Best Roblox Dress-Up & Fashion Games
Dress-up on Roblox went from a niche to one of the platform's biggest genres, and Dress to Impress is the reason. This is the ranked rundown of the fashion and runway games actually worth your time — what each one's hook is, how deep the wardrobe goes, and which to start with.

Two years ago, "Roblox fashion game" mostly meant Royale High and a pile of forgettable clones. Then Dress to Impress showed up, exploded into one of the most-played experiences on the entire platform, and dragged the whole genre into the spotlight. Now dress-up is one of Roblox's biggest categories, the front page is full of runway games chasing that same hit, and most of them are bad.
This is the ranked list that sorts it out. Every game here is a real, current experience built around styling an avatar and showing it off — not a roleplay game with a wardrobe bolted on. I'll tell you exactly what each one's hook is, how deep the actual clothing and customization go, and whether the scoring/social layer is fun or just filler. If you've only ever played Dress to Impress and want to know what else is worth installing, start here. For the broader social side of the platform, our best Roblox roleplay games guide covers the dress-up-adjacent town and life-sim experiences.

What makes a dress-up game good
Before the rankings, here's the rubric, because "fashion game" covers wildly different designs and you want to know which kind you're getting.
- Wardrobe depth. The whole appeal is options. A good dress-up game gives you a genuinely huge library of clothing, hair, accessories, and makeup to combine — and ideally tools to recolor and layer them. A thin wardrobe gets boring in twenty minutes.
- The round structure. The best ones give you a theme, a timer, and a reason to get creative under pressure. Dress to Impress nailed this: a prompt, a clock, a runway, and a score. Games without that loop lean entirely on the wardrobe and the vibe.
- The social/scoring layer. Half the fun is being seen. Player voting, runway walks, and lobbies full of other people's looks turn a solo dress-up toy into a competitive, social game. How that scoring is handled — fair vote vs. popularity contest — makes or breaks the experience.
- Free vs. paywalled. Every game here is free to start, but some gate the good clothing behind grind or Robux. I'll flag which ones make you work (or pay) for the wardrobe that matters.
The quick tell for a quality fashion game: does it give you a theme and a timer? Theme-and-timer games are about creativity under pressure and they stay fun for months. Pure free-dress sandboxes are fun for an afternoon, then you've seen everything.
Dress to Impress: the genre-killer
If you play one fashion game on Roblox, it's Dress to Impress (DTI), and it's not close. This is the game that redefined the genre and became a genuine platform phenomenon — one of the most-played experiences on Roblox, the kind of breakout that spawns a hundred imitators. The loop is dead simple and perfectly tuned: everyone in the lobby gets the same theme (a celebrity, an aesthetic, a holiday, a chaotic prompt like "rainbow villain"), a timer, and a shared wardrobe. You build a look, walk the runway, and every other player scores you. Highest average wins the round.
What makes it sing is the combination of a deep, free, constantly-expanding wardrobe and the pressure of the clock. You're not just picking an outfit; you're interpreting a theme faster and more cleverly than the eleven other people in the room, then defending it on the catwalk. The developers add new clothing, hair, makeup, and theme content regularly, and the community has turned it into a full creative scene — themed looks, recreations, and viral runway clips everywhere. It's social, competitive, endlessly replayable, and free.
The catch: it's a victim of its own success — servers can be packed, and the voting is a popularity-and-creativity blend, so a technically great look can lose to a crowd-pleaser. Neither dents the recommendation. This is the one.
Verdict: The best dress-up game on Roblox, full stop. Theme, timer, runway, deep free wardrobe, real competition. Start here.
Royale High: the fashion MMO

