Devices

Desktop PC

Critical risk

A desktop PC often feels easier to supervise because it stays in one place, but that advantage disappears if it lives in a bedroom. Once the screen is unsupervised, gaming platforms, browsers, chat tools, and late-night use can become much harder to spot than on a phone.

Start here — 3 things to do today

  1. 1

    Move the PC to a common area

    Visibility cuts down hidden use more than almost any software setting.

  2. 2

    Enable Windows Family Safety or macOS Screen Time

    Turn on the native tool before adding game stores, browsers, or chat apps.

  3. 3

    Keep the account password to yourself

    A child should not have the password that approves installs or removes limits.

Warning signs

Warning signs to know

Unsupervised room use

Critical

A bedroom desktop makes it easy to hide late-night gaming, explicit content, and private chats.

No mobile screen time habits

Medium

Families often remember to limit phones but forget the desktop entirely, creating a second unmonitored screen.

Gaming platforms like Steam

High

Desktop gaming stores bring mature games, social features, voice chat, and constant sales pressure.

Discord and community chat

High

Desktop use often shifts children toward servers and voice channels where adults can join quietly.

Step-by-step guide

Complete step-by-step guide

Desktop safety depends heavily on location. Native parental controls work better when the machine is visible and shared, not isolated.

  1. 1

    Create a child-only login

    Windows: Settings → Accounts → Family. macOS: System Settings → Users & Groups → Add User and keep it as a standard account.

  2. 2

    Turn on the family dashboard

    Windows: link the child to Microsoft Family Safety. macOS: System Settings → Screen Time and apply limits to the child's account.

  3. 3

    Keep software installs behind your password

    Do not share the administrator password. Steam, Discord, VPNs, and second browsers are much harder to add without it.

  4. 4

    Add browser and gaming schedules

    Use Family Safety or Screen Time to set time windows for the browser, games, and chat apps.

  5. 5

    Review activity once a week

    Look at screen time reports, installed apps, and recent friend or server activity before it becomes a surprise.