KidWatch › Channel Safety › Sl1tYT
Too much crude humor, throat-cutting jokes, and language for younger kids to be watching unsupervised.
Best for ages 14+
This is a Gorilla Tag trolling channel where the creator uses mods and soundboards to scare and mess with other players in VR. The concept is pretty common in the gaming space, and some of it is genuinely funny in a goofy, harmless way. But the execution is inconsistent at best.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
This is a Gorilla Tag trolling channel where the creator uses mods and soundboards to scare and mess with other players in VR. The concept is pretty common in the gaming space, and some of it is genuinely funny in a goofy, harmless way. But the execution is inconsistent at best.
The tone swings pretty wildly. One moment it's silly and playful, the next someone's joking about cutting throats, dropping casual profanity, or mocking other players. The creator seems to be a teenager, and it shows. There's not a lot of thought put into what lands versus what just normalizes mean behavior toward strangers online.
What you're really getting is a channel built around pranking and startling random kids in a kids' game. The "scary character" gimmick gets old fast, and the stuff in between the jumpscare bits is where things get dicey. Parents of younger kids should know this one runs hotter than it looks.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
A player jokes repeatedly about cutting someone's throat open, saying things like 'I'm going to cut your throat like I'm about to cut this cake.' This kind of language is treated as casual banter rather than something serious.
The video includes a casual debate among players about whether God is real and references to 'tainted souls,' mixed with mockery and profanity. The creator doesn't redirect or moderate any of it.
Players repeatedly tell the creator to 'kill' another player, and the joke about making someone easier to harm 'if they don't move' is played for laughs without any pushback from the creator.
There's a brief reference to a 'joint sound' that goes unchallenged and is treated as funny background noise, hinting at drug use in a way that's clearly aimed at an older audience.
Multiple instances of uncensored profanity throughout, including 'what the hell' and stronger language, used casually by both the creator and players in the lobby.
The video description frames the character as one that 'murders' people it lures in, and the in-game script includes lines about constant pain and not hoping for a better world, which is dark framing for what's presented as a kids' prank video.
A string of numbers is read aloud in a way that resembles an IP address being shared, which raises a concern about doxxing-style behavior being modeled as a joke.
The creator or another player recites what sounds like a real username and personal name of another player in the lobby, framed as a funny 'God knows everything' bit but functioning like light doxxing.
A soundboard line tells a player 'no one loves you, not even your own mom,' directed at a real person in the lobby. It's played for laughs but it's genuinely mean-spirited.
A player casually claims 'Mrs. Claus is trans' as a punchline in a mocking context, which isn't the kind of offhand trans reference most parents would want their younger kids absorbing without any context.
What Parents Should Know
Watch a few videos yourself before letting younger kids browse this channel freely, because the tone varies a lot and some of it is rougher than the thumbnail suggests.
Talk to your kid about the difference between harmless pranks and actually being mean to strangers online, because this channel blurs that line pretty regularly.
Set a firm age floor around 13 or 14 for this one, especially if your kid is sensitive to dark humor, jump scares, or casual cruelty being played for laughs.
Keep an ear out if your younger child is watching this and starts repeating aggressive or threatening phrases, since some of the soundboard content does model that kind of talk.
Use it as a conversation starter about online behavior if your teen is already watching, since the doxxing-adjacent moments and 'kill him' jokes are worth discussing directly.
Check in on whether your kid understands that the people being scared and mocked in these videos are real players, not NPCs, because the format can make that feel less obvious.
Recommended for ages 14+.
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