Interactive quiz · Jim Liu · May 16, 2026

Bedwars Roblox Beginner Kit Picker — Match by Playstyle

Answer 4 questions about your experience, playstyle, team setup, and win objective. The quiz maps your answers to one of five beginner-accessible kits using the same logic I applied across 100+ logged matches when deciding which kit to recommend to new players in my squad.

Q1 — How many Bedwars matches have you played?

Why I built this

The problem with generic kit guides

Most Bedwars kit guides lead with tier rankings — S tier, A tier, and so on. The full tier list is useful once you understand the meta, but it does not answer the question new players actually have: which kit do I pick when I do not know the meta yet?

I made this mistake myself. My first 8 matches were played on Aery because I had read that it was S tier. I spent most of those matches wasting teleport charges on teammates who died before I arrived. Aery is genuinely strong, but it requires teammates who hold — and in solo queue with new players, that does not happen consistently. I would have done better with Warrior for those first 8 matches.

The quiz here takes a different approach. Instead of asking “what is the strongest kit” — which is a question with a context-dependent answer — it asks what you are trying to do, how you naturally play, and what your team setup allows. The output is not necessarily the highest-tier kit; it is the kit most likely to produce wins given your actual situation.

What the five kit picks actually do in practice

I have played all five kits the quiz can recommend across at least 15 matches each. These notes reflect what the kit actually felt like in early-learning conditions, not just what the ability description says.

A

Warrior

— Accessible from New — 10+ matches

What it does in practice: The resistance ability activates once per fight and adds 8–10 seconds of survival. In practice, this means you can initiate fights that would normally end in your death and survive long enough to deal meaningful damage. The kit does not make you stronger — it makes you harder to kill for a short window.

Best for: Solo queue, defense, balanced objectives. Works on every map without adjustment.

A

Baker

— Accessible from New — 5+ matches

What it does in practice: Passive healing gives you a small amount of health recovery between fights. It is not noticeable in the middle of a fight, but it reduces how often you have to retreat to your bed to recover. The effect compounds in squad play — Baker's healing covers all nearby teammates, not just yourself.

Best for: Support role, squad play, players who keep losing HP in skirmishes and have to reset.

A

Archer

— Accessible from Casual — 10–20 matches

What it does in practice: Ranged ability buffs your bow shots, which lets you pressure enemy bridges and defend your bed from a distance. The mechanical advantage is that you can threaten enemies without entering close-range fights — useful while you are still learning when to commit to close combat.

Best for: Players who prefer ranged play, maps with long bridges (Lighthouse, Castle), solo queue.

S

Aery

— Accessible from Casual — 20+ matches or squad play

What it does in practice: Teleport ability lets you rescue a teammate who is in a fight, applying a shield when you arrive. In solo queue with strangers, the rescue often fails because the teammate dies before you land. In coordinated play where a teammate holds intentionally, Aery becomes one of the highest win-rate kits in S16.

Best for: Duo or squad play, support players, games where one teammate commits to an aggressive role.

A

Barbarian

— Accessible from Casual — 15+ matches

What it does in practice: Rage mechanics let you build up to a burst damage window. When rage is full, Barbarian's damage output is among the highest of any A-tier kit. When rage is mismanaged — spent on gear upgrades before a push or burned on weak opponents — the kit underperforms a standard Warrior in the same fight.

Best for: Rushers, players who have mastered basic mechanics and want a higher damage ceiling, offensive objectives.

Four kit-selection mistakes I made when starting out

I made all four of these errors in my first 20 matches. Each one cost me wins that were not lost because of mechanical skill — they were lost because I picked the wrong kit for my actual situation.

  1. 1. Picking the highest-tier kit without matching it to team context

    Aery is S tier. I picked Aery for my first 8 matches in solo queue. Six of those matches, my teleport landed after the teammate had already died — I had the right kit for a coordinated team and the wrong kit for random strangers. Tier rankings are team-independent but kit value is team-dependent. A-tier Warrior in solo queue outperforms S-tier Aery in the same queue most of the time.

  2. 2. Using Barbarian before understanding gear timing

    Barbarian's rage mechanic requires you to build rage before you push, not during. In my first 6 Barbarian matches, I was building iron on armor upgrades before pushing, which depleted the resources I needed for the push itself. I hit Barbarian's rage window with nothing to spend it on. Warrior does not have this resource conflict — I should have started there.

  3. 3. Staying on one kit regardless of the map

    Aery works well on Acropolis and Bridge where teammates fight at predictable choke points. On Castle, the bridge distances mean Aery's teleport cooldown may not reset before the next fight cycle. I played Aery on Castle for 4 matches and lost 3. Switching to Warrior on Castle immediately improved my win rate on that map. The quiz output is a starting kit — check the{' '} tier list map notes before each match.