Royale High is the genre's elder statesman and a completely different animal from DTI. Where Dress to Impress is a fast, round-based competition, Royale High is a sprawling fantasy-school MMO where fashion is the long-term goal rather than a sixty-second sprint. You attend a magical academy, complete activities to earn diamonds (the in-game currency), and spend them building an enormous wardrobe of clothing, accessories, halos, and sets — many of them seasonal or event-exclusive and genuinely coveted in the community.
The depth here is in collection and self-expression over time. There's no runway-and-vote loop; instead there's a persistent world, trading, seasonal events that drop sought-after items, and a customization system deep enough that dedicated players treat their avatar like an ongoing project. It's the pick if you want fashion as a hobby — something to log into over weeks, grind toward a dream outfit, and show off in a living world — rather than a quick creative round.
The catch: the best items take real grinding or trading to get, and the game's scope can feel overwhelming for someone who just wants to dress up and go. It's also leaned hard into roleplay and events over the years, so the pure dress-up part is one feature among many.
Verdict: The fashion MMO. Best for players who want collecting and long-term avatar-building, not a fast scored round. Massive wardrobe, but you earn it.
Fashion Famous: the original runway game
Fashion Famous is the OG — the runway-and-vote fashion game that predates the current boom and laid down the template Dress to Impress later perfected. The loop is familiar precisely because Fashion Famous helped invent it: you get a theme, a time limit to assemble an outfit from a shared catalog, and then everyone struts and votes, with the top scorers rewarded. If you've played DTI, you'll recognize the DNA immediately.
It's worth playing for two reasons. First, it's a genuinely fun, no-frills version of the format — fast rounds, clear theme, real voting — that scratches the same itch. Second, it's a bit of Roblox history; this is where the scored-runway genre got its footing. The wardrobe and presentation are dated next to DTI's, and it doesn't have the same player counts or constant content updates, but the core game still holds up as a lighter, less-crowded alternative.
The catch: it's been largely eclipsed by Dress to Impress in polish, wardrobe size, and population. You're playing the original, not the most refined version.
Verdict: The format's originator and still a fun, lighter runway game. Play it for the loop and the history, but know DTI does the same thing bigger.
Fashion Icon: the streamlined rival
Fashion Icon is one of the more credible "if you like Dress to Impress, try this" picks — a runway fashion game built squarely in the scored-theme mold. You get a prompt, you build a look from the wardrobe against the clock, you hit the catwalk, and you get judged. It leans into the same competitive-styling fantasy DTI made huge, with its own catalog of clothing and accessories and its own spin on the round structure.
What it's chasing is the crowd that wants more theme-and-runway games, full stop — people who've worn out the DTI lobby and want a fresh wardrobe and a slightly different feel. Whether it sticks for you comes down to taste in the clothing library and how the scoring feels, both of which are close enough to DTI to be familiar but distinct enough to be a change of pace. It's a smaller, newer experience, so expect fewer players and less content than the genre leader.
The catch: it lives in DTI's shadow by design, so it's only worth it if you specifically want a second runway game to rotate to. As the standalone choice, the bigger games win.
Verdict: A solid DTI-style alternative for the runway-game enthusiast. Best as a second fashion game, not your only one.
Star Status / Crown Academy: the cozy pick
Star Status (formerly known as Crown Academy) sits between the two big poles of the genre. It's a fashion-and-roleplay experience with a glamorous, school-and-stardom theme, where dressing up your avatar and styling yourself is central but folded into a softer, more social, world-to-hang-out-in package than DTI's pure competition. Think of it as Royale High's cozier cousin — fashion as part of a vibe rather than a scored sprint.
It's the right pick for players who like the dress-up part but don't want the runway pressure, and who'd rather have a relaxed world to customize their look and socialize in. The wardrobe and styling options are the draw, with the roleplay layer giving you somewhere to actually wear your outfits. It's a smaller experience than the headliners, so manage expectations on population and content cadence, but it fills a real niche between competitive runway and full MMO.
The catch: it's neither the deepest wardrobe nor the most competitive loop, so it can feel in-between. If you want pure scored fashion, DTI; if you want a deep collection MMO, Royale High. This is the middle, cozy lane.
Verdict: The relaxed, social-fashion pick. Best for players who want to dress up and hang out without the runway clock.
Where roleplay games fit in
A lot of people searching for "dress-up games" actually want a roleplay game with great customization, and that's a slightly different category worth flagging. Experiences like Brookhaven and Berry Avenue aren't fashion games — there's no theme, timer, or runway vote — but they give you a wardrobe and a town to live a styled life in. The dress-up is the means, not the game.
If that's what you're after, the roleplay genre is where to look, not the scored-runway games above. The trade-off is straightforward: roleplay games give you freedom and a world but no creative-competition loop; dedicated fashion games give you the loop but less of a life to live around it. Know which one you're actually in the mood for. Our best Roblox roleplay games and best Roblox games for kids guides cover the dress-up-friendly roleplay side in depth.
How to pick your fashion game
The genre splits cleanly by what kind of fun you want:
| Game | Type | Wardrobe | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dress to Impress | Scored runway rounds | Deep, free, constantly updated | The definitive dress-up experience |
| Royale High | Fashion MMO / collecting | Enormous, but earned | Long-term avatar-building as a hobby |
| Fashion Famous | Scored runway rounds | Dated but functional | The original format, a lighter lobby |
| Fashion Icon | Scored runway rounds | Solid, DTI-style | A second runway game to rotate to |
| Star Status / Crown Academy | Fashion roleplay | Good, vibe-focused | Cozy dress-up without the clock |
Quick rule of thumb: if you want the real thing — a theme, a timer, a runway, and a score — play Dress to Impress and don't look back; it's the best in the genre by a wide margin. If you want fashion as a long-term collecting hobby in a living world, Royale High. If you've worn out DTI and want more of the same loop, Fashion Famous or Fashion Icon give you a fresh lobby. And if you want to dress up and socialize without the competition, Star Status is the cozy lane.
Whatever you pick, they're all free to start, so the smart move is to load DTI first, then try one alternative and see whether you're a runway-round person or a collect-and-customize person. That answer points you at the rest of the genre better than any list.
Quick Action Checklist
Find your fashion game fast:
- Want the best dress-up game on Roblox? Start with Dress to Impress
- Want fashion as a long-term collecting hobby in a living world? Play Royale High
- Worn out the DTI lobby and want the same loop, lighter? Try Fashion Famous
- Want a second DTI-style runway game to rotate to? Fashion Icon
- Want to dress up and socialize without the runway clock? Star Status / Crown Academy
- Actually want a town to live a styled life in? Look at roleplay games, not scored-runway ones
- Remember theme-and-timer games stay fun for months; pure free-dress sandboxes fade fast
- It's all free to start, so load DTI first and branch out from there
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