By Jack Denton
Roblox stock posted stomach-churning losses in Friday's premarket, proving a valuable lesson for investors in companies that sell to children: what's good for customers can be very, very bad for shareholders.
Roblox stock was down 25% in premarket trading following results after the Thursday bell from the online gaming platform that is popular with children.
Daily active users in the first quarter rose 35%, which was significantly below the 44% increase expected by Wall Street. The guidance for bookings was also revised down to a year-over-year increase of 8% to 12%, far down from a previous 22% to 26%.
"Safety and the knock-on effects (lack of 'comms'/chat for nonage checked players which dampens the experience for all players) related to safety were called out as the primary headwinds," said Wyatt Swanson, an analyst at D.A. Davidson.
Roblox, in its letter to shareholders, said: "We are committed to setting the Global Standard for healthy, safe, and age-appropriate digital engagement -- this is core to our vision to connect 1 billion users with optimism and civility. We believe the long-term benefits of this are innumerable."
The company also understood that its recent efforts were to blame for slowing growth: "Growth was ... tempered by greater-than-expected headwinds from our age-check roll out, which restricted on-platform communication for nonage checked users, diluted communication for age-checked users, and slowed new user acquisition."
Roblox is correct to implement increased child-safety measures because it is the moral thing to do, will benefit customers, and sets the company up for success in the future. But doing so also unavoidably hurts the stock price by curbing growth.
These two things can be true at once -- which investors are learning the hard way.
Write to Jack Denton at jack.denton@barrons.com
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May 01, 2026 07:44 ET (11:44 GMT)
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