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KidWatch Channel Safety EEVblog

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EEVblog

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Top videos analyzed · July 2026
72 / 100
B

Great nerdy content for curious teens, but Dave's mouth runs as fast as his enthusiasm and he doesn't always clean it up.

Best for ages 13+

EEVblog is a one-man show run by an Australian electronics engineer named Dave Jones who genuinely loves what he does. He tears things apart, explains how circuits work, exposes scams, and teaches soldering with the kind of energy that makes dry technical stuff actually watchable. It's hands-on, educational, and clearly made by someone who'd rather be in his lab than in front of a camera pretending to be polished.

Score Breakdown

Language & Tone 60 / 100
Violence & Danger 85 / 100
Adult Content 75 / 100
Commercialism 90 / 100
Role Modeling 80 / 100

KidWatch Assessment

EEVblog is a one-man show run by an Australian electronics engineer named Dave Jones who genuinely loves what he does. He tears things apart, explains how circuits work, exposes scams, and teaches soldering with the kind of energy that makes dry technical stuff actually watchable. It's hands-on, educational, and clearly made by someone who'd rather be in his lab than in front of a camera pretending to be polished.

The tone is casual to a fault. Dave swears occasionally, drops phrases that aren't exactly parent-approved, and calls things he doesn't like words you wouldn't want a ten-year-old repeating. It's not mean-spirited or edgy for shock value. It's just a bloke being himself, which is part of the appeal but also part of the problem depending on your kid's age.

For older teens who are into electronics, coding, or making things, this channel is genuinely fantastic. The technical depth is real, the enthusiasm is contagious, and there's nothing predatory or harmful going on. Just watch a few episodes yourself first so you know what your kid's getting into.

Flagged Moments from Top Videos

Moderate How to Entertain a Nerd

The clip includes multiple bleeped profanities in quick succession and a phrase describing electronics as 'sex on a stick,' which is casually tossed in without any apparent awareness that younger viewers might be watching.

Mild How to Entertain a Nerd

The overall tone of the segment is chaotic and irreverent, with shouting, explosions, and language that feels more like a blooper reel than a kids-appropriate introduction to the channel.

Mild EEVblog #671 - White Van Speaker Scam Teardown

Dave refers to finding dumpster items with genuine excitement and uses casual dismissive language throughout, which is fine for adults but younger kids might pick up on the 'just take stuff from dumpsters' framing without the surrounding context.

Mild EEVblog #600 - OpAmps Tutorial - What is an Operational Amplifier?

The tutorial mentions dismissing the 'hard way' of learning in a slightly snarky tone, which is mostly harmless but reflects Dave's habit of editorializing in ways that could come across as discouraging for kids who struggle with a different approach.

What Parents Should Know

Watch a couple episodes yourself before handing it over to your kid, just to get a feel for Dave's communication style and whether it fits your family's standards.

Expect some bleeped or barely-bleeped swearing scattered across the channel. It's not constant, but it shows up enough that younger or more sensitive kids will notice.

Use the educational videos as a jumping-off point for conversations about electronics and engineering if your kid shows interest. Dave's explanations are genuinely solid and could spark a real hobby.

Skip the more chaotic highlight-reel style videos with younger kids and stick to the structured tutorial or teardown content, which tends to be more focused and less likely to include offhand remarks.

Remind older teens that Dave's casual dismissal of brands and products is opinion-based, not always backed by formal testing. It's a good lesson in evaluating sources.

If your kid is 13 or older and interested in how things work, this channel is a genuinely positive rabbit hole. Encourage it, but check in on what they're watching occasionally.

Recommended for ages 13+.

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