trello, test it in-game, then tweak. Which vow will force you to rethink your whole playstyle next week?