Halloween Blooket Blooks List: Every Spooky Blook

Halloween Blooket blooks list showing all rarity tiers from common pumpkin to legendary phantom in the Spooky Box

The Spooky Box is one of the most popular themed boxes in Blooket, and not just in October. Halloween blooks appear in games year-round — on teacher dashboards, in student collections, and during live classroom sessions globally. If you want a complete picture of every Halloween blook, which ones drop at which rarity, and how to collect the full set without wasting coins, this guide covers all of it in one place.

What is the Blooket Spooky Box?

The Spooky Box is Blooket’s Halloween-themed blook box, available in the Market at any time of year. It contains a curated set of blooks built around classic Halloween imagery — ghosts, vampires, witches, bats, and pumpkins. The box has a smaller pool than the standard All Blooks box, which means each opening has a better chance of returning a blook you don’t yet own, making it more efficient for targeted collecting.

Is the Spooky Box available year-round?

Yes, without any seasonal restriction. Despite the Halloween theme, the Spooky Box is a permanent fixture in the Market. Many players assume it disappears after October and delay opening it — that assumption costs them months of potential collection progress. Every blook you unlock from the Spooky Box stays in your collection permanently and can be equipped in any game session regardless of the time of year.

How the Spooky Box fits Blooket’s rarity system

Like all Blooket boxes, the Spooky Box uses the same six-tier rarity ladder. Understanding the tiers before you start opening boxes prevents the most common coin-wasting mistakes.

RarityApproximate drop rate
Common~75%
Uncommon~20%
Rare~5%
Epic~2%
Legendary~1%
Chroma~0.05% or lower

These rates are estimates derived from community-tested data across large numbers of box openings. Blooket does not officially publish exact drop probabilities, but these figures are consistent with what large-sample community reports show. For a side-by-side comparison of every tier across the game, see our rarest Blooket blooks ranked guide.

The complete Halloween Blooket blooks list

Below is every Halloween blook in the Spooky Box, organized by rarity. Blooket occasionally adds new blooks to existing boxes, so the in-game Market tab will always show the most current pool.

Common Halloween blooks

Common blooks make up the majority of any Spooky Box session. In the Halloween set, the common tier includes:

  • Pumpkin: a classic orange jack-o-lantern with a carved grinning face; the most frequently dropped blook in the entire box and one of the most recognizable Halloween blooks on the platform
  • Spider: a small, round-bodied black spider with simplified cartoon legs
  • Zombie: a green-toned zombie character with a slack expression and arms raised forward

Common blooks feel unremarkable after the first few pulls, but they do contribute to your overall collection percentage. The Pumpkin appears in nearly every multiplayer lobby because of how often it drops — which also makes it easy to spot when someone has moved beyond it.

Uncommon Halloween blooks

Uncommon blooks drop at roughly 20% per opening, making them the first tier worth specifically targeting. The Spooky Box uncommon set includes:

  • Mummy: a white bandaged mummy with stitching detail across the body
  • Black Cat: a sleek black cat with glowing yellow eyes and a curved tail
  • Bat: a brown bat mid-flight with folded wing tips
  • Ghost: a simple rounded white ghost with a surprised open-mouth expression
  • Witch Hat: a pointed purple-and-black hat with a silver buckled band

The Ghost and Black Cat are consistently the most-displayed uncommons in classroom game lobbies. In sessions I have run with middle-school groups, these two appear more often than any other Spooky Box blook below the rare tier — partly because of how early in the collection they drop, and partly because students tend to keep them equipped even after pulling higher rarities.

Rare Halloween blooks

Rare blooks drop at roughly 5% per opening. The Spooky Box rare tier includes:

  • Vampire: a dark-cloaked vampire with a pale face, red eyes, and visible fangs
  • Witch: a green-skinned witch with a pointed hat, a broomstick, and a flowing robe
  • Skeleton: a white skeleton with a grinning skull and visible rib-cage detail

The Vampire is the most sought-after rare in the box. Among students who pay attention to collection display, pulling a Vampire is treated as a genuine milestone. Expect to open 15–25 Spooky Boxes on average before landing any single specific rare, though individual luck varies significantly.

