XTAKARA TOMY BEYBLADE X

Beyblade X Stadiums

Beystadiums are the arenas Beyblade X is played in. The Xtreme Gear rail around the rim is what gives the system its signature speed and Xtreme Finishes. This page lists all 10 Stadiums in the Beyblade X line, with details and where to buy each on Amazon.

Xtreme StadiumBX-10

Xtreme Stadium

StadiumsBasic Line
Wide Xtreme StadiumBX-32

Wide Xtreme Stadium

StadiumsBasic Line
Double Xtreme StadiumBX-37

Double Xtreme Stadium

StadiumsBasic Line
Infinity StadiumBX-46

Infinity Stadium

StadiumsBasic Line
Beystadium (2024)

Beystadium (2024)

StadiumsBasic Line
Beystadium (2026)

Beystadium (2026)

StadiumsBasic Line
Clash & Carry Beystadium

Clash & Carry Beystadium

Stadiums
Drop Attack Beystadium

Drop Attack Beystadium

Stadiums$54.99
Sneak Attack Beystadium

Sneak Attack Beystadium

Stadiums$54.99
Xtreme Beystadium

Xtreme Beystadium

Stadiums

Which Beyblade X Stadium Should You Buy First?

For most new bladers the answer is the standard Beyblade X stadium: the Xtreme Stadium, product code BX-10. It debuted at a June 2023 event in Japan before its regular release on July 15th, 2023, and it defines the standard 1v1 format the rest of the lineup builds on, including the Xtreme rail that attack types ride into Xtreme Finishes. If you only buy one stadium, this is the common first pick.

If you are buying for a group, or for two kids who want to battle at the same time, the Double Xtreme Stadium (BX-37) is the BX lineup's answer to bigger sessions. For a casual gift where simplicity matters more than format, one of the Beystadium models works well; the table below compares all ten options.

All 10 Beyblade X Stadiums Compared

Here are all ten stadiums in our Takara Tomy Beyblade X database: four numbered BX releases and six sold under the Beystadium name. One note on wording: arena and stadium mean the same thing in Beyblade X, so if you searched for Beyblade X arenas, every product in this table is what you were looking for. The table lists the Japanese and US release dates our database holds for each model; open the product page for the full spec sheet and box contents.

StadiumProduct codeRelease (JP / US)Best for
Xtreme StadiumBX-10JP July 15th, 2023; US September 2025The standard 1v1 stadium, the usual first buy
Wide Xtreme StadiumBX-32JP July 13th, 2024; US October 1st, 20251v1 with a wider floor, more room for attack types
Double Xtreme StadiumBX-37JP October 12th, 2024; US October 1st, 20252v2 team battles and group play
Infinity StadiumBX-46JP October 11th, 2025Standard 1v1 play in the current BX format
Beystadium (2024)No BX codeUS June 1st, 2024The plain compact option for casual play
Beystadium (2026)No BX codeUS January 2026The updated take on the plain casual arena
Clash & Carry BeystadiumNo BX codeUS January 28th, 2025Casual battles with a pack up and carry design
Drop Attack BeystadiumNo BX codeUS May 2025Gimmick battles; seen in the anime as the Flying Stadium
Sneak Attack BeystadiumNo BX codeUS July 15th, 2026 (scheduled)The upcoming gimmick arena, not out yet
Xtreme BeystadiumNo BX codeUS June 1st, 2024The Beystadium take on the Xtreme format, not the BX-10

Xtreme Stadium, Wide Xtreme, Double Xtreme, Infinity: How the BX Lineup Evolved

The four BX coded stadiums track how the game itself grew. The Xtreme Stadium (BX-10) set the template at its regular Japanese release in July 2023, and the Wide Xtreme Stadium followed as BX-32 in July 2024 with a broader playing field, which gives attack types more room to build speed before contact.

October 2024 brought the Double Xtreme Stadium (BX-37) and with it a genuine format change: 2v2 team battles instead of a simple size bump. The fourth entry, the Infinity Stadium, carries code BX-46 and reached Japan on October 11th, 2025. It is the newest BX arena, and recency is the honest summary of what our database records about it, so check its product page for the floor layout and box contents before assuming it plays exactly like the BX-10.

BX Stadiums vs Beystadium Line: What Is the Difference?

The quickest way to tell the two groups apart is the product code. The four stadiums above carry Takara Tomy BX numbers and listed Japanese release dates, and they are the ones bladers usually reference for organized, tournament style play. The six Beystadium products carry no BX code and are listed with US release dates instead, from the Beystadium (2024) in June 2024 to the Sneak Attack Beystadium scheduled for July 2026, with the Clash & Carry, Drop Attack, Beystadium (2026) and Xtreme Beystadium arriving in between.

Naming is the main trap: the Xtreme Beystadium is not the same product as the BX-10 Xtreme Stadium, even though both carry Xtreme in the name. Drop Attack and Sneak Attack lean toward gimmick battles, while the plain Beystadiums are the compact casual picks. Rail layouts and sizes also vary from model to model, so check the individual product page before assuming a stadium supports the same Xtreme Finish setups as the standard one.

Stadiums, Launchers and What to Get Next

A stadium is only half of the setup: every Bey needs a launcher, and the winder versus string question deserves its own comparison, which you will find on the launcher category page.

For rules questions, part compatibility and buying basics, the FAQ answers the points that come up most often.