Condo Games and Adult-Content Lures
Hidden Roblox games containing sexual content bypass platform moderation and are advertised via Discord or rentry.co links — kids may not understand what they're entering.
How This Scam Works
"Condo games" is the community term for Roblox experiences designed specifically to bypass the platform's content moderation and display adult or sexual content. The name comes from early examples styled as apartment or condominium roleplay spaces — but the category now refers broadly to any game that smuggles explicit content past Roblox's automated filters.
These games are almost never discoverable through the main Roblox game search — they're taken down within hours of being reported. Instead they spread through external channels: Discord servers, rentry.co pages (a free, anonymous paste-style site popular with Roblox communities), and direct messages. Kids who are curious but not actively looking for adult content can stumble into them through a friend's server or an innocuous-sounding invite link.
The lure mechanic varies. Sometimes it's positioned as a "secret" or "18+" game that makes it feel exciting and forbidden. Sometimes it's disguised as a normal social hangout that shifts once inside. Sometimes the advertisement is straightforward — a Discord message with a game link and no context. Kids who join may not immediately understand what they're seeing, particularly younger children who haven't encountered this content elsewhere.
Roblox bans accounts associated with creating or promoting these games, but the cat-and-mouse cycle continues. The meaningful protection layer isn't Roblox moderation — it's monitoring the off-platform channels where links get shared.
Red Flags to Watch For
- Your child receives a Roblox game link through Discord, rentry.co, or a messaging app rather than from within Roblox itself
- Your child is vague or defensive when asked which game they were just playing
- Browser or app history shows rentry.co URLs or unfamiliar Discord servers
- Your child seems embarrassed or quickly closes a screen when you enter the room during gameplay
- Friends or older kids are sending your child "special" or "secret" game links
- Your child mentions a game by a nickname rather than its actual listed title
What Kids Say (and Why)
Hearing one of these in your house? Here’s what it usually means.
- “It's just a hangout game, there's nothing bad in it.
- “My friend sent it to me — I didn't know what it was going to be.
- “Everyone knows about condo games, it's not a big deal.
- “I only went in for like two seconds and then left.
- “You can't get in trouble for just looking.
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Recommended Parental Control Tools
How to Talk About It
Actionable conversation scripts — non-accusatory, aimed at the pattern not the child.
- 1.Lead without shame: "I'm not angry at you for clicking a link — I'm concerned because those games exist specifically to show content that isn't appropriate for kids. Can you tell me who sent it?"
- 2.Address the "I didn't know" reality honestly: "You might genuinely have not known what it was before you clicked — that's exactly how they spread. The rule from now on is: any game link that doesn't come from inside Roblox itself, check with me first."
- 3.Name the off-platform channels specifically: "rentry.co links and Discord invites from people you don't know in real life are the main way these get shared. If you see either, come find me."
- 4.Discuss what they may have seen without over-questioning: "If you saw something that confused or bothered you, I want to hear about it. You're not in trouble for asking questions."
- 5.Set a practical rule: "Game links in Discord servers, even from friends, need a quick check before you join. It takes ten seconds and I won't make it a whole thing."
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How Bark Helps With This Scam
Condo games spread almost exclusively through off-platform links — rentry.co URLs and Discord server invites are their primary vectors. Bark monitors both, flagging when your child receives or shares these link types so you can intervene before they enter the game, not after.
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