Diamonds
Diamonds are the main account progression currency in 99 Nights in the Forest. They matter because they are spent outside a single survival run: you use them for classes, talents, and class stock rerolls.
What Diamonds Are Used For
| Use | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Classes | Unlocks role-based starts such as support, scouting, cooking, or combat classes |
| Talents | Adds extra class progression after the first unlock |
| Class stock rerolls | Lets you refresh available class options |
Do not treat Diamonds like a quick-use run item. A small number of good Diamond decisions can make future runs easier, while bad early spending slows account growth.
Verified Diamond Sources
Public sources list these Diamond routes:
- Cultist Stronghold reward chest.
- Surviving major day milestones such as Day 50 and Day 99.
- Daily quests.
- Chests.
- Badges.
- Developer codes.
- Update party drops.
- Robux purchases through the Currency Shop.
For a beginner, the safest order is codes first, daily quests second, then Stronghold attempts once the team can defend and route reliably.
Code-Related Diamonds
As of the May 7, 2026 check, Bloxpedia Hub only publishes Diamond codes that are corroborated by reliable code sources. afterparty is listed as a normal code reward. yay fishing is not a normal lobby code; it is activated in-game while fishing and can drop two Gems once.
Low-confidence single-source code claims are not shown as usable codes until they are corroborated or checked in game.
Beginner Spending Priority
- Redeem verified codes before spending.
- Save toward a class that supports how you actually play.
- Avoid rerolling class stock early unless you already know which class you need.
- Do not buy a class only because it looks rare; pick based on run value.
Spend Based On Your Failure Point
Diamonds help most when they solve the reason your runs fail. Use this table before buying or rerolling:
| Your problem | Better spending direction |
|---|---|
| You run out of carrying space | Consider cheap utility before expensive combat |
| Your team lacks wood and fuel control | Look for resource or route value |
| Your group keeps going down | Support and recovery value can matter more than damage |
| You survive early but fail long runs | Save for stronger role-defining classes |
| You do not know why you are dying | Do not reroll yet; improve route basics first |
This is why Bloxpedia Hub does not recommend buying only by rarity. A powerful class that does not fix your run problem is still a bad first purchase.
When Not To Spend
Wait before spending Diamonds if:
- You have not redeemed verified codes yet.
- You are dying before the Campfire, food, and return routes are stable.
- You only want to buy because a class looks rare.
- You are about to reroll without knowing which class you are targeting.
- Your team has not agreed who handles fuel, food, scouting, or defense.
Saving is a real strategy. Diamonds are account progression, not a resource you need to spend as soon as you get it.
Practical Farming Notes
The Stronghold route can be a renewable Diamond source, but it is not beginner-safe. If your campfire, food, and return route are unstable, farming Diamonds there usually costs more time than it saves. Stabilize the run first, then farm.
Code And Gem Workflow
For new players, use this order:
- Check the codes page.
- Redeem only active or clearly labeled special rewards.
- Ignore low-confidence claims until they are corroborated.
- Play enough normal runs to understand your failure point.
- Spend Diamonds on the role that helps that failure point.
This keeps the currency loop tied to actual progress instead of random spending.
Source guardrails
This page is kept as player guidance for 99 Nights in the Forest. When exact values, hidden rates, damage numbers, drop chances, or prices are not directly verified by the listed sources, treat them as legacy guide context rather than confirmed current facts.
Bloxpedia Hub does not recommend scripts, executors, mod menus, or downloadable reward tools for this game. Use official Roblox data, visible public source reports, and recently checked code status before spending rare resources.