KidWatch › Channel Safety › CannonGtag
Goofy and mostly harmless, but the shouting, name-calling, and crude humor add up fast across a session.
Best for ages 10+
CannonGtag is a Gorilla Tag content creator who leans hard into chaotic, improvisational roleplay with a small crew of friends. The format is almost always the same: a silly premise gets set up, everyone yells over each other for 10-15 minutes, and something mildly absurd happens. It's energetic and genuinely funny at times, especially for kids who already play Gorilla Tag.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
CannonGtag is a Gorilla Tag content creator who leans hard into chaotic, improvisational roleplay with a small crew of friends. The format is almost always the same: a silly premise gets set up, everyone yells over each other for 10-15 minutes, and something mildly absurd happens. It's energetic and genuinely funny at times, especially for kids who already play Gorilla Tag.
The tone is where parents might pause. The channel runs on loud banter, and that banter includes regular name-calling, words like 'freak' and 'ugly' thrown at other players, and the occasional 'what the hell' or 'oh my god' scattered through the commentary. Nothing is explicit, but it's also not especially measured.
Rolemodeling is inconsistent. Cannon and his friends mock each other constantly, and comments like calling someone 'chopped' or 'ugly' are played for laughs without any pushback. Younger kids who absorb this kind of talk might not realize it doesn't land the same way in real life.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The creator repeatedly calls another player's avatar 'ugly' and 'chopped,' and says he would never be with someone who looks like her. The comments are played as jokes but model casual appearance-based mockery.
The phrase 'I literally mugged this kid to death' is said casually in a comedic context. It's throwaway slang, but it's the kind of line that can stick with younger kids.
The group references 'escaping the Matrix' and invokes Andrew Tate by first name in a way that implies familiarity, though it's brief and not developed further.
Repeated jokes about a monster 'eating and killing people' are played for laughs. The framing is clearly comedic, but younger or more sensitive kids might find the subject matter a bit much.
The title implies a romantic subplot involving someone's sister, which sets an expectation the content doesn't quite deliver on but could feel unnecessary to some parents regardless.
The creator shouts 'OH MY GOD' and uses 'what the freak' and similar exclamations heavily throughout. The language is frequent enough to be a pattern, not just a slip.
The Backrooms setting involves a creature stalking the player in a dark, liminal space. The horror framing is light, but it could be startling for younger or anxious kids.
A friend group conspires to exclude the creator and writes 'Kennen sucks' in-game. The exclusion is played as setup for a prank, but the dynamic of group mockery toward one person is a recurring social pattern on the channel.
The creator is transformed into a creepy monster character and reacts with intense screaming and repeated 'what the freak' and 'oh heck no' outbursts. The intensity is high even if the content is tame.
What Parents Should Know
Watch an episode with your kid first so you know what the baseline energy and language level feels like before handing over the headphones.
Talk briefly about the difference between joking with friends who are in on it and calling strangers 'ugly' or 'chopped,' because the channel blurs that line pretty regularly.
Keep an eye on how your kid talks after binge-watching. The slang and mockery tone can rub off quickly, especially on kids under 10.
Skip this one for kids who startle easily or have anxiety around horror themes. The Backrooms and monster content is light, but the screaming reaction style cranks up the tension.
If your kid watches a lot of this creator, it's worth checking whether they've encountered the Andrew Tate reference in the House Head video. It's brief, but worth addressing depending on your kid's age.
This channel is best for kids who already play Gorilla Tag and understand the community humor. Without that context, a lot of the content won't land and the rougher edges will stand out more.
Recommended for ages 10+.
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