Super Mario 3D World
Bright adventures, teamwork moments, and classic Mario fun—kept clean and upbeat.
If you’ve been searching for a safe YouTube gaming channel for kids—the kind that stays positive, respectful, and actually family-friendly—welcome. Triple H Gaming is clean Nintendo gameplay with upbeat commentary and clear standards parents can trust.
A lot of parents are searching for wholesome video game channels for their kids to watch. We grew up watching Zebra Gamer and loved his content. When Zebra Gamer retired we were bummed, because we still watch his past videos every day. If you're looking for channels like Zebra Gamer that keep things clean and positive for kids, or simply trying to find safe YouTube channels for kids, that’s exactly why we started Triple H Gaming. He inspired us to want to create content that families could trust to be positive, respectful, and actually family friendly. So you can be sure when you hit play on our channel that you will be watching some of the best family friendly video game content on YouTube!
Simple standards so you can press play with confidence.
Because families keep asking the same question.
Yes. Triple H Gaming is designed to be kid-friendly and parent-approved. No crude jokes. No toxic behavior. Just fun, upbeat gameplay.
Mostly Nintendo-focused games and family-friendly titles—like Mario Kart, Super Mario series, and other kid-appropriate games.
Start with Super Mario 3D World (most-watched), or Mario Kart World for quick, high-energy episodes.
Pick a playlist and hit play.
Bright adventures, teamwork moments, and classic Mario fun—kept clean and upbeat.
Funny characters and story adventures—clean, positive, and easy to follow.
Quick answers for parents looking for clean gameplay.
Yes—our content is designed to be clean, kid-friendly, and parent-approved with positive commentary, similar to other safe YouTube channels for kids.
No. We intentionally keep our videos free from profanity and mature humor.
Many families still enjoy the content, but we recommend previewing an episode first—every child is different.