your dumb (Anonymous)Anonymous wrote:Oh my. Any website can buy “.io” these days, it is not a domain for a type of game. Please do your research before letting your kids on.
i think you should try it before put it out for possible chance to connect with your childrenAnonymous wrote:Why don't you try playing it yourself, OP? If your kid wanted to go play with friends you've never met at a playground you've never been at before, you would probably hang around and watch the first few times, right? Online games are the same.
Anonymous wrote:Why don't you try playing it yourself, OP? If your kid wanted to go play with friends you've never met at a playground you've never been at before, you would probably hang around and watch the first few times, right? Online games are the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You've got a long way to go, OP, if you think .io games are of concern. There are kids playing Fortnite in elementary.
If you read the original post, I know nothing about .io games and have no idea of whether they are of concern or not. That's why I asked. I have heard about Fortnite and Minecraft but had never heard of moomoo.io until my kid came home from his buddy's talking about it and there's not much information out there. Trying to do my due diligence instead of letting him have free rein.
Glad to hear they are harmless. I am not crazy about him being able to chat with randoms but trying to instill some sense of "stranger danger" and critical thinking... I guess that's all I can do.
Anonymous wrote:
You've got a long way to go, OP, if you think .io games are of concern. There are kids playing Fortnite in elementary.