others' safety and dignity. Especially not children’s.
Please, do your research. Reflect on the content you consume and support. Ask yourself honestly: When was the last time you played Sprunki for the game itself—not the chaos surrounding it?
And with that, I rest my case.
please—don’t equate this with the furry fandom, for example. That comparison is misaligned. Furry culture, as controversial as it can be, is not inherently predatory toward children. What we’re seeing in parts of the Sprunki fandom is active sexualization of characters widely recognized as minors. That crosses every line. Sky is a child character—and yet has been targeted by inappropriate content.
It is disturbing to open a For You Page and be served this kind of material, as if it’s normal. It’s not. And if no one holds people accountable, the cycle continues.
Yes, the creator being doxxed was a turning point—but the real issue runs deeper. It’s us. You and me. Everyone engaging with or enabling this content.
So, I ask you sincerely: consider leaving this community. Let it go. You can spend your energy on something healthier, more creative, more fulfilling.
But let me be clear—I’m not here to scare anyone out of a fandom. Be passionate. Be expressive. But never at the cost of oth
I’d like to offer a counterpoint: in my opinion, the Sprunki community itself has become the embodiment of “brainrot.”
Now, you might say, “It’s the players, not the game!”—a fair argument on the surface. But let’s pause for a moment. If you're participating in the culture surrounding this game, especially by turning a blind eye to its darker elements, then you’re contributing to the issue, whether intentionally or not.
To be clear: I do not support the chaos and behavior that currently defines much of the Sprunki fandom. It’s deeply concerning to see content farms and creators distributing explicit material—yes, including Rule 34 content of “Wenda Sprunki” and others—to minors. That is not just unethical. It’s illegal. And somehow, people are getting away with it.
You might defend it with, “There are bad actors in every community, but that doesn’t mean the entire fandom is rotten,” and yes—there are good people in every space. People are flawed, and communities reflect that.
But p