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KidWatch Channel Safety SteveWillDoIt

S

SteveWillDoIt

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Top videos analyzed · June 2026
12 / 100
F

This is essentially a crash course in how to blow through millions of dollars irresponsibly while swearing constantly, and no kid should be watching it.

Best for ages 21+

SteveWillDoIt is a loud, chaotic channel built around extreme spending, gambling, and stunts. The creator leans hard into a persona of reckless excess, throwing around hundreds of thousands of dollars on cars, bets, and giveaways while openly admitting he's broke and in debt. It's presented as entertainment, but the underlying message is genuinely troubling.

Score Breakdown

Language & Tone 5 / 100
Violence & Danger 50 / 100
Adult Content 20 / 100
Commercialism 5 / 100
Role Modeling 5 / 100

KidWatch Assessment

SteveWillDoIt is a loud, chaotic channel built around extreme spending, gambling, and stunts. The creator leans hard into a persona of reckless excess, throwing around hundreds of thousands of dollars on cars, bets, and giveaways while openly admitting he's broke and in debt. It's presented as entertainment, but the underlying message is genuinely troubling.

The tone throughout is frenetic and juvenile, heavy on screaming, profanity, and shock value. Steve surrounds himself with celebrity guests and hype men, which gives the channel a glossy feel, but underneath it's mostly financial chaos dressed up as fun. There's also repeated casual discussion of substance withdrawal, which gets dropped into videos almost as an afterthought.

The giveaway promotions are a constant fixture and feel designed to drive engagement rather than actually reward fans. The whole channel models a lifestyle of debt, impulsive decision-making, and zero accountability, wrapped in a package that's clearly meant to appeal to young audiences.

Flagged Moments from Top Videos

Severe I am broke (dark truth)

Steve openly describes going through kratom withdrawal on camera, including vomiting and night sweats, treating substance dependence as a casual aside between comedy bits.

Severe I am broke (dark truth)

The video frames taking on millions of dollars of debt and spending $19 million in a year as something to brag about, with the explicit goal of getting 'as little liquid as possible' presented as a punchline.

Severe Surprising David Dobrik with his DREAM CAR!

Steve places a $1 million sports bet on camera and jokes that if it loses, the plan is to flee the country, normalizing reckless high-stakes gambling as entertainment.

Moderate Surprising David Dobrik with his DREAM CAR!

Steve openly brags about buying multiple luxury cars on credit he can't afford, with his mom confirming he's a financial liability, all played for laughs in front of a young audience.

Moderate WE LOST EVERYTHING...

Heavy profanity is used throughout, including multiple uncensored expletives in casual conversation, with no attempt to moderate language.

Moderate WE LOST EVERYTHING...

A car crash is treated as an opportunity to head to a casino and gamble to cover the damage, framing impulsive gambling as a reasonable problem-solving strategy.

Moderate 6ix9ine gave me my $2,000,000 back!

The video casually mentions being owed $2 million by a guest and gifting that same person a Lamborghini anyway, modeling a complete lack of financial boundaries or accountability.

Moderate 6ix9ine gave me my $2,000,000 back!

Repeated and uncensored profanity is used throughout, including slurs and crude language, with no warning beyond the vague 'trained professional' disclaimer.

Severe I am broke (dark truth)

Giveaway promotions in this video appear structured to drive social media engagement, with the host admitting payments are delayed because he's in a financial crisis, raising real questions about whether winners actually get paid.

Severe Surprising David Dobrik with his DREAM CAR!

The channel promotes a separate gambling content hub and shows Steve gambling in a casino high-limit room as a direct method of funding viewer giveaways, effectively marketing gambling to his audience.

What Parents Should Know

Block this channel entirely if your kids are under 18, there's no version of this content that's appropriate for younger viewers.

Talk to your teens about the giveaway mechanics on channels like this, because the odds of anyone actually winning are vanishingly small and the promotions are designed to grow follower counts.

Use the financial behavior shown here as a jumping-off point for a real conversation about debt, credit, and why 'it's on credit' is not the same as having money.

If your teen follows this creator, ask them what they think about the substance withdrawal content, because it's presented so casually that kids may not register how serious it actually is.

Watch a few minutes alongside your kid rather than just checking the title, the real content often has nothing to do with what the video is advertised as being about.

Be aware that the 'trained professional' warning at the start of each video is cosmetic and does almost nothing to contextualize the actual risk of the behavior being modeled.

Recommended for ages 21+.

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