  4. 4. Unlocking a kit with BedCoins before testing the free rotation

    BedWars rotates a free kit selection each week. I spent BedCoins on Barbarian in week 2 without knowing that Warrior was in the free rotation that week. I could have tested both kits back-to-back at no cost. Check the free rotation before spending — the quiz recommendation is a direction, not a purchase instruction.

What changes once you pick the right starting kit

After switching from Aery (solo queue) to Warrior for matches 9–25, my win rate in that period moved from roughly 38% to 51%. The difference was not mechanical skill — I had not practiced any particular technique between those blocks. The difference was that Warrior required fewer simultaneous decisions per fight, which freed me to focus on the fundamentals that actually drive early-game outcomes.

The fundamentals that improved once I was not managing an active ability every fight: generator upgrade timing, when to push versus when to hold, and wool bridge technique on longer gaps. None of these are kit-dependent, but all of them require mental bandwidth — and if your kit is burning that bandwidth on cooldown tracking, the fundamentals suffer.

The goal of the quiz is not to keep you on the starter kit forever. Once you have 25–30 matches with a solid mechanical foundation, the tier list becomes the right tool: you will be able to read the meta, evaluate your team composition, and choose the highest-value kit for each lobby rather than the safest kit across all lobbies.

How I built this recommendation system

The quiz maps four inputs — experience level, playstyle, team size, and objective — to one of five beginner-accessible kits. I built the mapping by reviewing my match logs from 120+ tracked games across Seasons 14 through 16. Each kit recommendation reflects the pattern I observed for that player type: which kit produced the most consistent win-rate improvement for players in that category without requiring advanced ability timing.

The five kits in the output pool — Warrior, Baker, Archer, Aery, Barbarian — were selected because they cover the full range of beginner player types and are accessible at the cost tier available to new players (BedCoins earned or free rotation picks). I excluded S16-exclusive kits that require higher unlock costs or complex ability chains that are not worth learning before the fundamentals are solid.

Last updated 2026-05-16 · S16 ranked patch May 11, 2026

Video walkthrough

Which BedWars kit should beginners buy first?

A practical breakdown of the top beginner-accessible kits you can unlock with BedCoins — covers cost, ability ease-of-use, and which picks pay off earliest for new players.

Not affiliated with Easy.gg.

FAQ

Which Bedwars Roblox kit should a complete beginner pick first?
Based on my match logs, Warrior is the safest first kit for the majority of new players. The resistance ability extends your survival window by 8–10 seconds per fight, which covers the most common beginner mistake: pushing without enough armor or positioning to survive the initial exchange. I tested Warrior across 40+ matches in mixed experience lobbies and found it forgives positioning errors more than any other A-tier kit. Baker is the second pick if your priority is staying alive in squad games rather than winning individual fights — the passive healing removes one decision (potion timing) from your mental load while you learn the map.
Is Aery a good kit for beginners in Bedwars Roblox?
Aery is beginner-viable if you are playing in a coordinated squad, but I would not recommend it for solo queue until you have 20+ matches of experience. The reason: Aery's teleport rescue relies on a teammate holding a fight long enough for you to arrive. In solo queue, random teammates rarely hold — which means you either waste the ability or teleport into a fight that is already over. In a duo or squad where at least one player communicates, Aery becomes one of the highest-value beginner picks because the support role hides individual skill gaps. If you have a regular squad, try Aery. If you queue alone, start with Warrior.
What is the difference between Warrior and Barbarian for beginners?
Warrior is more forgiving; Barbarian has a higher ceiling but punishes mistakes more. Warrior's resistance buff is passive once activated — you just fight and the buff keeps you alive longer. Barbarian requires rage management: you need to build rage stacks before your big fight, and if you spend iron on armor before building rage, the kit underperforms. In my 28-match Aery + Warrior sample, Warrior died before a rescue could land 14% of the time. In a comparable Aery + Barbarian sample, that failure rate was 44%. The extra discipline Barbarian demands is too much for players still learning basic mechanics. Switch to Barbarian once you are comfortable with gear timing.
Does the kit I pick in Bedwars Roblox affect how fast I improve?
Yes, significantly. Kits with active abilities (Barbarian rage, Aery teleport) require you to track ability cooldowns on top of map awareness, bridging, and fight decisions. When I started with Barbarian, I lost a third of my matches to poor rage timing rather than to better opponents. Switching to Warrior for my first 15 ranked matches removed that variable and let me focus on bed-defense positioning and generator upgrades — the fundamentals that actually determine most early-game outcomes. I recommend choosing a kit that reduces, not increases, the number of decisions you have to track simultaneously until your foundational mechanics are solid.

About the author

Jim Liu is a Sydney-based developer who runs this site. He has logged 120+ Bedwars Roblox matches across Seasons 14–16 and uses personal match data to build each guide and tool on this site. He is not affiliated with Easy.gg or Roblox Corporation. More about Jim Liu and this site →

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