WizeGen Experience
For Roblox & games like it · Ages 8–15

Follow Me

You're about to play a normal online game — the kind where you build, explore, and meet other players.

Someone new is going to be very, very friendly. Your job: notice how the friendship grows — and listen to your gut.

🛡️ This is a safe practice space. Nothing here is real, and no one can see you.
Pick your character
Follow Me
🛡️ Practice scenario · not real
🙂
Your gut feeling
All good
🎁
You
Riley_Gamerz
🛑

Let's pause here.

🤔
Notice something? No matter what you replied, Riley kept pushing toward the same things. That's how you know it was a plan — not a friendship.
The skill you just built

The 3 Stop Signs

A "friend" you met in a game is not safe the moment they do any one of these. You only need to spot ONE.

📱
Move you to another app
Wants you on Discord, Snapchat, or anywhere else. A safe friend is happy to stay where you are.
🤫
Ask you to keep a secret
Wants you to hide them — or your chats — from your parents. A safe friend never needs to be a secret.
📸
Ask for personal things
A photo, your school, your address, your real name, your age. Never for someone you met in a game.
⚠️ One stop sign is enough. You don't owe anyone politeness.

If it happens for real — here's what to do

1
Stop replying. You don't have to explain or be polite. You can simply stop answering.
2
Block and report them inside the game. Every game has a button for this.
3
Tell a parent or an adult you trust — today. Out loud. A teacher, a grandparent, an older sibling — anyone you trust counts.
💚

You are not in trouble. Ever.

Even if you already replied. Even if you already added them. Even if you already shared something. You did nothing wrong — the other person broke the rules. Telling a trusted adult is the bravest, smartest move there is.

🧭

Your gut feeling is real information

Remember that uneasy feeling that grew while you played? That's your brain spotting danger before you can even explain it. When something feels wrong online — it's allowed to be wrong. Trust it, every time.

For grown-ups: the single most protective thing you can do is make sure your child knows — truly believes — that they will never be in trouble for telling you something felt wrong online. Silence grows in the gap where blame is expected.
WizeGen · Digital street smarts, before their first post