Know-how editor & reporter

Dad and mom who don’t desire their youngsters on Roblox mustn’t allow them to use it, the chief govt of the big gaming platform has stated.
The positioning, which is the preferred within the UK amongst younger avid gamers aged eight to 12, has been dogged by claims of some youngsters being uncovered to specific or dangerous content material via its video games, alongside a number of reported allegations of bullying and grooming.
However its co-founder and CEO Dave Baszucki insisted that the corporate is vigilant in defending its customers and identified that “tens of tens of millions” of individuals have “superb experiences” on the positioning.
When requested what his message is to folks who don’t desire their youngsters on the platform, Mr Baszucki stated: “My first message can be, if you happen to’re not snug, do not let your youngsters be on Roblox.”
“That sounds a bit counter-intuitive, however I’d all the time belief dad and mom to make their very own selections,” he instructed BBC Information in an unique interview.
Gaming big
US-based Roblox is likely one of the world’s largest video games platforms, with extra month-to-month customers than Nintendo Change and Sony PlayStation mixed. In 2024 it averaged greater than 80 million gamers per day – roughly 40% of them beneath the age of 13. Its huge empire consists of some 40 million user-generated video games and experiences.
Within the UK the On-line Security Act, which is available in to drive in April, has strict legal guidelines for all tech companies particularly geared toward defending youngsters from on-line harms.
However Mr Baszucki says he stays assured in Roblox’s security instruments and insists the agency goes above and past to maintain its customers protected.

“We do within the firm take the perspective that any unhealthy, even one unhealthy incident, is one too many,” he says.
“We look ahead to bullying, we look ahead to harassment, we filter all of these sorts of issues, and I’d say behind the scenes, the evaluation goes on all the best way to, if essential, reaching out to regulation enforcement.”
Gamers who select to not show what he calls “civility” can face short-term time-outs and longer bans, and Roblox claims to analyse all communications that go between members on the platform, more and more utilizing extra superior AI methods and different tech to take action — and something flagged is shipped for additional investigation.
In November final yr, beneath 13s had been banned from sending direct messages, and likewise from taking part in in “hangout experiences” which options chat between gamers.
Security filters bypassed
Nonetheless, the BBC was in a position to create two faux accounts, one aged 15 and one aged 27, on unlinked gadgets and trade messages between the 2.
Whereas the filters caught our makes an attempt to overtly transfer the dialog onto a unique platform, we discovered simple methods to re-word requests to speak elsewhere and make recommendations about taking part in extra grownup video games.
After we confirmed the Roblox boss these findings, he argued that our instance highlighted the comparative security of Roblox: that individuals felt they needed to take content material which could breach Roblox’s guidelines to different platforms.
“We do not condone any kind of image-sharing on our personal platform, and you will see us getting increasingly, I believe, manner past the place the regulation is on such a behaviour,” Mr Baszucki says.
He admits there’s a delicate steadiness between encouraging friendships between younger individuals, and blocking alternatives for them come to hurt, however says he’s assured Roblox can handle each.
We additionally put to him some Roblox sport titles that the BBC has found had been really useful by the platform to an 11 year-old not too long ago, together with:
- ‘Late Evening Boys And Ladies Membership RP’
- ‘Particular Forces Simulator”
- ‘Squid Recreation’
- ‘Shoot down planes…as a result of why not?’
After we requested whether or not he thought they had been applicable, he stated he places his religion within the platform’s age score methods.
“One factor that is actually necessary for the best way we do issues right here, is it is not simply on the title of the expertise, it is actually on the content material of the expertise as properly,” he says.
He insists that when Roblox charges expertise, they undergo rigorous tips and that the corporate has a “constant coverage” on that.
Mr Baszucki based the platform with Eric Cassel in 2004 and launched it to the general public in 2006 – a yr earlier than the primary Apple iPhone appeared, heralding the beginning of the smartphone period.
Mr Baszucki describes his youthful self as “much less of a gamer, and extra of an engineer”, and the pair’s first firm was an schooling software program supplier known as Information Revolution. However they quickly observed that children weren’t solely utilizing the product to do their homework.
“They wished to play and construct stuff. They had been making homes or ships or surroundings, and so they wished to leap in, and all of that studying was the germination of Roblox,” he says.
The identify Roblox was a mash-up of the phrases “robotic” and blocks” – and it caught. The platform grew shortly in reputation – and there have been additionally early warning indicators of its future points.
Mr Cassel observed some gamers “beginning to act out” and never all the time behaving in a “civilised” manner a few months after it launched, recollects Mr Baszucki.
He says the roots of constructing a “belief and security system” subsequently started “very, very early” and that in these earlier days there have been 4 individuals appearing as security moderators.
“It form of is what launched this security civility basis,” he provides.
However regardless of attracting respectable numbers, it was a yr later, when the agency launched its digital forex Robux, that it actually began to make cash.
Gamers purchase Robux and use it to buy equipment and unlock content material. Content material creators now get 70% of the payment, and the shop operates on dynamic pricing, that means in style gadgets price extra.
Mr Baszucki says there was some preliminary resistance among the many management staff about Roblox changing into greater than a pastime for its gamers, with the introduction of a digital financial system.
Robux stayed, and the agency is now price $41bn (£31bn).
Its share worth has fluctuated because it went public in 2021, however total Roblox shares are price about one third greater than they had been six months in the past, on the time of writing. Like many huge tech companies its worth peaked throughout Covid, when lockdowns meant tens of millions of individuals had been indoors.
Mr Baszucki compares his expertise of constructing Roblox with how Walt Disney might have felt about his creations.
He describes his job as “a bit like having the chance he had a very long time in the past when he was designing the Magic Kingdom”, and is concentrated on Roblox’s ongoing evolution right into a Metaverse-style expertise the place individuals go about their day by day lives in a digital world, in avatar kind.
They’ve additionally been public of their ambitions to finally appeal to 10% of the world’s avid gamers.
Requested to explain Roblox in three phrases, he replies: “The way forward for communication.”
We end our time collectively taking part in a few his favorite video games: Pure Catastrophe Survival and Gown to Impress.
We use his account and he is continually recognised by different gamers — however we nonetheless get smashed to items by a blizzard exterior the Pure Disasters mansion.
Further reporting by Ammie Sekhon