KidWatch › Channel Safety › iamSanna
iamSanna
Fun and mostly harmless, but a couple of moments would make me hit pause with younger kids in the room.
Best for ages 10+
Sanna is a bubbly, high-energy creator who plays Roblox games with her boyfriend and leans hard into couple content. The tone is silly and playful, with lots of screaming over virtual pets and fake-competitive banter. It's genuinely charming a lot of the time, and the Roblox gameplay itself is pretty tame stuff.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
Sanna is a bubbly, high-energy creator who plays Roblox games with her boyfriend and leans hard into couple content. The tone is silly and playful, with lots of screaming over virtual pets and fake-competitive banter. It's genuinely charming a lot of the time, and the Roblox gameplay itself is pretty tame stuff.
The channel's style is very personality-driven. You're watching Sanna and her boyfriend goof around as much as you're watching any actual gameplay. That warmth is appealing to younger viewers, but it also means the content goes wherever their conversation takes it, and that's where things get a little inconsistent.
A few moments stand out as worth knowing about. There's some casual carelessness in how she plays characters, including a babysitter role that models pretty dismissive behavior toward a child. She also casually mentions dropping out of school in a way that feels like a quirky flex. Nothing is outright harmful, but the channel isn't squeaky clean either.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
Sanna reads aloud a nonsense word from a quiz that sounds like a sexual term, laughs about it, and moves on. It's brief but clearly audible and she acknowledges it was weird.
She casually mentions being a school dropout in a jokey, almost proud tone, framing it as part of her identity rather than a serious life decision. Kids who look up to her might absorb that framing uncritically.
The babysitter character repeatedly tells a child to be quiet, calls them a 'poop face,' keeps money meant for the child, and tries to set the kid up with a stranger for money. It's played for laughs but models dismissive and neglectful adult behavior pretty consistently throughout.
A stranger in the game offers the child money and asks to add her to his family, and the babysitter character engages with it in a jokey way rather than treating it as something concerning. The moment passes quickly but the framing is odd.
The video is essentially an extended loop of buying virtual eggs and opening them, with heavy excitement around spending in-game currency. The format functions a lot like a loot box reveal and could reinforce impulsive spending thinking in younger viewers.
What Parents Should Know
Watch a couple of videos with your kid before letting them watch solo, since the content shifts depending on whatever Sanna and her boyfriend are riffing on that day.
Talk to your child about the school dropout comment if it comes up, since younger viewers may not have the context to understand that it was a very specific personal choice and not a general lifestyle endorsement.
Keep an eye on how your kid reacts to the pet-buying videos, especially if they also play Adopt Me, because the constant egg-opening excitement can feed the urge to spend real money on in-game items.
The babysitter roleplay content is framed as comedy, but younger kids might not read it that way, so it's worth checking in about what they thought of the way the adult treated the child in those videos.
This channel is better suited to kids who already have some media literacy, probably 10 and up, rather than very young viewers who are more likely to just absorb what they see without questioning it.
Recommended for ages 10+.
Is your child watching iamSanna?
See exactly what your child watches, every week.
KidWatch monitors your child's actual YouTube watch history and sends you a private weekly safety report. No blocking. No spying. Just awareness.
Start monitoring free →No credit card required · Privacy-first · Cancel anytime