The Gakuran guide policy is simple: publish clear Roblox page facts, label community videos carefully, and hold exact codes, maps, styles, rewards, controls, and tier lists until they can be explained well.
Gakuran: Guide labels
| Label | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Roblox page | Main game listing and public Roblox details | Title and creator group |
| In-game note | Original screenshots, recordings, or repeatable checks | Future control table rows |
| Public note | Public game reference pages | Empty codes context |
| Community lead | YouTube videos, comments, Discord screenshots, or player tips | PvP video topics |
Gakuran: Claims that need strong support
The Gakuran guide policy requires strong support before publishing active codes, code redemption steps, exact controls, fighting styles, map routes, rewards, tier rankings, private server advice, or “best” builds.
Community videos can inspire test plans. They do not prove exact game systems by themselves.
Gakuran: What the site refuses to publish
- fake active codes
- fake expired code history
- invented code redemption menus
- copied keybind tables without testing
- tier lists without clear criteria
- maps with invented location names
- exploit scripts, executors, or unsafe downloads
- official-looking links that are not trustworthy
Gakuran: How updates should happen
Every content update should say what changed. If a page changes because of a hands-on test, the update log should say what was tested, which device was used, and whether screenshots were captured. The Gakuran guide policy is stricter than a typical quick guide because Roblox search results often contain copied claims and reward spam.
Gakuran: Analytics note
This site uses Google Analytics to measure aggregate page views and navigation patterns. The analytics script helps the site owner understand which Gakuran pages players use most; it is not used to publish personal player data, Roblox account details, or private in-game information.