KidWatch › Channel Safety › moxie2D
Genuinely wholesome Pokemon content with a creative twist — pretty safe for most kids, though younger ones might not get all the humor.
Best for ages 8+
Moxie is a Pokemon and Nintendo artist who makes the kind of videos that are clearly passion projects, not cash grabs. The content mixes reaction videos, drawing challenges, and storytelling nuzlocke runs, all with a heavy art focus. He's enthusiastic, a little nerdy, and clearly loves this stuff. You can tell he actually knows his audience.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
Moxie is a Pokemon and Nintendo artist who makes the kind of videos that are clearly passion projects, not cash grabs. The content mixes reaction videos, drawing challenges, and storytelling nuzlocke runs, all with a heavy art focus. He's enthusiastic, a little nerdy, and clearly loves this stuff. You can tell he actually knows his audience.
The tone is casual and conversational, like a funny older sibling who's really into Pokemon. He jokes around, laughs at himself, and keeps things moving at a good pace. There's some mild self-deprecating humor and light sarcasm, but nothing mean-spirited. He tends to collaborate with or react to other popular creators in the same space, which keeps things pretty community-focused.
For parents, this is low-risk content. The art component actually adds some real value, showing kids a creative skill in action. There's no swearing, no scary content, and nothing inappropriate. It's a solid pick for Pokemon fans who like watching someone who genuinely cares about the craft.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
Moxie casually uses the phrase 'basically suicide' when describing walking into tall grass without a Pokemon, as a comedic exaggeration. It's clearly a joke in context, but the word choice might catch younger kids off guard.
The nuzlocke format involves Pokemon 'dying,' and Moxie leans into the emotional stakes with phrases about characters dying horribly and prompting viewers to leave comments for dead Pokemon. It's all game-context, but sensitive kids might find it a bit much.
Moxie mentions a Pokemon name that sounds like a profanity ('poo poo poo whatever') and brushes past it with a laugh. It's handled lightly and without intent, but it's the kind of moment that might prompt a question from younger kids.
Moxie references 'killing his swamp' and repeatedly jokes about Pokemon deaths and emotional trauma in the nuzlocke format. Again, purely game-related, but the repeated death framing is a pattern worth knowing about for younger or more sensitive viewers.
What Parents Should Know
Watch a video or two alongside your kid the first time to see if the humor and pacing are a good fit for their age.
Know that the nuzlocke format involves Pokemon dying permanently, which Moxie plays up for emotional effect. It's always in a game context, but sensitive kids might need a heads-up.
Use the drawing segments as a jumping-off point if your kid likes art. Moxie walks through his actual creative process, and it can be surprisingly inspiring.
Skip to the drawing portions if your child isn't old enough to follow the gaming commentary. The art content stands on its own and is easy to follow.
Be aware that Moxie name-drops and collaborates with other creators like Jaiden Animations and MandJTV, so this channel can be a gateway to discovering others. Those channels are generally fine too, but worth a quick check.
The subscription and like reminders are present but not pushy. Moxie keeps them brief and doesn't repeat them constantly throughout videos.
Recommended for ages 8+.
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