My Child Was Exposed to Inappropriate Content on Roblox — What Can Parents Do?
If your child uses Roblox — and with 80 million daily users, there's a good chance they do — this is something every parent needs to read.
What Is Roblox?
Roblox is an online gaming platform that allows users to create and play games built by other users. It's marketed primarily to children and has become one of the most popular platforms among kids aged 6–16 in the United States.
What many parents don't realize is that Roblox is also a social platform — one where children can interact with strangers, exchange messages, and engage in virtual environments that are largely user-generated and inconsistently moderated.
What Parents Are Reporting
Thousands of parents across the United States have come forward with serious concerns about their children's experiences on Roblox:
Exposure to sexual content embedded in user-created games
Predatory behavior from adult users targeting children
Grooming attempts through Roblox's messaging system
Exploitative in-app purchases designed to psychologically pressure children into spending money
Exposure to graphic violence in user-generated content
What the Platform Knew
Internal communications and legal filings have raised questions about what Roblox knew about these risks and when. Plaintiffs allege that the platform was aware of safety concerns and did not take adequate steps to protect its youngest users.
Who May Qualify?
Your family may have options if:
Your child used Roblox and was exposed to harmful, sexual, or violent content
Your child was contacted by an adult in an inappropriate or predatory manner through Roblox
Your child experienced psychological harm related to their Roblox use
Your child was manipulated into making excessive in-app purchases
A Free Review Costs Nothing
Finding out whether your family has options is free, confidential, and takes under 60 seconds. There's no obligation and no upfront costs.
Attorney Advertising. My Case Claim is not a law firm. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Results vary by case.