The short answer: Fortnite can be okay for the right age with the settings sorted — the two things to handle are voice chat with strangers and spending. Lock those down and put the console in a shared room, and it's a manageable game rather than a worry.
Fortnite isn't the gore-fest some parents picture — it's cartoonish. The real issues are who your child talks to and how easily real money disappears into it.
What Fortnite is
A hugely popular online game where players team up or compete in real time — which means voice and text chat with people you don't know, and a shop full of tempting (real-money) extras called V-Bucks.
The real risks
- Voice chat with strangers. The most overlooked one — open voice chat connects your child with anyone in the lobby.
- Spending. V-Bucks are real money, and it's easy to rack up purchases.
- Time. It's designed to keep you playing "one more match".
The exact settings to change
- Set your child's real age / use a Cabined Account. Younger players get Cabined Accounts, which disable voice and free text chat until a parent gives consent — a strong default. Don't fudge the age older.
- Set up Epic parental controls via the Epic Account Portal: set a Parental Controls PIN, then lock the settings.
- Restrict communication: set voice and text chat to Friends only (or off for younger kids), and set friend requests to require approval.
- Require the PIN for purchases, and don't save a card to the account. Consider a fixed V-Bucks gift-card allowance instead.
- Set playtime/reporting so you can see how long they've played.
- Console or device stays in a shared family area — voice chat included.
So what age?
Common Sense Media pegs Fortnite at around 13+, mainly for the open chat and spending pressure. Younger than that, only on a Cabined Account with chat off and tight supervision.
What we do
Friends-only voice chat, PIN on purchases, no saved card, and it's played in the lounge. The chat setting is the one I'd never skip.
The bottom line: Fortnite is manageable for older kids once you set voice chat to friends-only, PIN the purchases and keep it in a shared space. The cartoon violence isn't the issue — strangers and spending are.
Want the full lockdown steps?
Every app, every device, screen by screen. One-off $13.60, no subscription, no affiliate links.
The Ultimate Parents Guide · $13.60Sources: Epic Games — Parental Controls & Cabined Accounts; Common Sense Media; eSafety Commissioner. Settings current as of June 2026.

