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MoreLachlan
Totally watchable for most kids, but the constant item shop plugs and V-Bucks prize framing are worth a heads-up conversation.
Best for ages 9+
Lachlan's second channel is basically a looser, more casual version of his main content. It's all Fortnite, all the time, and the vibe is low-stakes fun with friends rather than polished productions. He plays with pro players and fellow creators, does challenge formats, and keeps things pretty breezy. The humor is light and friendly.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
Lachlan's second channel is basically a looser, more casual version of his main content. It's all Fortnite, all the time, and the vibe is low-stakes fun with friends rather than polished productions. He plays with pro players and fellow creators, does challenge formats, and keeps things pretty breezy. The humor is light and friendly.
The tone is genuinely pretty clean. There's no real swearing, no scary content, and nothing that would make a parent walk in and wince. He's clearly in his mid-to-late 20s and that comes through, but he's not edgy or trying to be. It feels like watching a group of mates mess around in a game.
The main thing to be aware of is the commerce angle. He plugs his item shop code constantly, frames V-Bucks as prizes, and talks about real money in ways that could get kids thinking about spending. It's not predatory, but it's persistent enough that younger kids might not register it as advertising.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The video openly revolves around stream sniping, which is widely considered unsportsmanlike behavior in gaming. It's played for laughs, but it normalizes cheating the system to get a record.
Lachlan repeatedly plugs his item shop code and frames large V-Bucks payouts as prizes, including a joke about adding a million V-Bucks to a wheel if the video hits a like milestone. This mixes engagement-baiting with real monetary value in a way younger kids won't fully parse.
There's a throwaway joke about a guest not having a kid because it would be 'irresponsible at his age.' It's innocuous adult humor, but slightly out of place for a young audience.
Cash prizes of $1,000 and $100 are dangled as part of the challenge format throughout. For young viewers who idolize these creators, the casual talk of big money payouts can skew expectations.
The premise once again treats stream sniping as a fun, harmless activity rather than something that disrupts other players' games. It's a recurring pattern on this channel worth discussing with kids.
The entire concept is built around deception within a tournament setting, and it's framed as clever and entertaining rather than potentially unfair to other competitors.
What Parents Should Know
Talk to your kid about the item shop code plugs before they start watching regularly, because they appear in almost every video and younger children may not recognize them as advertising.
Use the stream sniping videos as a conversation starter about fair play in games, since Lachlan treats it as funny content but it's actually a form of cheating that could get real players penalized.
Feel comfortable leaving kids 10 and up with this channel unsupervised. The content is genuinely tame and there's no real language, violence, or adult material to worry about.
Watch a video or two alongside your kid if they're under 9, mostly just to give context for the gaming culture references and the creator friend group, which can be confusing without some background.
Keep an eye on whether your child starts asking for V-Bucks after watching, since the channel treats them almost like a currency kids should be earning and spending regularly.
Recommended for ages 9+.
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