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Safety & Review Policy

Question Parties is built for mixed company — kids, teens, families, and adults often play from the same library. This page explains the audience modes that control which prompts you see, how prompts are reviewed before publication, and how to report anything that seems out of place.

The four audience modes

Every session on Question Parties runs under one of four audience modes. The mode decides which prompts can appear on every interactive surface — the generator, game mode, session mode, classroom mode, and printables.

  • Kids (ages 5–12): only prompts reviewed as safe and fun for children.
  • Teens (ages 13–17): kid-safe and teen prompts. No adult-only content.
  • Family (all ages): kid-safe and teen prompts that everyone can play together. This is the default for every session.
  • Adults (18+): unlocks mature prompts, and only after an explicit opt-in confirmation.

Family-safe by default

Every new session starts in Family mode. If a setting is missing, malformed, expired, or restored from an old saved session, it falls back to the family-safe default — never to a looser audience. Adult prompts can never appear in a kids, teens, or family session, even when restoring a saved session: adult mode is only honored when an explicit 18+ confirmation was recorded for that same session.

Adult mode is opt-in only

Adult mode requires the visitor to actively confirm they are 18 or older before any mature prompt is shown. It is never inferred from a past visit or an old saved session. Prompts that carry sexual-content or substance signals are always rated adult-only, even if they were tagged for a younger audience by mistake.

Automated signals plus human review

Every prompt in the library carries content signals — sexual content, substances, violence, humiliation, and relationship themes — that are checked automatically from the prompt's text and taxonomy. Automated checks decide what a prompt is allowed to do; human review decides whether it belongs on the site at all. No prompt is published on Question Parties without review.

How kids pages are built

Pages aimed at children — kids lists, classroom materials, and family printables — are generated only from inventory that has been reviewed and rated for kids or family audiences. Unclassified prompts are treated as adult-only until reviewed, so they cannot leak into a kids page.

Reporting a prompt

Every prompt card has a Report link that opens the submission form with the prompt's ID pre-filled. You can also report through the submission page directly.

Reports go into a moderation queue. A reviewer can edit, re-rate, or remove the prompt in the shared library that powers every page — one correction removes it from lists, saved sessions, and printables site-wide. Submissions and reports are reviewed before publishing and are never auto-published.

Our commitment

No prompt appears on Question Parties without passing automated checks and human review first. When something slips through, the report flow exists so it can be corrected or removed in one place, for every visitor at once.