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KidWatch Channel Safety megaprojects9649

M

megaprojects9649

Top videos analyzed · June 2026
78 / 100
B

Solid educational content for curious teens, but the casual sponsor plugs and occasional dry humor about weapons and military failures might not be for younger kids.

Best for ages 13+

This is a documentary-style channel hosted by a guy named Simon who clearly enjoys diving deep into engineering, military tech, and big infrastructure projects. He's got a conversational, self-aware style that keeps things from feeling like a textbook. He'll poke fun at himself for mispronouncing things or admit he's covering a topic partly because it gets clicks. That kind of honesty is actually pretty refreshing.

Score Breakdown

Language & Tone 88 / 100
Violence & Danger 72 / 100
Adult Content 95 / 100
Commercialism 65 / 100
Role Modeling 82 / 100

KidWatch Assessment

This is a documentary-style channel hosted by a guy named Simon who clearly enjoys diving deep into engineering, military tech, and big infrastructure projects. He's got a conversational, self-aware style that keeps things from feeling like a textbook. He'll poke fun at himself for mispronouncing things or admit he's covering a topic partly because it gets clicks. That kind of honesty is actually pretty refreshing.

The content leans heavily toward aviation, military hardware, and science. Think Cold War aircraft programs, tank capabilities, and energy technology. It's genuinely educational and well-researched, but it does cover weapons systems and wartime failures in some detail. Nothing gratuitous, but it's not fluffy stuff either.

Every video has sponsor segments baked in, usually for services like Audible or Squarespace. They're clearly labeled and not aggressive, but they're definitely there. Language is clean throughout. Simon's humor is light and a little nerdy. Teens who are into history, engineering, or military topics will probably love this channel.

Flagged Moments from Top Videos

Mild The T-90: Russia's Main Battletank (And its Failure in Ukraine)

The video goes into specific detail about tank armaments, armor-piercing capabilities, and battlefield performance in an active conflict. It's informative rather than glorifying, but the level of weapons detail may not be appropriate for younger viewers.

Mild The T-90: Russia's Main Battletank (And its Failure in Ukraine)

Framing the content around real ongoing military failures in Ukraine brings the subject matter closer to current events and casualties than the purely historical aviation content on the channel. Not sensationalized, but worth knowing.

Mild The Airbus A380: The Incredible Plane that No One Wants

The sponsor segment for Squarespace runs fairly long and is woven into the middle of the video, which can feel like an interruption and teaches kids that paid promotions are a normal part of educational content.

Mild MiG-31: Intercepting the SR-71

The video discusses military aircraft designed specifically to intercept and potentially shoot down reconnaissance planes, including the technical capabilities of weapons systems involved. Context is historical and educational, but the framing is around military confrontation.

Mild The A-12 Archangel: Faster, Lighter, Higher than the SR-71

Simon makes a couple of mildly dismissive comments about Elon Musk being 'a bit of a strange man,' which is pretty harmless but is the kind of casual opinion-editorializing some parents may want to discuss with their kids.

What Parents Should Know

Watch a few episodes alongside your teen the first time to get a feel for the tone before letting them go solo.

Expect sponsor segments in every video and use them as a good conversation starter about how creators make money online.

Older teens who love history, science, or engineering will get a lot out of this channel, but it's probably too dry and detailed to hold the attention of kids under 12.

The military and weapons content is educational rather than violent, but if your family avoids that subject matter entirely, know that it's a recurring theme across the channel.

Simon sometimes edits himself or jokes about fact-checking, which is actually a good modeling behavior to point out to kids as an example of intellectual honesty.

Use the thorium reactor or aviation engineering videos as a jumping-off point for bigger conversations about energy, science, or Cold War history if your kid is the curious type.

Recommended for ages 13+.

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