Online grooming via gaming — parent guide

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Online grooming via gaming apps

Predators are using popular multiplayer games to build trust with children aged 8–14 — then moving conversations to private messaging apps to exploit them.
Updated May 2026
Most relevant: ages 8–14
First reported May 2026
8.4
SEVERITY
out of 10
What is online grooming via gaming?

Online grooming via gaming is a form of child exploitation where adults pose as peers inside popular multiplayer games — such as Roblox, Minecraft, and Fortnite — to build emotional bonds with children.

The process starts with friendship requests in-game, progresses to gift-giving (skins, in-game currency), and eventually moves to Discord, WhatsApp, or Telegram where the child is isolated and manipulated.

Predators exploit children's desire for social belonging and gaming achievement — making it difficult for children to recognise the relationship as unsafe.

Who is most at risk?
Ages 8–14
Primary target group
Mobile gamers
Free-to-play titles with chat
Socially isolated
Children seeking connection
Late-night players
Unsupervised gaming time
How grooming escalates — the 5 stages
1
Stage 1 — Appears safe
Initial contact in-game
A friendly account sends a game invite or friend request. They play well, compliment your child's skills, and seem like a genuine peer. Nothing feels wrong yet.
2
Stage 2 — Trust building
Gifts, praise, and special attention
In-game items, skins, or currency are sent as gifts. The adult learns your child's interests and becomes their "best online friend" — often feeling closer than real-life peers.
3
Stage 3 — Isolation begins
Moving to private chat
They suggest moving to Discord, WhatsApp, or Telegram. Secrecy from parents is introduced: "Don't tell them — they won't understand our friendship."
4
Stage 4 — Boundary testing
Inappropriate topics normalised
Conversations gradually shift to personal questions and age-inappropriate content framed as "just joking." The child is desensitised step by step before realising what is happening.
5
Stage 5 — Exploitation
Coercion and abuse
Images or meetings are requested, backed by threats to expose previous conversations. The child feels trapped and ashamed. This stage requires immediate adult intervention — contact authorities, do not delete evidence.
Warning signs to watch for
Becoming secretive or defensive about who they are playing with online
Switching screens or closing apps quickly when a parent walks in
Receiving unexpected gifts — in-game currency, skins, or physical items
References to an online "friend" they have never met in person
Using new apps or platforms you did not install or recognise
Withdrawal from family, school friends, or usual activities
Emotional distress — upset or angry after time on the device
If you suspect your child is in danger, do not delete messages or accounts — these are evidence. Contact your local police or child protection authority immediately and preserve all records.
What you can do — step by step
1
Have an open conversation now
Talk to your child about online friendships without blame. Explain that real friends don't ask for secrecy or personal information. Keep the tone calm and curious, not accusatory.
2
Review friend lists and chat history together
Go through in-game friends and contact lists with your child. Look for accounts they cannot describe meeting, or contacts who are much older.
3
Enable privacy and safety settings on all games
Turn off public friend requests, disable in-game chat with strangers, and enable parental controls. Most platforms have these — we have a guide for each major platform.
4
Set clear gaming rules as a household
Agree on screen time limits, which games are allowed, and a rule that all new online "friends" must be people your child knows in real life.
5
Keep the conversation ongoing
A one-time talk is not enough. Build a habit of asking about their online world weekly. Normalise the check-in so it never feels like surveillance.
Ask the ArmorBee advisor
Have a specific situation? Get personalised guidance.
My child got in-game gifts Roblox parental controls How to talk to my child
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