At a glance
| Reroll purpose | Players use reroll-style resources to improve traits, stats or other unit quality points. |
|---|---|
| Common resources | Public guides and code lists mention resources such as trait shards, stat rerolls and perfect cubes. |
| Main risk | The resource can disappear without improving the result if rolls are unlucky. |
| Best habit | Reroll only after choosing a unit you expect to keep using. |
Check before you spend
- Do not spend rerolls just because they came from a free code.
- Do not chase a perfect roll on a unit you may replace soon.
- Resource names and use cases can shift after updates, so confirm the current in-game menu.
When an Anime Squadron reroll makes sense
An Anime Squadron reroll makes sense when the unit is important, the current result is limiting progress, and the potential improvement is worth the risk. That usually means the unit appears in your main squad, performs well in the mode you care about, and has enough upgrades to benefit from a better trait or stat line. If the unit is barely used, the reroll is probably premature.
A good reroll decision begins with the tier list and units guide. If the unit is a long-term piece, improving it can be smart. If the unit is a bridge for early progression, basic upgrades may be enough. A reroll is most painful when it turns a temporary unit into a resource sink.
Trait rerolls versus stat rerolls
Trait rerolls and stat rerolls solve different problems. A trait reroll changes the special value attached to a unit. A stat reroll focuses on the numbers or quality range the unit receives. Players often talk about both as if they are the same kind of upgrade, but the best target can differ depending on what is holding your squad back.
If your unit already has a useful trait but still underperforms, stat quality or upgrade level may be the issue. If the unit is strong but the trait does not support its role, trait rerolling may matter more. The safest Anime Squadron reroll plan identifies the problem first, then chooses the resource.
How to use free rewards without regret
Anime Squadron codes can make reroll resources feel disposable because they arrive as a bonus. They are not disposable if you are free-to-play or early in progression. Treat every free reroll as a future option. Saving a reward for a better unit often feels slower today and smarter tomorrow.
A simple rule helps: never spend a rare Anime Squadron reroll on the same day you discover a new unit unless you already know that unit's role. Play a few rounds, compare it with your squad, check recent ranking opinions and then decide. That pause prevents excitement from making the decision.
Stopping rules for reroll sessions
Set a stopping rule before you start. Decide how many rerolls you are willing to spend and what result is acceptable. If you roll something useful, stop even if it is not perfect. Chasing perfect outcomes can drain resources while leaving your account weaker than before.
If you hit your limit without improvement, stop and play. Anime Squadron progression comes from clears, upgrades, learning modes and building a squad, not only from reroll screens. A disciplined stop keeps the game playable.
FAQ
What is an Anime Squadron reroll?
An Anime Squadron reroll is a resource use that changes a unit's trait, stat quality or similar improvement point, depending on the current in-game system.
When should I reroll in Anime Squadron?
Reroll when the unit is important, likely to stay in your squad, and clearly limited by its current trait or stat result.
Should I save Anime Squadron stat rerolls?
Yes, save stat rerolls until you know which units deserve long-term investment.
Are perfect cubes worth spending right away?
Only spend perfect cubes or similar rare resources after checking the current in-game use and deciding that the target unit is worth it.
Read next
For site ownership, privacy and sourcing notes, read the About page and Privacy Policy.
Official and reference pages
Use this page to open the official Anime Squadron experience and verify the game name, creator, and current public description.
Useful for cross-checking public code lists and reward wording before trying codes in game.
Useful for a second public check on active and expired Anime Squadron codes.
Useful for another view of unit rankings, traits, and upgrade priorities.