If you price classic limiteds, there is one fact you now need to work around: Roblox's legacy resale endpoint — the public feed that RAP comes from — stopped recording new sales in early February 2025. Our sister site BloxToolbox found it by accident: they tracked about 170 top limiteds daily for a week, saw not a single RAP move or sales-counter tick, then checked the feed's own dated sale records and found every item's newest entry frozen in the same few days of February 2025. The full investigation is worth reading: RAP's clock stopped, and almost nobody noticed.
The practical consequence is simple to state. RAP was always a lagging average of real sales. It is now a stopped average — a photograph of the classic-limiteds market as it looked seventeen months ago. It has not become useless, but it has changed category: from "recent price signal" to "historical reference point." Trading against it as if it were live is how you overpay for items that have drifted down, or give away items that have drifted up.
What still works, in the order to use it
1. Community value lists, checked for a date. Lists like ours are built from what traders actually accept and decline, not from the frozen feed — that is why every value on this site carries an updated date and is framed as a community estimate. The date matters more than ever: a list that cannot tell you when it last changed a number is not obviously better than the frozen RAP it replaced. (Our primer on how trade values form explains where these numbers come from.)
2. Live asking prices — as a ceiling, not a value. Current resale listings are genuinely live: they tell you what sellers are asking today. They do not tell you what buyers are paying, and the lowest ask on a thin item is often aspirational. Treat the ask spread as an upper bound and be more skeptical the wider it is — the same logic as our guide to items with a thin sales history.
3. Recent completed trades you can verify. Trade screenshots and community trade logs are anecdotes, but a handful of consistent, recent, verifiable trades beats a seventeen-month-old average. Weight recency hard. One trade from last week outranks any number from February 2025.
4. RAP — as a relative ranking, last. The frozen feed still preserves the market's hierarchy as of its stopping point: an item that carried triple another item's RAP then is very likely still worth more now. Use RAP to sanity-check ordering ("is this item in roughly the right tier?"), never to set a price. And treat any tool that sums RAP into an "account value" as denominated in February-2025 prices — a floor-era artifact, not a balance.
The failure modes to watch for
The frozen feed breaks the usual tells in specific ways. A "stable RAP" used to suggest a calm market; now it suggests nothing, because every RAP is perfectly stable forever. The liquidity checks that leaned on sales counters no longer discriminate — every counter reads the same as it did in February 2025. And "RAP versus ask gap," a classic manipulation tell, now mostly measures time rather than manipulation: seventeen months of drift can open a large, innocent gap. The manipulation patterns in how limited values get manipulated still exist — but you now detect them through listings and community consensus, not through RAP movement.
One honest unknown: whether the feed wakes up. Roblox has been migrating limiteds to its newer collectibles system for years, and the legacy endpoint going quiet looks like part of that migration rather than a deliberate announcement. BloxToolbox's tracker checks the feed daily and labels its data by the newest recorded sale, so if the clock restarts, the labels will say so within a day. Until then, price classic limiteds the way traders did before RAP existed: recent evidence first, consensus second, asks as ceilings — and an old photograph only for perspective.
Values on this site are community estimates, dated when last reviewed, and are not guaranteed prices. Nothing here is financial advice about virtual items — trade what you can afford to lose.