The main complaint is they encourage kids to create games by emphasizing the revenue sharing aspect, without making clear how hard it is to derive any revenue at all from it.
Honestly I think it is a good learning experience.
I talked about it with my son.
"Yup there's lots of people making games, it's hard to make games as elaborate as everyone else."
And then you just make them for fun ...
The fact that kids try and fail at this is not a bad thing IMO.
If kids out there can't control themselves (they're kids...) I gotta wonder what if any parental involvement there is. Let's say they ban kids from creating content ... kid who can't control him/herself will just go make an 'adult' account too and do the same thing. Roblox can only do so much.
> they encourage kids to create games by emphasizing the revenue sharing aspect
I disagree completely here - they encourage kids to create games by giving them an easy platform to create games and letting them play games other kids have created.
A kid who sees that other kids their age are able to actually make a video game is far more likely to want to learn to do that themselves.
While I am sure many kids would be swayed without it, the potential to make "serious cash" is one of just three things they highlight about their platform on their creator page: https://www.roblox.com/create
I think what the video presenter is suggesting is that:
1. Revenue could be shared more fairly. The money that Roblox is keeping from kids is going into corporate pockets. There's no way around that.
2. The advertising could be more honest. If it's only for devs to make money, then mention that part only under the dev pages where 1% of the people will find them. For everyone else, advertise playing and creating for fun.
He has a great time, he's not chasing $, he just wants to have fun. It works great for that.
As soon as you try to stand out and chase money, yeah it gets HARD. Just like streaming on YouTube... or just getting noticed online for your blog.
But what's the alternative here? That's a question of scale. Just not let kids even have a chance to make money?