KidWatch › Channel Safety › PM7Plus
Genuinely fun Pokemon content with a goofy older-brother energy, totally fine for most kids.
Best for ages 8+
This is a Pokemon-focused channel run by a guy who's clearly a longtime fan and doesn't take himself too seriously. He reacts to other creators' content, opens weird merchandise, plays randomized games, and does silly tier lists. The humor is self-deprecating and pretty clean. He laughs at himself constantly, which is actually kind of refreshing.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
This is a Pokemon-focused channel run by a guy who's clearly a longtime fan and doesn't take himself too seriously. He reacts to other creators' content, opens weird merchandise, plays randomized games, and does silly tier lists. The humor is self-deprecating and pretty clean. He laughs at himself constantly, which is actually kind of refreshing.
The tone is enthusiastic but never hyper or exhausting. He's a tall, self-described non-fighter who jokes about punting small Pokemon to the moon. That kind of playful fake-violence in the tier list content is worth knowing about, but it's clearly absurdist humor, not anything aggressive. He also gives genuine shoutouts to other creators and encourages viewers to watch their work first, which is a nice habit.
He's not targeting little kids, but there's nothing here that would alarm most parents of school-age children. The content assumes some Pokemon knowledge, so it'll land better with kids who are already fans.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The entire premise involves ranking Pokemon by whether he could physically beat them up, with repeated jokes about punting, stomping, and smashing small Pokemon. It's clearly comedic but younger or more sensitive kids might find the framing a bit rough.
He casually mentions being out of shape from the pandemic and jokes about his physical appearance in a self-deprecating way. Not harmful, but it's a recurring type of body-humor that parents of younger kids might want to be aware of.
A brief Fight Club reference appears when he jokes about the 'first rule of underground Pokemon Beyblade League.' It goes by fast and most young kids won't catch it, but it's there.
He describes Pokemon dying in Nuzlocke runs with light emotional framing, including a joke about accidentally 'finding god and maybe he'll just kill all my animals.' Totally in context of the game format, but the death-of-pets framing is a pattern worth noting for very young or sensitive kids.
What Parents Should Know
Watch an episode or two yourself first if your kid is under 8, just to get a feel for the humor style before handing over the remote.
Expect some mild self-deprecating jokes and fake-combat humor, especially in the tier list videos, it's not mean-spirited but it's a running bit.
Use the Nuzlocke reaction content as a natural opener to talk with kids about how games handle 'losing' and why people find that kind of challenge fun.
Know that he frequently shouts out other YouTube creators and encourages viewers to go watch their videos, so your kid may end up discovering new channels through him.
The channel works best for kids who already know their Pokemon. If your kid is just getting into it, some of the humor and references will fly right over their head.
Skip the 'could I beat up' tier list videos with kids who are on the younger or more literal-minded end, the punting and stomping jokes are silly but that style of humor isn't for everyone.
Recommended for ages 8+.
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