Royale🌼High: Roblox Parent Guide
A fantasy dress-up school where your daughter can be a princess, a mermaid, or whoever she wants, as long as she knows who she's chatting with.
High school roleplay meets fairytale
Royale High is a dress-up school simulator where kids collect **diamonds** to buy gowns, halos, and mermaid tails, then roleplay in castles and campuses. Players attend classes to earn currency, decorate dorms, and chat with other students in their server. The game itself is gentle, but the chat is where your parenting happens.
Why kids play Royale🌼High
Endless dress-up without the mess
She can mix **fairy wings, mermaid tails, and ball gowns** in combinations that would cost a fortune in real life. The dopamine hit is instant, the closet is infinite, and nothing ends up on your credit card unless you let it.
Collecting and completing feels like progress
Earning **diamonds per level** and hunting for the seasonal **halo** at the fountain gives her a goal that feels like achievement. She's not aimlessly scrolling, she's working toward something, even if it's digital.
Roleplay lets her try on identities
Whether she's the **popular girl, the shy new student, or the rebellious outcast**, she's experimenting with social scripts in a low-stakes space. That's normal developmental play, just happening on a screen.
Small servers feel safer than chaos
With only **12 players per server**, she's not lost in a crowd of strangers. She can recognize usernames, follow conversations, and leave if the vibe turns.
What parents should watch for
Chat bypasses let bad language through
Roblox's chat filter is beatable with special characters and alternate spellings, so **curse words and inappropriate requests** slip through despite moderation. Your daughter will see things you'd rather she didn't, and the game can't stop it. Check her chat history together, not as a bust but as a Sunday routine.
Roleplay attracts older, boundary-testing players
High school roleplay games draw teens and adults who test limits in chat, and **predators have used Roblox to groom younger players** before moving them to Discord or other platforms. The game's innocent aesthetic doesn't mean everyone playing is innocent. Lock her friend requests, know her Roblox username, and ask who she's talking to.
Diamond grinding turns into Robux pressure
Earning diamonds is slow, and the game constantly updates with **new halos, mermaid tails, and sets** that cost real money via Robux. She'll want the thing everyone else has, and the line between earning and buying blurs fast. Set a monthly spending limit with her, not for her.
"Who wants to be the baby?" opens the wrong door
Roleplays that start with **"Who wants to be the baby?" or "I'll be the mom"** can veer into infantilization or age-inappropriate dynamics with strangers. Most kids are just playing house, but some adults use these scripts to test boundaries. If she's doing family roleplay, she should do it with real friends, not randos.
Parent takeaway
Royale High is fine if you treat it like a chatroom that happens to have a dress-up game attached. Lock her friend requests, set a Robux budget together, and check her chat log on Sunday mornings with coffee, not as a gotcha.