A primary school in Klang just dropped a bombshell post — warning that your child’s favorite video games might secretly be teaching them how to kill without guilt.
Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan (Cina) Kong Hoe shared on Facebook that many students are hooked on games filled with violence, blood, and crime, and parents need to start paying attention now.
“Children aren’t born evil,” the school wrote. “But when they’re rewarded for killing in games, their hearts slowly grow numb — without them even realizing it.”
The school’s counseling team didn’t hold back, calling some games “silent killers of morality” — and urging parents to take control out of love, not punishment.
Here’s the list that’s freaking parents out:
GTA V (18+) — steal cars, punch people, shoot cops. The more violent you are, the higher your score.
PUBG / Free Fire (16+) — 100 players enter, only 1 leaves. Kill or be killed.
Mortal Kombat 11 (18+) — heads flying, bones cracking — it’s brutal.
Manhunt (18+, banned in some countries) — rewards you for the most gruesome kills.
Yandere Simulator (17+) — a girl kills for love and hides bodies — like a dark anime come to life.
Resident Evil / The Last of Us (18+) — constant gore and bloodshed, which studies say numbs empathy.
Doom Eternal (18+) — your goal? Kill everything that moves.
Tetris Effect (VR) (10+) — looks innocent, but too much can mess with your brain and sleep.
Postal 2 (18+, banned in 12 countries) — literally lets you burn schools and shoot civilians.
Hatred (18+) — one mission only: “Kill every human.”
Roblox (13+) — not all games are bad, but some player-made ones hide violent content.
The post has since gone viral among parents and teachers, sparking massive debate online. While some say “it’s just a game,” others are now checking their kids’ devices in panic.
One thing’s clear — video games aren’t just playtime anymore. For some kids, it might be the start of something much darker.

