KidWatch › Channel Safety › ZamfamGaming
This channel dresses up questionable content in bright Roblox packaging, and parents should absolutely know what's underneath.
Best for ages 13+
ZamfamGaming is Rebecca Zamolo's gaming spin-off, built around Roblox roleplays and Among Us sessions with her friend group. The tone is upbeat and family-friendly on the surface, lots of squealing, subscription begging, and 'zamfam' callouts. But the content underneath that glossy exterior has some real problems worth knowing about.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
ZamfamGaming is Rebecca Zamolo's gaming spin-off, built around Roblox roleplays and Among Us sessions with her friend group. The tone is upbeat and family-friendly on the surface, lots of squealing, subscription begging, and 'zamfam' callouts. But the content underneath that glossy exterior has some real problems worth knowing about.
The roleplay scenarios lean into some pretty uncomfortable territory. There are storylines involving stolen children, drawn-out grief and loss, and rich-versus-poor dynamics that normalize things like stealing a parent's credit card and treating broke kids as objects of pity. It's framed as fun drama, but the messaging is genuinely mixed.
The Among Us clothing-removal challenge is the biggest red flag. It's framed playfully, but the whole premise is that losing means taking off clothes, and the commentary around it is exactly what you'd expect. That's not content you want your 8-year-old watching without context.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The entire premise of this video is that losing at Among Us means removing clothing, and the commentary from the players draws repeated attention to who has their shirt off and how much clothing remains. It's played for laughs but the sexualized framing is hard to ignore.
The channel uses heavy subscription and engagement baiting mid-video, counting down and demanding kids comment within five seconds, which is a manipulative tactic aimed squarely at young viewers.
The rich girl character steals her mom's credit card and goes on a shopping spree, and this is played as aspirational and funny rather than as something that has consequences. Kids watching are meant to enjoy the splurge, not question it.
The broke girl storyline frames poverty as something to feel embarrassed about, with the character eager to fit in and avoid being made fun of for her clothes. The rich-versus-poor dynamic reinforces some unkind social hierarchies without any real pushback.
This roleplay involves a child being kidnapped, a police chase, a car crash death, and years of unresolved grief played out in detail. The emotional content is intense and prolonged, including a parent obsessively cleaning a missing child's room three years later.
Birth-to-death format content can be emotionally heavy for younger kids, and while this one is relatively gentle, the channel's repeated use of this format normalizes consuming dramatized life-and-death storylines as casual entertainment.
Aggressive subscription drives and engagement bait are woven throughout the video, with explicit goals like hitting 700,000 subscribers framed as something the audience is personally responsible for delivering.
What Parents Should Know
Skip the clothing-removal challenge video entirely if your kid is under 13 - the premise is not appropriate for the young audience this channel markets to.
Watch a Roblox roleplay episode with your kid before letting them binge, because the storylines can go to surprisingly dark places fast.
Talk to younger kids about the subscription and engagement begging baked into every video - it's frequent and designed to feel urgent, and kids often internalize it.
Use the rich-versus-broke content as a conversation starter about money, stealing, and why popularity based on clothes isn't something worth chasing.
Be aware that this channel is part of a larger creator network and will regularly push kids toward other channels and social accounts, so rabbit holes are a real risk.
If your kid is sensitive to themes of loss or missing family members, preview the Roblox roleplay content first - some of it is emotionally heavy in ways that feel out of place for a gaming channel.
Recommended for ages 13+.
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