Editorial standards

Editorial standards

These are the rules every GG Codes page follows. They cover where codes come from, how we verify and date them, how we separate active from expired, and how we handle mistakes.

Sourcing

We take codes only from official sources: the in-game code menu, the developers' verified social channels, and official update notes. When community lists disagree, the official source wins. We do not copy a code from a competitor list without confirming it against one of those sources first.

Verification and dating

Every code on the site is cross-checked daily against official sources and confirmed by player reports. We do not claim to redeem codes in-game ourselves, because that is not how the check works. Two things back every code:

  • A last-cross-checked date on each code, which matches the date the page was last updated, so you can judge freshness at a glance.
  • A reader confirmation signal from the "Did it work?" button, where codes confirmed by enough players earn a Player-verified badge.

Active and expired codes stay separate

Active and expired codes always live in separate tables. A working code is never mixed in with dead ones, and a code that stops matching its source is moved to the expired archive rather than quietly deleted, so you can still tell that a code you remember is gone. Where a game's active count moves constantly, we read the count live rather than printing a number that goes stale.

No fabricated codes or rewards

We never invent codes, and we never invent rewards. If a code is not backed by a source, it does not appear on the page. When a code is confirmed but its exact reward amount is not, we show the reward without an invented number until a source confirms it. We would rather show less than show something we cannot stand behind.

Corrections

If we get something wrong, we fix it on the page and update the date the same day we find it. Codes that turn out to be dead move to the expired table immediately. Because the lists update throughout the day, a correction is part of normal operation rather than a rare event, and the date stamp is your signal that the page reflects the latest check.

Independence and money

Codes are free, and they always will be. The site may show advertising, but advertising never decides which codes we list, which game hubs we build, or whether we call a code working. Those calls are made only against the sourcing and verification rules above.

External links

We link official sources only, such as a game's official Roblox page. We do not link competitor code lists. When we cannot verify that a Discord, group, or social account is the official one, we name the channel in plain text without linking it, so a redemption step is never gated behind a link we are not sure about.

Automation and the live tracker

A tracker re-checks each game's sources on a short cycle, roughly every six hours, and updates the live code lists and their dates. Automation handles the speed that these fast-churning games demand, while the standards on this page, the page structure, and any wording about how a code is verified are set and reviewed by people. Automation changes the data, not the promise.