Apps
Steam
Medium-high riskThe world's largest PC gaming platform — with adult content accessible via a checkbox, unmoderated community forums, and a thriving scam ecosystem targeting young players.
Start here — 3 things to do today
- 1
Set up Steam Families
Steam Families (which replaced Family View and Family Sharing in 2024-2025) lets a parent account set playtime limits, restrict store and community access, and approve purchase requests for a child member.
- 2
Block Steam Community access
Turn off Steam Community and Online Features because those are the highest-risk surfaces and children do not need them to play local games.
- 3
Remove saved payment methods
Delete stored cards and use gift cards or wallet credit instead so spending stays inside a fixed budget.
What parents worry about most
Steam's adult content toggle is a checkbox that any child can tick. There is no technical barrier between a child's account and explicit content — only a yes or no prompt they can answer themselves.
The one thing to do right now
Setting up Steam Families (the system that replaced Family View) and removing saved payment methods are the two controls that matter most. Steam Families restrictions are tied to the child's account role, so they are harder to bypass than the old PIN.
Risk level
Age rating
13+ for accounts
Users
The largest PC gaming platform
Platform
PC, Mac, Linux, Mobile companion app
Age recommendation
Treat adult content access as open until Family Controls are enabled
Checkbox birthdate only
Adult content gate
Largely unmoderated
Community forums
Young players are primary targets
Scam targeting
Sales, bundles, limited-time offers
Spending triggers
Warning signs
Warning signs to know
Adult and violent game content accessible via false birthdate
HighSteam's adult content filter requires only clicking I am over 18 to bypass. There is no verification. Explicitly sexual games are available in the same store a 10-year-old can browse.
Steam Community forums contain unmoderated content
HighGame discussion boards, community hubs, and Workshop comments contain adult content, hate speech, extremist rhetoric, and contact attempts. These are not separated from the core game experience.
Trading and marketplace scams specifically target young players
HighFake item trade offers, Steam Support impersonation, and phishing links shared in game chat or Community are specifically engineered to target young players who do not recognise the patterns. Account takeover and item theft are common.
Sale mechanics and bundle design drive compulsive spending
MediumSteam sales like Summer Sale and Winter Sale create artificial urgency. Children with access to stored payment methods regularly spend significant amounts during sale events without fully registering the real-money cost.
Friend requests from strangers in multiplayer games
MediumPlayers from shared game lobbies can send friend requests. Strangers on a child's friend list can then message them, see their game activity, and invite them to other games.
Step-by-step guide
Complete step-by-step guide
- 1
Set up Steam Families (this replaced Family View)
Steam now uses Steam Families instead of the old PIN-based Family View. From your own adult account go to Steam menu → Settings → Family and create a Family (up to 6 members), then add your child as a child-role member. Restrictions are now tied to the child's account role rather than a guessable PIN, and you can set playtime/screentime limits, restrict store and community features, and approve or deny each purchase request. Any old Family View settings carry over automatically when you migrate.
- 2
Block Steam Community and forums entirely
In the Steam Families parental controls, restrict access to Online Features and the Steam Community. These are the highest-risk areas and children do not need them to play games.
- 3
Remove all saved payment methods from their account
Open Steam → account name → Account Details → remove all payment methods. Establish a gift card system by buying Steam Wallet cards with a set monthly value so they keep autonomy within a fixed budget.
- 4
Review the Friends list together
Open Steam → profile → Friends and remove anyone they cannot identify by name from real life or from a confirmed mutual gaming context.
- 5
Restrict which games the child can launch
In Steam Families parental controls, limit the child's access to an approved set of games so you review any title before it is played for the first time. Children can send a request to add a new game, which you approve or deny.
- 6
Check installed games against their age ratings
Open the Library, right-click any game, then open its store page to check the PEGI or ESRB rating. Games above the child's age should be discussed, not ignored.