KidWatch › Channel Safety › lclc01
Harmless Roblox fun with some pushy subscribe-begging and mild mockery of poor players that's worth a quick chat with your kid.
Best for ages 8+
This is a British Roblox creator who plays Pet Simulator X almost exclusively, and his whole thing is mixing real-world stunts with in-game grinding. He'll take his laptop somewhere unusual, wander around toy shops in the heat, spend absurd amounts of virtual currency, that kind of thing. The humor is goofy and low-key, and he talks to his audience like he genuinely likes them. It's pretty relaxed content overall.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
This is a British Roblox creator who plays Pet Simulator X almost exclusively, and his whole thing is mixing real-world stunts with in-game grinding. He'll take his laptop somewhere unusual, wander around toy shops in the heat, spend absurd amounts of virtual currency, that kind of thing. The humor is goofy and low-key, and he talks to his audience like he genuinely likes them. It's pretty relaxed content overall.
The tone is mostly gentle and self-deprecating. He pokes fun at himself more than anyone else, and there's no aggression or scary content here. That said, he does repeatedly call other players 'poor' in a jokey way, which could land differently depending on your kid's age or sensitivity. He also leans hard on subscribe-and-like calls to action, often tying them to receiving free in-game items.
The spending angle is worth noting. He regularly showcases large Robux purchases and frames big spending as exciting and aspirational. Kids who are already into Pet Simulator X will enjoy this, but younger or more impressionable viewers might get itchy for their own purchases after watching.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
He repeatedly calls other players' in-game banks 'poor' and frames their lack of rare pets as something to mock, even when addressing what appears to be an adult's account. The joke is light but the 'poor = bad' framing comes up several times.
Subscribe-and-comment calls to action are tied directly to receiving free in-game pets, which blurs the line between content enjoyment and transactional engagement for young viewers.
He calls out another player as a scammer based on limited evidence, labeling them publicly in a video. Even if the suspicion is valid, the public callout sets a casual tone around accusing strangers.
The video frames going undercover to avoid fans as funny, but part of the humor involves repeatedly emphasizing how famous and recognizable he is, which models a subtle but consistent self-promotion attitude.
Spending 100,000 Robux is presented as aspirational and exciting, with the large number treated as a fun flex rather than something notable. This could normalize large in-game spending to younger audiences.
He pre-orders large quantities of toys across multiple stores in a way that frames bulk-buying limited items as a fun competition, which could encourage similar impulse behavior in kids who follow along.
What Parents Should Know
Have a quick chat about the 'poor' jokes if your kid is on the younger or more sensitive side, since the humor of mocking empty in-game banks comes up fairly regularly.
Watch out for the Robux spending content with kids who already have access to Roblox purchases, because the big-spending videos make it look really fun and normal.
Remind your kid that subscribing or commenting to get free in-game items is a marketing tactic, not a genuine gift, so they're not constantly nagging you to comment their username.
This channel is pretty specifically for Pet Simulator X fans, so if your kid doesn't play that game the content won't make much sense and they'll probably lose interest fast.
The content is totally fine to watch unsupervised for kids around 8 and up who understand basic Roblox mechanics, but younger kids might need some context for the in-game economy stuff.
If your kid starts asking to spend large amounts of Robux after watching, that's a good opening to talk about the difference between watching someone else spend virtual currency and actually doing it yourself.
Recommended for ages 8+.
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