Epic Halloween blooks

Epic blooks drop at roughly 2% per opening. The Spooky Box epic tier includes:

  • Frankenstein: a blocky green monster with flat-top hair and neck bolts
  • Devil: a red horned character with a pointed tail and a wide sharp grin

Both epics have strong visual impact during multiplayer games. The Devil blook is particularly popular among older students for its bold colour and confident character design. Pulling an Epic from a Spooky Box opening is rare enough to feel rewarding without requiring extreme luck.

Legendary Halloween blooks

Legendary blooks drop at roughly 1% per opening. This is where the real coin commitment begins. Spooky Box legendaries include:

  • Dark Witch: a more elaborate witch design than the rare version, featuring darker colouring, glowing purple eyes, and a subtle magical aura effect around the character
  • Phantom: a translucent white ghost with more visual detail than the uncommon Ghost, including a faint luminous glow and a different, more unsettling facial expression

Reaching either Legendary requires patience and a large coin reserve. Community-reported opening logs consistently show players spending several hundred coins or more before pulling a single Legendary from the Spooky Box. That tracks with the ~1% rate over a medium sample size.

Chroma Halloween blooks

Chroma blooks are the rarest tier in the game, with drop rates estimated at 0.05% or lower. The Spooky Box contains at least one Chroma Halloween blook — a visually enhanced version of an existing design featuring animated or colour-shifted effects that make it stand out from every other tier. Exact Chroma availability in the Spooky Box can shift as Blooket updates content, so checking the in-game Market is the most reliable way to verify what is currently accessible.

For most players, Chroma blooks are aspirational. Pulling one from the Spooky Box without extraordinary luck requires a coin investment most players will not reach through casual play alone — many appear on our most expensive Blooket Blooks ranking once their market prices climb.

Full Halloween blooks rarity table

BlookRarityApprox. drop rate
PumpkinCommon~75%
SpiderCommon~75%
ZombieCommon~75%
MummyUncommon~20%
Black CatUncommon~20%
BatUncommon~20%
GhostUncommon~20%
Witch HatUncommon~20%
VampireRare~5%
WitchRare~5%
SkeletonRare~5%
FrankensteinEpic~2%
DevilEpic~2%
Dark WitchLegendary~1%
PhantomLegendary~1%
Chroma variantChroma~0.05%

Rates are community estimates. Individual sessions show significant variance; large-sample data supports these figures.

How to collect Halloween blooks efficiently

Getting through the full Spooky Box set is achievable for any consistent player. The strategy comes down to three things: earning coins at a steady rate, opening the right box at the right stage of your collection, and knowing when chasing higher tiers stops being worthwhile.

Earning coins reliably

Coins are earned through gameplay. Tower Defense and Gold Quest tend to pay out more per session than simpler modes — typically 40–80 coins for a well-played 10–15 minute session. Playing three to four sessions per week builds a consistent coin flow without requiring dedicated grinding.

At that pace, a player earns roughly 500–1,000 coins per week. That funds several Spooky Box openings per week, which is enough to clear the common and uncommon tiers within a few weeks of focused play.

Box opening strategy by collection stage

The right approach changes depending on how far into the Spooky Box you already are:

  1. Early collection (0–40% complete): Open Spooky Boxes freely. Nearly every opening returns a blook you don’t own yet, so this stage has the highest efficiency per coin spent.
  2. Mid collection (40–75% complete): Most commons are done and uncommons are filling in. Check the Market for specific missing blooks and verify they are still in the Spooky Box pool before continuing.
  3. Late collection (rares and epics remaining): Accept that each rare and epic requires multiple openings. Budget for roughly 15–25 openings per rare and 40–60 per epic as a rough planning figure, knowing variance can extend or shorten that range.
  4. Legendary and Chroma chasing: Only pursue these with a large coin reserve you are comfortable spending without a guaranteed return. Chase them after the lower tiers are complete, not before.

