Expired Clean the Supermarket codes
Updated:
Historical archive of retired codes. Currently empty — no real Clean the Supermarket code has been released, and therefore none has ever expired.
Archive status
ARCHIVE0 expired codes
The expired list is empty because no Clean the Supermarket code has ever been released — and therefore none has ever expired. The moment the first real code lands and eventually retires, it will be moved from the active list to this archive with its original reward and the date it stopped working. From that point forward, this page becomes the historical record.
How code retirement works in Roblox sorting games
Once Tidyverse ships a codes system, the standard Roblox pattern for code retirement will apply. Codes typically retire under one of three triggers: explicit expiry date (the code was attached to a time-limited event), implicit expiry (the milestone the code celebrated has passed and the studio retires the code in a cleanup pass), or revocation (a code was leaked early or abused, and the studio kills it ahead of its natural expiry).
The typical lifespan range for Roblox sorting-game codes:
- Event codes: 24-72 hours. Attached to a community event, livestream, or limited-time promotion. These are the codes you most need to catch early.
- Milestone codes: 1-4 weeks. Attached to a visit-count or favorite-count milestone celebration. These have the longest effective claim window because the milestone gets re-shared across multiple platforms.
- Partnership codes: Variable. When a Roblox YouTuber or streamer collaborates with the studio, the code is often attached to their content. Lifespan depends on the partnership terms — can be 1 week or until the next major content patch.
- Permanent codes: Indefinite. Some studios designate one or two codes as never-expiring evergreen rewards. Rarer for sorting games than for combat games, but possible.
Why we archive instead of delete
When a code retires, the natural impulse is to delete it from the wiki entirely — it can't be redeemed anymore, so why keep the entry? We disagree. The expired archive serves three purposes:
- Historical reference. Players who joined Clean the Supermarket after a code retired often want to know what the code was, what reward it gave, and when it shipped. The archive preserves that context.
- Pattern recognition. Looking at the archive lets you predict when the next code might drop. If past codes shipped on milestones spaced 3-4 weeks apart, that tells you the next likely drop window.
- Anti-fraud baseline.When a third-party site claims a code is "active" that we know retired weeks ago, the archive is the evidence base. Verifiable retirement dates beat "just trust the wiki."
What we won't do in this archive
Two anti-patterns we explicitly avoid:
- We don't archive fake codes as "expired."Some competitor wikis list strings like LIKE, GROUP, UPDATE, LAUNCH, BETA, THANKS as "expired Clean the Supermarket codes." They never expired because they never worked — they were fabricated for SEO traffic. Listing them in our archive would launder fabricated content as historical record. We refuse.
- We don't backfill the archive with guesses.If the first code drops in week 3, we'll add it to the active list when it ships and move it here when it retires. We won't invent a "launch code that probably existed" to populate the archive earlier. Empty is honest; fabricated content is not.