KidWatch › Channel Safety › SorjaxVR
Pretty harmless VR gaming content with a loud, chaotic friend-group energy that most kids will love and most parents will find totally fine.
Best for ages 9+
SorjaxVR is a Gorilla Tag content creator who films himself and a group of friends playing custom minigames inside the VR game. The format is consistent: pick a game, explain the rules, and let the chaos unfold. It's genuinely fun to watch and has a real playground feel to it. Kids who play Gorilla Tag themselves will especially get a kick out of it.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
SorjaxVR is a Gorilla Tag content creator who films himself and a group of friends playing custom minigames inside the VR game. The format is consistent: pick a game, explain the rules, and let the chaos unfold. It's genuinely fun to watch and has a real playground feel to it. Kids who play Gorilla Tag themselves will especially get a kick out of it.
The tone is rowdy but not mean. There's a lot of yelling, crosstalk, and laughing at each other, but it comes across as a tight-knit friend group goofing around rather than anything toxic. The creator stays in control of the group and keeps games moving, which shows some decent organizational maturity.
The main thing parents might notice is occasional mild language and one or two off-color comments buried in the chaos. Nothing that would shock most families, but it's not squeaky clean either. It's the kind of channel where the content itself is fine, but you'd want to listen alongside younger kids just to stay aware.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
A player makes a self-deprecating comment about being fat, which is casual and played for laughs but could register poorly with younger or more sensitive viewers.
A player uses the phrase 'pee poo check' and the surrounding exchange gets a little crude for a moment, nothing severe but slightly toilet-humor-adjacent in a way that's typical of this age group.
A subscribe call-to-action is framed around a threat that 'Monster will come for you at 3am' if viewers don't like and subscribe, which is a cheap scare tactic aimed at young audiences.
A player casually says 'Christ' as an exclamation during gameplay. It's a fleeting moment but worth noting for families who are sensitive about that kind of language.
A player makes an off-the-cuff comment suggesting racial self-awareness ('I'm not even black') in response to something said during the game. It passes quickly but is the kind of comment that can confuse younger kids.
What Parents Should Know
Watch a session or two alongside your kid at first, because the crosstalk is fast and occasional off-color comments can fly by before you notice them.
Talk to your child about the 'subscribe or something bad happens' style of call-to-action, since younger kids can take that kind of joke more seriously than it's intended.
This channel is best suited for kids who already play Gorilla Tag, since a lot of the fun comes from recognizing the maps and gameplay, and kids without that context may lose interest fast.
Remind your kids that the chaotic yelling and talking over each other is fun to watch but isn't a great model for how to actually communicate with friends in real life.
If your child wants to replicate the minigames in their own Gorilla Tag sessions, that's actually a positive takeaway from the channel since the games are creative and cooperative.
Keep volume expectations in check before your kid starts watching, because the energy level on this channel is consistently loud and it's easy for headphone volume to creep up.
Recommended for ages 9+.
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