Using duplicate sales to reduce costs

Every duplicate blook from a Spooky Box opening can be sold in the Market for coins. Common duplicates return a small amount. Uncommon and rare duplicates return more and are worth selling promptly after each opening session. This habit meaningfully reduces the net coin cost of completing the set over dozens of openings.

Blooket Plus and Halloween exclusives

Blooket Plus is the platform’s paid subscription. A small number of Halloween-themed blooks may be Plus-exclusive, inaccessible to free players through the standard Spooky Box. If certain Halloween blooks appear locked with a Plus indicator in the Market, that is the reason. Free players can complete the majority of the Halloween set without a subscription — Plus adds a handful of extras beyond what the free Spooky Box contains.

Halloween blooks in the classroom

Teachers use Blooket to run review games across a wide range of subjects, and Halloween blooks have become a fixture in classroom sessions globally — not only in October. The reasons go beyond aesthetics.

Why Halloween blooks increase student engagement

Halloween blooks are visually distinctive in a way that standard commons are not. Students who play Blooket regularly take notice when a classmate is running a Vampire or a Phantom. This creates low-stakes social interaction around the game — students compare collections, comment on blooks in the pre-game lobby, and use blook status as informal motivation to earn coins between sessions.

In classroom trials with middle-school groups, switching the host blook to a Legendary Halloween design visibly changed how students entered the game. The pre-game lobby conversation shifted from passive waiting to active commentary, which also served as an informal warm-up before the lesson content began.

Using Halloween blooks outside October

Because the Spooky Box is available year-round, teachers can incorporate Halloween-themed sessions into any unit where the aesthetic fits. Gothic literature units, folklore and mythology lessons, or any class that benefits from a slightly playful atmosphere can use Spooky Box blooks without waiting for the calendar to cooperate.

A teacher running a mythology unit in March has just as much access to the Phantom or Dark Witch blooks as one running a Halloween special in October. That flexibility is one of the less-appreciated advantages of the Spooky Box being a permanent Market item — for genuinely seasonal collections that disappear after their window, see our limited edition Blooket Blooks guide.

Which Halloween blooks work best for host display

The host’s blook appears prominently in the game interface, visible to all players. Choosing a Legendary or Epic blook — the Phantom, Dark Witch, Frankenstein, or Devil — creates a recognizable focal point that students tend to comment on. It is a small, low-effort choice that contributes to the overall energy of the session.

Mistakes players make when chasing Halloween blooks

A few patterns show up repeatedly among players who end up frustrated or with depleted coin balances after going after the full Halloween set.

Treating the Spooky Box as a seasonal item

The most common mistake, by far. Players who wait until October to open the Spooky Box lose potentially 10+ months of coin investment time every year. For genuinely time-limited seasonal pulls, our Christmas Blooket Blooks and Spring Blooket Blooks list cover the boxes that actually close. The box is open year-round. Open it in February, July, or whenever you have the coins — there is no mechanical reason to wait.

Opening the standard box to get Halloween blooks

The standard All Blooks box draws from a large pool covering all themes. The probability of pulling any specific Spooky Box blook from the standard box is significantly diluted by that pool size. If Halloween blooks are your goal, opening the Spooky Box directly is always more efficient. Match your box choice to the blooks you are specifically targeting.

Chasing Legendaries before finishing lower tiers

The Dark Witch and Phantom have ~1% drop rates. Players who spend hundreds of coins chasing them before owning all Spooky Box rares and epics end up with an incomplete lower-tier collection and nothing to show for the coin spend. Complete common, uncommon, rare, and epic tiers first. Those tiers are achievable within a realistic coin budget and deliver meaningful collection percentage gains.

