KidWatch › Channel Safety › BunniAshley
It's goofy Roblox fun on the surface, but the dramatic storylines and suggestive roleplay scenarios make it better suited for tweens than younger kids.
Best for ages 10+
BunniAshley is a Roblox-focused channel built around life simulation roleplay games, mostly Life Together RP. The creator plays out social scenarios like getting adopted, going undercover, and doing couples pranks, all narrated with a loud, reactive commentary style. She's energetic and clearly entertained by what she's doing, which makes the videos easy to watch.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
BunniAshley is a Roblox-focused channel built around life simulation roleplay games, mostly Life Together RP. The creator plays out social scenarios like getting adopted, going undercover, and doing couples pranks, all narrated with a loud, reactive commentary style. She's energetic and clearly entertained by what she's doing, which makes the videos easy to watch.
The content leans heavily on drama as a hook. Thumbnails and titles promise kidnappings, divorces, and shocking twists. The actual gameplay is usually pretty tame, but the framing is designed to feel scandalous. There's also a recurring boyfriend storyline woven through several videos, which normalizes a pretty adult relationship dynamic for a platform that skews young.
Her language stays mostly clean, but she uses mild substitutes like 'freak' and 'what the heck' pretty freely. The bigger concern is the roleplay content itself, which includes adoption scenarios, pregnancy and birth storylines, and situations involving strangers online behaving oddly.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The video's central premise involves a stranger 'kidnapping' the player character and keeping multiple children in a basement. It's played for laughs, but the scenario normalizes a genuinely dangerous concept for young viewers.
The creator actively seeks out a 'baddy mom' based on appearance and rejects other players for not being attractive enough, modeling shallow social judgment in a way that's casually presented as funny.
The video centers on a pregnancy and childbirth roleplay scenario that includes a gender reveal party. The content itself is mild, but the framing of romantic partnership, pregnancy, and parenting as entertainment feels more suited to older kids.
The boyfriend character tells a child character 'before I give you something to cry about,' which is a threat framing that's played off as humor but could register negatively with younger or more sensitive viewers.
The thumbnail and title use 'divorce' as clickbait, and the storyline frames relationship breakdown as entertainment. It's not graphic, but the repeated use of adult relationship drama as a hook is a pattern worth noting.
The creator makes repeated comments about other players' appearances and outfits, including commenting on body parts in a mocking tone. The humor is light but could model body-focused judgment for younger kids.
The whole video arc is built around chasing wealth and judging families by how rich they are, with the creator explicitly seeking out a 'rich family' and expressing disappointment at anything less. It's a minor point, but it's a consistent value signal.
The video frames spying on a romantic partner as a fun prank rather than a boundary issue. For older kids this probably reads as silly roleplay, but younger viewers may absorb it as a normal relationship behavior.
What Parents Should Know
Watch a few videos with your kid before letting them binge unsupervised, since the roleplay scenarios can shift in unexpected directions pretty quickly.
Talk to younger kids about the kidnapping and stranger-danger scenarios that get played for laughs, because the humor can muddy what should be a clear safety message.
Point out when the channel uses words like 'divorce,' 'kidnapped,' or 'went wrong' in titles just to get clicks, since it's a good teachable moment about how YouTube works.
Be aware that the channel has a recurring romantic relationship storyline running through several videos, which may prompt questions you want to be ready for with younger kids.
If your kid starts roleplaying similar adoption or family scenarios online, check in about who they're interacting with, since the game involves real strangers.
Skip this channel entirely for kids under 9 or 10, not because it's harmful, but because the humor and social dynamics are aimed at a tween audience and won't land the way she intends for littler ones.
Recommended for ages 10+.
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