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KidWatch Channel Safety CUBASTIC

C

CUBASTIC

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Top videos analyzed · July 2026
82 / 100
B

Totally fine for puzzle-obsessed kids, though the creator's English is rough and one video tries to sell a math trick that's actually just an illusion.

Best for ages 7+

CUBASTIC is a niche channel built around Rubik's cubes and twisty puzzles. The creator is clearly passionate about the hobby, whether he's assembling tiny novelty cubes, speed-solving a full lineup of competition puzzles, or walking beginners through how to solve a standard 3x3. The tone is calm and nerdy in a good way. There's no drama, no shouting, no hype. Just a guy who really likes puzzles.

Score Breakdown

Language & Tone 92 / 100
Violence & Danger 95 / 100
Adult Content 98 / 100
Commercialism 80 / 100
Role Modeling 85 / 100

KidWatch Assessment

CUBASTIC is a niche channel built around Rubik's cubes and twisty puzzles. The creator is clearly passionate about the hobby, whether he's assembling tiny novelty cubes, speed-solving a full lineup of competition puzzles, or walking beginners through how to solve a standard 3x3. The tone is calm and nerdy in a good way. There's no drama, no shouting, no hype. Just a guy who really likes puzzles.

The tutorials are genuinely useful for kids who want to learn. They're patient, well-structured, and the creator explains concepts clearly even though his English isn't always polished. Non-native phrasing pops up regularly, but it's never confusing enough to be a problem.

One outlier is a video about making 'infinite chocolate' using a cutting trick. It's harmless fun, but it presents a mathematical illusion as if it's real, which could mislead younger kids. Worth watching alongside them so you can explain what's actually happening.

Flagged Moments from Top Videos

Mild Endless chocolate | How is it possible?

The video presents a geometric cutting illusion as a genuine way to create extra chocolate from nothing, framing it as a real 'life hack' rather than clearly explaining upfront that it's an optical trick. Younger kids could genuinely believe matter is being created.

Moderate Endless chocolate | How is it possible?

The creator uses a utility knife on camera without any safety commentary, which could prompt kids to try the same chocolate-cutting trick at home unsupervised.

Mild THE SMALLEST RUBIK'S CUBE IN THE WORLD | Nano cube

The channel ends the video with a straightforward subscribe call-to-action, which is minor but worth noting for parents of very young viewers who are still learning to recognize when creators are asking for engagement.

What Parents Should Know

Watch the chocolate video with younger kids so you can explain that the extra piece doesn't actually appear from nowhere - it's a classic area paradox and a great teachable moment.

Keep an eye out when kids try to recreate anything shown on screen, especially if it involves knives or small puzzle parts that are a choking hazard for little ones.

Use the beginner tutorial series as a starting point if your child is curious about solving the cube - it's broken into parts and genuinely easy to follow.

Don't worry about the language barrier - the creator's English is imperfect but the content is clear enough, and it's actually a low-key opportunity to talk with kids about creators from different countries.

Skip the pure speed-solve videos if your kid is a casual viewer - they're mostly just music with fast hands and don't offer much unless your child is already deep into the hobby.

Recommended for ages 7+.

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