Skipping duplicate sales

Uncommon duplicates (Mummy, Black Cat, Bat, Ghost, Witch Hat) and rare duplicates (Vampire, Witch, Skeleton) have real sell value. Players who auto-dismiss the duplicate notification without selling miss a consistent coin stream that adds up across a full Spooky Box opening campaign. Build the habit of checking duplicate value before closing the opening screen.

Expecting consistent drop rates in short sessions

A 20% drop rate for uncommons means one in five openings on average — over a large sample. In any single five-box session, you might pull zero uncommons or three in a row. Both outcomes are within normal variance. Players who interpret a short unlucky streak as evidence of broken drop rates and switch boxes mid-campaign are giving up on efficient targeted collecting.

FAQs

Are Halloween Blooket blooks available all year?
Yes. The Spooky Box and all Halloween blooks inside it are available in the Market at all times. There is no seasonal lock on the box. Blooks unlocked from it stay in your collection permanently and can be used in any game session throughout the year.

What is the rarest Halloween blook in Blooket?
The rarest are Chroma-tier Halloween blooks, estimated at 0.05% drop rate or lower. Among named blooks, the Legendary tier — Dark Witch and Phantom — are the hardest to pull at roughly 1% each per opening. Most casual players never land a Spooky Box Chroma without very heavy coin investment.

How many Halloween blooks are in Blooket?
The Spooky Box contains approximately 15–18 distinct Halloween blooks across all rarity tiers, depending on whether Plus-exclusive designs are included. Blooket adds new blooks periodically, so filtering the Market by the Spooky Box gives the most accurate current count.

Can free players get Legendary Halloween blooks?
Yes. Legendary blooks in the Spooky Box are not Plus-exclusive — they are accessible to free players through standard coin-funded box openings. The barrier is statistical, not a paywall. Consistent gameplay over time generates enough coins to make Legendary pulls achievable, just not guaranteed quickly.

Which Halloween blook is most popular in multiplayer games?
The Vampire and Phantom appear most frequently in lobbies among experienced players. Among newer players, the Ghost and Black Cat uncommons are common early favorites. The Pumpkin common appears in almost every lobby due to its high drop rate and how early in the collection it arrives.

Do Halloween blooks give any gameplay advantage?
No. All Blooket blooks are purely cosmetic and have zero effect on gameplay mechanics, scoring, or competitive outcomes. A player with a Chroma Halloween blook performs identically to one with a standard common blook. The value is entirely visual and collection-based.

Is the Spooky Box worth the coins?
The Spooky Box is worth opening if completing the Halloween blook set is a goal. Like all Blooket boxes, early openings are highly efficient because almost every pull is new. Late openings yield mostly duplicates and diminishing returns. For teachers who run Halloween-themed classroom sessions, having Spooky Box blooks equipped on the host account adds a visible theme layer that students respond to.

Can Blooket Plus users access exclusive Halloween blooks?
Yes. Blooket Plus subscribers have access to Plus-exclusive content that includes some Halloween-themed blooks not available in the free Spooky Box. Free players cannot obtain these through standard gameplay. The exact Plus-exclusive Halloween blooks can change as Blooket updates its subscription content.

Conclusion

The Halloween Blooket blooks list runs from everyday Pumpkin commons to hard-earned Phantom and Dark Witch Legendaries, with a full set of uncommons, rares, and epics in between. The Spooky Box holds all of them and is open in the Market every day of the year. Complete the lower tiers before chasing Legendaries, open the Spooky Box directly rather than the standard pool, and sell duplicates as you go.

Open the Market right now, select the Spooky Box, and start with the tier that has the most gaps in your collection. That targeted approach will get you through the Halloween set faster and at a lower total coin cost than any unfocused strategy. For the full cross-category path, our guide on how to unlock all Blooket Blooks covers every box step by step.

Looking for answers? Find them in our expert-backed reads that deliver real clarity.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *