1. Why a Portfolio Matters Even for Solo Developers
A developer portfolio is not just a job-hunting document — it is a trust-building tool that affects every commercial interaction you have on Roblox. Players decide whether to trust your game based on whether your other games look professional. Potential collaborators decide whether to partner with you based on your track record. Roblox staff decide which creators to feature based on public portfolios.
Even if you never apply for a single job, a clean portfolio pays dividends in community credibility.
2. What to Include in a Strong Portfolio
Include three to five finished projects, chosen for quality over quantity. For each project, show a short gameplay clip (15–30 seconds), a one-paragraph description of your role, and the key metrics (player count, rating, revenue if you're comfortable sharing).
Also include a short personal bio, your specialties (scripting, building, UI, game design, marketing), and clear contact information. List the tools and languages you use. Link to your Roblox profile, Twitter/X, and Discord.
3. Presentation and Hosting Options
You have three main options for hosting a portfolio: a personal website, a Notion page, or a structured DevForum post. Personal websites give you the most control and professionalism. Notion is the easiest to maintain. DevForum posts reach the Roblox community directly.
Whichever you pick, prioritize loading speed, mobile-friendliness, and clear navigation. A portfolio with broken images or slow loading speeds signals carelessness.
4. Keeping Your Portfolio Fresh
Update your portfolio at least every three months. Remove projects that no longer represent your skill level. Add new case studies as you ship features and launch games. The act of updating forces you to evaluate your own growth.