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Is Ben Azelart Safe for Kids? Safety Score: F

@benazelart · 49.5M subscribers · Graded May 12, 2026 · Based on 100 recent videos

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Overall Safety Grade: F (35/100)

I would not recommend this channel for young children due to the risky behaviors shown. Older children might watch with parental guidance to discuss safety and media literacy.

Best for ages 13+. Not recommended under age 10. Acceptable for 10-12 with guidance.

The content involves stunts and potentially dangerous activities that are not suitable for younger children and could encourage imitation.

Score Breakdown

DimensionScoreHeadline
Content Appropriateness 10/25 10/25 Content features risky stunts and destructive experiments, not suitable for young children.
Shorts & Dopamine Factor 12/25 12/25 Nearly half of recent uploads are Shorts, encouraging rapid, passive consumption.
Age Clarity 5/25 5/25 Content lacks clear age targeting, appealing to a broad, potentially young audience.
Educational Value 5/25 5/25 Primarily entertainment-focused with minimal educational content or learning objectives.

Content Appropriateness — 10/25

Content features risky stunts and destructive experiments, not suitable for young children.

Videos like "Impossible Ninja Star Throw!" and "Impossible Axe Throw!" depict dangerous activities. "I Built a SECRET Survival Bunker!" mentions real explosives, which is concerning for impressionable viewers. The channel frequently involves destructive tests, such as in "Smoke Bomb VS YouTube Play Button!" and "Which Hammer Is The Strongest?".

Shorts & Dopamine Factor — 12/25

Nearly half of recent uploads are Shorts, encouraging rapid, passive consumption.

48% of the last 100 uploads are Shorts, indicating a significant focus on short-form, high-stimulation content. This frequency of short, attention-grabbing videos can contribute to a preference for quick content over sustained engagement with longer-form material.

Age Clarity — 5/25

Content lacks clear age targeting, appealing to a broad, potentially young audience.

The channel's humor and challenge-based format can attract a wide age range, including younger children who may not fully grasp the risks involved. There is no explicit age labeling or content complexity that clearly defines a target demographic, leading to mixed-age viewership.

Educational Value — 5/25

Primarily entertainment-focused with minimal educational content or learning objectives.

While some videos like "How Strong Is Glass?" or "Which Scissors Are The Sharpest?" involve basic physics demonstrations, they are presented as entertainment challenges rather than structured learning. The channel does not aim to teach specific skills or knowledge, focusing instead on stunts and builds.

Expert Analysis

Overview

This channel features a creator performing various stunts, challenges, and large-scale builds, often involving destruction or risky activities. The content is primarily entertainment-driven, aiming for viral appeal through dramatic scenarios and experiments. It targets a general audience interested in high-energy, challenge-based videos.

What Parents Should Know

Parents should be aware that many videos depict potentially dangerous activities, such as throwing sharp objects, using explosives, and constructing elaborate, sometimes precarious, structures. These stunts are performed by adults and should not be imitated by children, but the channel does not always clearly convey these safety messages.

The Bottom Line

I would not recommend this channel for young children due to the risky behaviors shown. Older children might watch with parental guidance to discuss safety and media literacy.

Parent Tip

If your child watches this channel, discuss the difference between staged entertainment and real-life safety, emphasizing that these stunts are performed by professionals and are not for imitation.

Notable Videos Reviewed

About This Safety Report

VidCove's Channel Safety Grader analyzes the 100 most recent videos on Ben Azelart using Google Gemini, scoring four independent dimensions on a 0–25 scale:

Ben Azelart's Shorts ratio in this sample is 48% — roughly 48 of the 100 videos sampled were Shorts. Reports are regenerated when channel content changes materially or after 180 days have passed.

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