KidWatch › Channel Safety › AngelazzBrookhaven
Harmless Roblox chaos mostly, but the constant like-begging and 'oder' shaming add up fast.
Best for ages 9+
This is a Roblox Brookhaven channel built around a group of friends (and apparent siblings) goofing around together, copying other players' avatars, and reacting to what they call 'oders' - online daters in the game. The energy is loud, silly, and very clearly aimed at younger kids. Think middle-school lunch table humor translated into a YouTube format. It's genuinely lighthearted most of the time.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
This is a Roblox Brookhaven channel built around a group of friends (and apparent siblings) goofing around together, copying other players' avatars, and reacting to what they call 'oders' - online daters in the game. The energy is loud, silly, and very clearly aimed at younger kids. Think middle-school lunch table humor translated into a YouTube format. It's genuinely lighthearted most of the time.
The recurring format is pretty formulaic: spot a couple roleplaying romance in the game, spy on them, copy their look, then troll or mock them. There's nothing violent or sexually explicit, but the mockery angle is worth noting. Kids watching this learn that publicly humiliating strangers for playing a game 'wrong' is funny content.
The biggest ongoing issue is the relentless like-begging and Robux references baked into nearly every video. Kids are constantly nudged to hit like targets or else something 'bad' happens to a character. It's low-stakes manipulation, but it's nonstop.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The hosts repeatedly mock and publicly shame other players for roleplaying romantic scenarios, framing embarrassing strangers as the whole point of the content. This is a consistent pattern, not a one-off joke.
The video lingers on in-game romantic roleplay between players, including a fake drowning rescue played for flirtatious laughs. The host notes 'there are little children around them' while commenting on the scenario, which draws more attention to the romantic context.
The framing of the whole segment centers on a player only allowing 'rich girls' into a pool, and the host changes avatars specifically to gain access. It's played as funny, but it reinforces appearance-based gatekeeping without any pushback.
A player insults the host's avatar by calling it 'gross and smelly' because it's a bacon avatar, and the immediate response is planning 'sweet revenge.' The retaliation framing is light but it does model that mockery deserves mockery back.
The video ties a character's happiness directly to hitting 5,000 likes, using emotional stakes to pressure young viewers into engagement. This kind of conditional like-begging appears repeatedly across the channel.
The hosts type mocking messages directly at other players in the game, including publicly calling out a player's romantic nickname in front of the whole server. The joke lands at the expense of real people who didn't consent to being filmed.
One creator jokes about being 'forced' to record the video and complains about meeting like targets, which while clearly banter between friends, subtly models resentment around content creation in a way younger kids may not read correctly.
What Parents Should Know
Talk to your kid about the 'oders' framing - the channel treats mocking romantic roleplay as sport, and younger kids may internalize that publicly embarrassing strangers is just good fun.
Watch for the like-begging pattern because it shows up constantly. Kids are regularly told a character will be sad or something bad will happen unless they hit a like count, and that kind of low-level manipulation sticks.
Skip this channel for kids under 8 or so. The humor relies on a layer of social awareness about online behavior that younger children genuinely won't have.
Use it as a conversation starter if your child already watches it. The videos naturally raise questions about how you treat strangers online, which is a genuinely useful topic.
Check in on whether your kid is absorbing the Robux references. Robux costs come up regularly in the jokes and kids may start lobbying for purchases after watching.
Reassure your kid that the 'oders' being mocked are avatars in a game, not real situations to copy. Some children may think trolling other players like this is a normal or cool way to play Roblox.
Recommended for ages 9+.
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