KidWatch › Channel Safety › llxllie
Fun Roblox vibes for tweens, but the sketchy third-party item shop ads and cheating-as-entertainment are real things to talk through with your kid.
Best for ages 11+
This is a Roblox-focused channel built around Murder Mystery 2, a popular game where players are randomly assigned roles as murderer, sheriff, or innocent. The creator has a bubbly, teenage personality and leans hard into chaotic, reaction-driven content. Videos typically involve gimmicks like using hacks, playing with family, or setting up friend versus friend challenges. It's casual and fun in tone, the kind of thing that'll keep a tween glued to the screen for an hour without much thought.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
This is a Roblox-focused channel built around Murder Mystery 2, a popular game where players are randomly assigned roles as murderer, sheriff, or innocent. The creator has a bubbly, teenage personality and leans hard into chaotic, reaction-driven content. Videos typically involve gimmicks like using hacks, playing with family, or setting up friend versus friend challenges. It's casual and fun in tone, the kind of thing that'll keep a tween glued to the screen for an hour without much thought.
The bigger concern isn't the content itself but the ads baked into every video. The creator promotes third-party Roblox item shops mid-video, complete with walkthroughs showing kids exactly how to buy game items on external websites. That's genuinely sketchy territory for younger or unsupervised viewers.
There's also a recurring thread of cheating being played for laughs, using hacks against real players in public servers. It's framed as harmless trolling, but it normalizes some questionable behavior. Language is mostly fine, energy is high, and there's nothing overtly adult here.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The creator uses actual hacks against unsuspecting players in public servers and frames it as funny entertainment, repeatedly acknowledging she's cheating but brushing it off. This is presented as something to replicate, not something to question.
A mid-video ad promotes a third-party website selling in-game items, with instructions on how to purchase and receive them, targeting an audience that's likely quite young.
The video explicitly celebrates toxic gaming behaviors like camping, teaming, and spam-jumping, framing them as a fun challenge rather than something that ruins other players' experiences.
Another embedded ad promotes a third-party Roblox item shop with a step-by-step guide for kids on how to buy items, including instructions for accounts under 13 to friend a bot.
The channel promotes a second third-party Roblox shop mid-video with the same detailed purchasing walkthrough, making this a consistent pattern across the channel rather than a one-off ad.
The ex-boyfriend framing combined with commentary like calling him names and the general relationship drama energy may feel edgy or slightly mature for younger viewers, though it stays lighthearted.
The video features romantic framing between the two creators, with flirty back-and-forth commentary and references to being a couple. It's tame but adds a social dynamic that younger kids may not be ready to parse.
There are a few mild moments of trash talk and one instance of fairly aggressive language during sibling bickering, though it stays within what you'd expect from actual family chaos and doesn't feel scripted or mean-spirited.
What Parents Should Know
Talk to your kid about the third-party shop ads before they watch unsupervised. These are not official Roblox purchases and the channel walks children through the entire buying process, including using discount codes.
Check whether your child's Roblox account has payment methods attached, because this channel creates genuine purchase intent and makes buying seem easy and normal.
Use the hacking videos as a conversation starter about online fairness. The creator frames cheating against strangers as harmless fun, and that framing can quietly shape how kids think about it.
This channel is best suited for kids around 11 and up who already understand the difference between YouTube entertainment and real-life behavior expectations in games.
If your kid is younger or more impressionable, consider watching a video or two together first so you can add context where the creator glosses over the fact that real people are being cheated against.
The relationship-drama style content (ex versus current, crush content) is light but recurring. Worth knowing about if you have a younger or more sensitive child who might take social cues from it.
Recommended for ages 11+.
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