KidWatch › Channel Safety › Crispy
Fun concept for older teens, but the constant swearing and some genuinely cringe-worthy humor make this a hard pass for younger kids.
Best for ages 15+
Crispy is a mid-tier gaming and internet culture channel aimed squarely at older teens. The format bounces between Fortnite-style group games, product testing, and collaborative comedy bits with friends. It's got a loose, unscripted feel that some kids will find charming, but it also means the content wanders into territory parents probably didn't sign up for.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
Crispy is a mid-tier gaming and internet culture channel aimed squarely at older teens. The format bounces between Fortnite-style group games, product testing, and collaborative comedy bits with friends. It's got a loose, unscripted feel that some kids will find charming, but it also means the content wanders into territory parents probably didn't sign up for.
The language is the biggest issue. Profanity shows up regularly and casually, not just as the occasional slip but as part of the channel's normal vocabulary. Some bits also lean on humor that pokes fun at real people or groups in ways that aren't exactly teaching great lessons about how to treat others online.
The host himself comes across as genuinely likable and not malicious. He's goofy, he laughs at himself, and the content isn't dark. But 'not dark' isn't the same as 'appropriate for a 10-year-old,' and the steady stream of swearing alone puts this firmly in older-teen territory.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
Frequent uncensored profanity throughout, used casually in conversation between the host and friends as a normal part of the video's humor and commentary.
The group briefly jokes about commissioning content with sexual undertones ('give me some head') and references adult topics like Tinder and relationship humor in ways that feel offhand but are clearly there.
Multiple instances of uncensored profanity, and the group toys with commissioning racist or sexist scripts before partially walking it back, with one participant actually sending a script referencing gender stereotypes.
The bit involving an 'African spokesperson' and the framing around it carries an uncomfortable racial undertone that isn't called out or challenged within the video.
Lyrics written for Fiverr musicians include a line joking about spreading misinformation online, played entirely for laughs with no acknowledgment of why that might be a problem.
A casual mention of Tinder on an old device and references to an ex-girlfriend are minor but worth noting for younger viewers who may ask questions.
The video is structured around product promotion and includes a sponsored segment, without always making the commercial nature obvious to younger viewers.
What Parents Should Know
Set the age floor at 15 or 16 at minimum before letting kids watch this channel unsupervised.
Watch one of the group collaboration videos with your teen first so you know exactly what the humor style looks and sounds like.
Talk to your kid about the bits where the group jokes about racist or sexist content, even when they pull back from fully going there, because the casual way it's treated sends a message.
Point out the sponsored segments and product review videos as a good opportunity to discuss how advertising works on YouTube and why creators have financial incentives to recommend things.
Be aware that the Discord call format used in some videos normalizes a lot of casual group chat language and humor that younger kids may try to imitate without understanding the context.
Recommended for ages 15+.
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