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Roblox Safety Snapshot

Sharing Recent Insights Into Our Safety Efforts

Our vision is to build the safest place on the internet, where users of all ages can play, explore, and create. We often share major announcements and recent launches—such as new parental controls, councils, and our plan to expand age estimation. However, we’re implementing updates all the time—we’ve shipped more than 100 safety initiatives since January 2025—and we want to share more about these small, but impactful, updates. Going forward, please check back here on the blog and follow our social channels for more regular updates about our safety efforts.

Removing Access to Unrated Content: We know content ratings are an important tool to help users and parents understand which experiences are appropriate for them and their families. That’s why we announced that after September 30, we will no longer allow unrated experiences to be playable on Roblox. This week, more than 100 million unrated experiences became unplayable. We’ve worked closely with developers to help them get their experiences rated and built a process to provide ratings for more than 200,000 unrated experiences that are no longer maintained by an active developer.

Expanding Voice Moderation to Seven New Languages: We’re continually improving the accuracy and coverage of our real-time voice safety model. It can now detect misbehavior, such as swearing or bullying, in 15 languages including seven new languages: Indonesian, Polish, Thai, Chinese, Tagalog, Arabic, and Russian.

Removing Inappropriate Legacy Content: Over nearly 20 years, our content library has grown exponentially and now includes billions of long dormant avatar items, usernames, display names, and  experiences. We are auditing our catalog for policy violations and recently removed 800,000 avatar items and 1.8 million usernames and display names containing inappropriate references to certain real-world events that violate our Community Standards. We’ve also trained our automated systems to detect and block these types of references in the future.

Engaging Our Community: We’ve also established community councils to provide insights that will help inform future products and policies. Our second annual Teen Council kicks off this month and we announced a new Community Safety Council at this year’s Roblox Developers Conference.

We work every day to help make Roblox a safe, civil place for all our users, and we will continue sharing these updates to keep our community informed of our continual progress.