KidWatch › Channel Safety › ZaySolis119
Fun energy and genuinely good-hearted moments, but the language, reckless stunts, and confrontational content make this one you'll want to watch alongside younger kids.
Best for ages 13+
ZaySolis119 is a young creator who makes adventure and motorsports content with a loose, spontaneous vibe. He rides dirt bikes and e-motos, travels with friends, does outdoor challenges, and occasionally pulls off feel-good gestures for other riders. The channel has real charm in those moments. His enthusiasm is contagious and he clearly loves what he does.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
ZaySolis119 is a young creator who makes adventure and motorsports content with a loose, spontaneous vibe. He rides dirt bikes and e-motos, travels with friends, does outdoor challenges, and occasionally pulls off feel-good gestures for other riders. The channel has real charm in those moments. His enthusiasm is contagious and he clearly loves what he does.
The tone is very much "dude bro YouTube" - loud, chaotic, and edited for energy over polish. Profanity slips in here and there, sometimes bleeped and sometimes not. Some content puts him and his crew in genuinely risky situations without much acknowledgment of the danger involved. There's also at least one video built around a real-world confrontation that could teach kids some questionable lessons about handling conflict.
He's not trying to be inappropriate, and a lot of what he does is just young guys having fun. But parents of kids under 13 should probably watch with them, at least until you get a feel for where his content goes.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The creator drives to confront a stranger he suspects stole his bike, bringing what appears to be a firearm and asking on camera what he's supposed to do with it. This whole sequence normalizes confronting strangers over property disputes in a potentially dangerous way.
The creator refers to the seller as "definitely a crackhead" based on the quality of his phone photos, which is a casually derogatory comment that goes unchallenged.
Uncensored profanity appears in song lyrics playing in the car while the group rides along, and the word is audible and not bleeped in the transcript.
The group jokes about someone doing "inappropriate stuff" and the overall tone around the female friend in the group skews slightly immature in ways younger viewers may pick up on.
Someone slides down a water reservoir and hits hard enough that the group reacts with concern, and a crew member apparently injures their shoulder during the activity, with the injury played mostly for laughs.
The group repeatedly eggs each other on to go down a slide that is described as not being deep enough, raising real safety concerns that nobody in the video addresses seriously.
The crew rides bikes onto private abandoned property without discussing permission or trespassing, presenting it as an exciting adventure with no acknowledgment of the legal or safety issues involved.
One rider shows up with a partially charged battery and no proper riding shoes, and both issues are treated as funny rather than genuine safety concerns before heading into remote terrain.
Sponsor integrations are woven naturally into what feels like a purely generous gesture, and younger viewers may not recognize that the build is also brand promotion. The commercial intent behind the goodwill is not clearly disclosed.
What Parents Should Know
Watch the confrontation video with your kid and use it as a conversation starter about how not to handle situations like stolen property.
Expect occasional uncensored language, especially in music playing in the background during travel segments.
Know that the stunt and adventure content regularly involves real physical risk, and the creator usually downplays or laughs off injuries when they happen.
Explain to your kid that several videos involve trespassing on private or abandoned property, which the channel treats as totally normal.
The channel does have genuinely kind content mixed in, so it's worth screening individual videos rather than writing it off entirely.
Set a minimum age of around 13 to 14 if you want to let your kid watch independently, and younger than that should be with a parent in the room.
Recommended for ages 13+.
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