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Parents, beware: The ‘little girl’ talking to your child online could be a predator
- San Matildo
- PHT
- Call of Duty: Mobile, Fortnite, Free Fire, Minecraft, Mobile Legends: Bang Bang, Roblox
DECODED: TECH, TRUTH, AND THREATS
Online games have become an important part of childhood, allowing kids to socialize, compete, create, and have fun. Unfortunately, cybercriminals know this, and they have become increasingly skilled at targeting young gamers.
Games such as Roblox, Minecraft, Fortnite, Free Fire, Mobile Legends: Bang Bang, Call of Duty: Mobile, and other multiplayer titles are popular targets, but the real danger is not the game itself. The danger lies in the people who use these platforms to manipulate children.
Many parents imagine hackers as mysterious adults sitting behind computer screens. In reality, cybercriminals often disguise themselves as children. They create accounts that appear to belong to kids and spend time building trust with young players. Some even pretend to be girls or use attractive avatars to gain attention and lower a child’s defenses.
A common tactic involves showing off rare items, expensive skins, premium characters, upgraded accounts, exclusive weapons, collectibles, virtual currency, or other hard-to-obtain digital items. In every game, there is something that young players desire. Naturally, other children become curious and ask how these items were obtained.
The cybercriminal then claims to have discovered a secret hack, cheat, exploit, or mod that can unlock premium features for free. A mod, short for modification, is a file or software that changes how a game works. While some mods are legitimate in certain gaming communities, criminals often use the term to make their offer sound harmless and exciting.
The child is then directed to download a file, install a program, join a Discord server, visit a website, or disable security settings on their device. The instructions may seem simple and harmless, but the file often contains a hidden malicious payload designed to steal information from the victim.
Once installed, the malware may secretly collect usernames, passwords, authentication tokens, screenshots, browser cookies, and other sensitive information. In many cases, attackers are not only interested in the game account; they may also gain access to email accounts, social media profiles, messaging apps, and digital wallets on the linked device.
Another growing threat involves online grooming and sextortion. Cybercriminals may impersonate another child and spend weeks building trust with their target. Then they move conversations to private chat platforms and persuade victims to exchange personal or intimate photos.
Once a victim sends a photo, the situation can quickly become a nightmare. The criminal begins a campaign of blackmail known as sextortion. The attacker may threaten to send the images to parents, classmates, or teachers, or to post them publicly, unless the child provides more photos, money, gift cards, game credits, or access to online accounts.
Parents and guardians should understand that these attacks are not really about gaming. They are about social engineering, manipulation, and deception. The game is simply the meeting place where criminals find their victims.
The best defense is communication. Parents should talk regularly with their children about online safety, explain that strangers are not always who they claim to be, and remind them never to download hacks, cheats, mods, or files from unknown sources.
Children should also know that if someone asks for personal information, account credentials, or photos, they should immediately tell a trusted adult.
In cybersecurity, the most effective attack is often not a sophisticated piece of malware. Instead, it is convincing a child to trust the wrong person.
