KidWatch › Channel Safety › Osirus
Totally fine for Pokémon fans — it's nerdy, calm, and genuinely helpful, just a bit dry for younger kids.
Best for ages 9+
Osiris is a Pokémon-focused guide channel run by a creator named Lee who clearly knows his stuff. The content is almost entirely tutorial-based — farming, breeding, leveling, collecting — and it's aimed at players who want to get better at the games rather than just watch someone play them. The tone is calm and conversational, never loud or flashy.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
Osiris is a Pokémon-focused guide channel run by a creator named Lee who clearly knows his stuff. The content is almost entirely tutorial-based — farming, breeding, leveling, collecting — and it's aimed at players who want to get better at the games rather than just watch someone play them. The tone is calm and conversational, never loud or flashy.
He talks to his audience like they're already fans who get it, which makes the content feel a little dense if your kid is newer to Pokémon. There's no drama, no rage, no clickbait stunts. It's just someone walking you through game mechanics in a pretty methodical way. That's genuinely refreshing.
The channel does briefly mention an exploit called the date skip glitch to respawn in-game items faster, which is worth knowing about if you care about that kind of thing. Nothing harmful, but it's the sort of shortcut some parents might want to talk through with their kids.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The video instructs viewers to use a date-skip glitch to manipulate in-game time and respawn items without waiting. It's not harmful, but it does teach kids to exploit software in ways the game isn't designed for.
The subscribe prompt at the start asks kids to subscribe and notes they can unsubscribe later, which is a soft pressure tactic embedded before the content even begins.
The video walks through a save-scumming method that involves repeatedly closing and restarting the game to manipulate random outcomes. It's a common community practice but does model exploiting game systems as a normal strategy.
What Parents Should Know
Watch an episode with your kid first if they're new to Pokémon, since the content assumes a lot of prior knowledge and younger or newer players might get lost pretty quickly.
Use the channel as a reference tool rather than passive viewing, since it's genuinely designed to be paused and followed along with during gameplay.
Talk to your kid about the game exploit methods shown, like the date-skip glitch, if you want to have a conversation about playing games as intended versus finding workarounds.
Don't worry about ads or sponsorships pushing products on your kid here, since the content stays focused on the games without heavy commercial pressure.
This channel works best for kids who are already into Pokémon and want to go deeper, so if your child is just getting started, they might find it more rewarding after they've played the games a bit first.
Recommended for ages 9+.
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