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I pretended to be a 7-year-old on Roblox. What I found should worry every parent
- Art Samaniego
- PHT
DECODED: TECH, TRUTH, AND THREATS
I created a Roblox account and posed as a seven-year-old girl. Within minutes, I was inside the system kids navigate every day, jumping between games, using chat and DMs, entering private servers, and stepping into roleplay spaces.
What began as a simple walkthrough of a child’s digital playground quickly changed. As I moved from one space to another, I found interactions and environments no child should see. That was when my concern turned from curiosity to alarm.
Parents in the Philippines backing the move by the Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) and the Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center (CICC) to restrict, or even ban, Roblox are not reacting out of technophobia.
Roblox may appear harmless to parents who only catch a quick glimpse of their children playing. On the surface, it looks like a colorful world filled with block-like characters, simple animations, and playful environments. It feels safe, almost toy-like, as if it belongs in the same category as digital Lego.

But that first impression can be misleading.
As I look into Roblox more, I realize it is not just a game. It is a vast, user-generated platform. Millions of players create their own worlds, interactions, and rules. This means the experience is not centrally controlled. Many games are wholesome and creative. Others drift into poorly moderated, hidden, or intentionally designed spaces to avoid detection.
Inside these spaces, children can encounter conversations, roleplay scenarios, and behaviors that are far from age-appropriate. What looks like two blocky avatars chatting could actually be a sexually suggestive roleplay. What seems like a friendly interaction could be the early stages of grooming. And because everything is wrapped in cartoon visuals, the risks are easy to overlook.
The real issue is not the graphics. It is the environment behind them.
Roblox mixes anonymity, private interactions, and a very young user base. This combination lets creativity flourish but also opens the door to exploitation. Without careful supervision and stronger platform safeguards, harmless games can become complex and concerning situations.

At the center of concern are what we from the cybersecurity community loosely call “secret rooms.” These are user-created environments that are not always visible on the surface. While Roblox has moderation systems in place, its open creation model allows users to build private or lightly monitored spaces where conversations and roleplay can become explicit. I pretended to be a seven-year-old girl and created an account. After just a few minutes of playing, I was invited to a room where topics about sex are openly discussed or simulated through avatars.
I later learned about the term “ODers.” Short for “Online Daters,” ODers are users who engage in romantic or sexual roleplay inside games. Some may be teenagers experimenting socially. The problem is that these behaviors often move into spaces accessible to much younger children. Worse, predators can mimic this behavior to blend in. By posing as fellow players or “friends,” they lower children’s guard. They then begin grooming children through seemingly harmless interactions that gradually become inappropriate.

For many Filipino parents, this is the main red flag. Roblox’s young audience makes it a target for bad actors. These people exploit trust, curiosity, and the anonymity of avatars. Grooming does not happen instantly. It often starts with simple chats, gifts, or helping a child level up. It then moves to private conversations and, in the worst cases, requests for personal information or explicit content.
Another layer of concern is how easily children bypass safeguards. Even with parental controls, tech-savvy kids or those guided by others can break through. Then there’s the language gap. Many Filipino parents are not immersed in gaming culture or slang. This makes it hard to spot warning signs. Terms like “ODing,” “RP” (roleplay), and coded language in chats often go unnoticed until it’s too late.
Moderation at scale is another issue. Roblox hosts millions of user-generated experiences. Policing every interaction in real time is a huge challenge. The company invests in AI moderation and reporting tools, but parents argue there are still too many gaps. Private servers and unpopular games often lack oversight.
I realized that support for a ban, or at least stricter regulation, is rooted in protection. Filipino parents are not necessarily against gaming. In fact, many recognize the educational and creative value of platforms like Roblox. But when the risk involves exposure to sexual content and potential grooming at a very young age, the tolerance level drops sharply.
What many parents really want is accountability and stronger safeguards. Some want age verification systems that actually work. Others want tighter controls on private rooms, stronger language filtering, and more visible enforcement of rules against inappropriate behavior. A ban becomes the loudest signal when these protections are perceived as insufficient.
The conversation around Roblox in the Philippines is no longer just about screen time or gaming habits. It is about digital safety in an environment where children are both the primary users and the most vulnerable. And for parents, that changes everything.
Filipino parents do not want Roblox to end. They want a version that fits its audience. This means stronger age checks, stricter controls on private rooms, better detection of grooming, and real accountability for violations.
Until those safeguards are not just promised but consistently enforced, many parents will continue to see blocking Roblox not as a choice but as a responsibility. Because in today’s digital environment, protecting children sometimes means keeping them out of places that were supposed to be safe in the first place.
