Gaming has long been a significant source of joy, inspiration, and social connection for players around the world, and social distancing has made this truer now than ever before. With the holiday break on the horizon, many parents and caregivers may be looking for ways to help balance screen time and family time. We know achieving this balance is important to families. That is why earlier this fall, we launched the Xbox Family Settings app for free on iOS and Android. Today, we are taking the next step on our journey to support families by introducing two new app features for child accounts on Xbox Live.

If someone is already part of a family group, they must leave or be removed from that group before joining another. They can also create a new Microsoft account to associate with a new family group. Family organizers can add family members by following the steps below.


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Parents and caregivers know best what content is right for their child. By bringing key family settings features right to your phone, we hope that families feel empowered to have important conversations about how to balance gaming with other responsibilities like school and time with friends. We will also release additional new features in the future for the Xbox Family Settings app to provide families with the tools and support they need for safer and fun for everyone.

Screen time limits in Microsoft Family Safety are a great way to balance online habits within your family group. You decide when and for how long family members can use their connected Windows, Xbox and mobile devices.

Everytime I get a game to play with my daughter I have to change account settings and change them back for a week(if I don't give up first) to be able to play with her. Why is it 2020 and this is still a problem?

This is part of ongoing efforts from Xbox to develop both its safety settings for families, but also their accessibility. The platform holder released an Xbox Family Guide around Christmas 2018, and made its safety settings available on Android through its Microsoft Launcher app in late 2019. McCarthy also touched upon these topics in an interview with GamesIndustry.biz last year.

The new app feels like the natural next step in presenting these settings in a user-friendly manner, accessible for even tech-averse parents and guardians. It also helps raise awareness that gaming can be part of a healthy family life.

"[We] started [working on the app] this past year but we've been working on these family settings for the four years that I've been in this space. We're continually investing in [it], we're [always] learning new things. Cross network play is an awesome example. It wasn't something that was even on our radar a few years ago and it wasn't even initially evident that we needed to do something special for kids and teens. But as we saw games like Fortnite come on the market, we needed to add functionality to allow more fidelity of control around that.

"And then the other piece -- and in some ways it's the flip side to that coin -- is how do you make it as easy and convenient as possible for people to manage? And that's where making the decision to introduce an app made a lot of sense for us. Because we did have really robust settings online, and that you can manage on the console's UI, but nothing beats the convenience of being able to pick up your mobile device and do it there."

When you set an account for a minor on Xbox, as part of a family group, the games they have access to are defaulted to age-appropriate content. So in Europe it would match PEGI ratings, and the ESRB for North America.

But you can also give access to Minecraft without giving access to the full package, so your child only plays offline for instance. Or on the other hand, you can give access to Minecraft's multiplayer, even if multiplayer is turned off by default in the master settings. For now, this functionality is only available for Minecraft, but it will be added to more games in the future.

"We can even go so far as to manage the Club settings there, which gives access to things like Minecraft Realms, if they want to be on a server with their friends and do online things. This is a real practical scenario that has fed some of our prioritisation of features. It's that 'easy button' for titles that parents want to give [some] access to, but respect the other settings. The idea is that, over time and based on parent feedback, [we'll] add more easy buttons like this, based on real life usage scenarios that they share with us."

"That breakdown [of the settings] allows you as a family just to have a dialogue around these things. It's a mix of us providing you the tools and choice to manage your experience the way you want it to, and setting up the right conversations for you to have with your kids on these things overall.

"In parallel to building the app we actually introduced the ability to set screen time at the individual game level," McCarthy says. "Before, it was just one universal setting. You could set your screen time, but it would apply to everything. Now you can go in and set discrete settings. I can manage down to the day of the week, hour in the day, and I can do that from the app as well.

Guardians can also set up communication settings for their child -- for instance who can get in touch with them, and whether the child is allowed to add friends on their own. However, friend requests won't appear in the app for now.

The initial set up process for many family safety apps can be enough of a bother to dissuade parents from seeing the value in these tools, so we'll outline every easy step in this Xbox Family Settings parents guide so that you can quickly and easily monitor your child(ren) whenever they're gaming online, even if you're not at home. Follow these steps, and you'll be ready in a matter of minutes, and will be able to take advantage of powerful tools like:

All of these settings are catered specifically towards gaming on Xbox consoles, rather than the more generalized uses of the Microsoft Family Safety app. So how do you set up the Xbox Family Settings app? It's easy; here's how:

Many people have asked how they can reset the family timer settings and/or the passcode on their Xbox 360 console. I have the answer! No cheap tricks! Reset all passcodes and security questions with this code:

"We believe that especially now, gaming plays an important role to help connect friends and family and have fun while staying home," McCarthy said. "The app makes it easy to find the right balance of gaming time that feels right for your family."

The app allows you to setup a family account which is linked to any Xbox consoles and Windows devices in the home. It's then possible to view daily and weekly activity reports broken down into Xbox and Windows usage. Screen time limits can be set, content blocked or unblocked, and adding or removing friends via Xbox Live can be setup to require a guardian's consent.

In addition to these features, the app can be used to filter content, manage play and communication settings, view and manage friends list, and access activity reports. Parents can download the Xbox Family Settings app for iOS as well as Android devices.

Xbox is making it easier for parents and carers to access these settings in the new Xbox Family Settings app. This provides access to the majority of settings that you previously needed to access via a browser. 006ab0faaa

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