80+ Avatars Reported with Evidence—Zero Action from VRChat Moderation

At this point, I’ve lost count. I’ve reported another 20 avatars today — explicit, adult, public, and in violation of the ToS. Some of them have already been actioned, so clearly someone is reviewing the reports.

But my actual request to speak with a moderator? Completely ignored.

I’ve been asking for weeks for a proper conversation about this. I’m actively helping clean up the platform, spending hours flagging content that clearly doesn’t belong in public spaces — especially not where minors can access them. And for what? No communication, no transparency, no effort to fix the system that’s clearly broken.

If my time is being used to do the moderation team’s job, then where’s the accountability? Where’s the improvement? Where’s even a response?

I’m tired of the silence. Tired of having to scream into the void just to get the bare minimum done. This isn’t sustainable — and it sure doesn’t reflect well on a platform that wants to appear “safe” and “community-focused.”

I wanted to provide an update on my ongoing effort to report avatars that blatantly violate VRChat’s ToS—specifically those with DPS (Dynamic Penetration System) which is against platform policy. When I initially posted, my report count was over 150. Today, that number has surged past 300, with avatars continuing to operate publicly without consequence. This includes avatars in public worlds, strip clubs, and highly trafficked areas where moderation should be visibly active.

Despite this, the VRChat team remains silent and seemingly indifferent. All this work—over 300 reports—and yet the community sees little to no change. It’s disheartening that the platform’s priority seems to be sweeping these issues under the rug instead of addressing them head-on. Where is the action? Where is the accountability?

It’s frustrating to watch VRChat ignore these blatant violations while community members like myself put in the work to identify them. At what point does this become a priority for VRChat? Ignoring it won’t make it disappear. Continuing to allow these avatars to exist sends a clear message that VRChat is willing to turn a blind eye to the very rules they set.

If moderation truly mattered, these avatars wouldn’t be accessible days or weeks after reports were made. The silence is deafening, and the community deserves better. I won’t stop reporting, and I won’t stop bringing this to light until something is done.

I’m honestly at a loss here. It’s been two entire days since I submitted over 70 reports—SEVENTY—on avatars blatantly violating VRChat’s Terms of Service. We’re talking crashers, NSFW content in public worlds, and straight-up ToS violations, and yet not a single notification of action taken. Not. One.

Do the moderators even bother looking at the reports? Or do they just get tossed into some digital trash bin while the offenders continue to run wild? These avatars are still out there, still active, still breaking rules like VRChat is some kind of unmoderated playground.

I’ve been reporting for months now, documenting hundreds of violative avatars. Hundreds. And here we are—70 more added to the list, and the response is absolute silence. Is this what VRChat calls “moderation”? Because it’s looking more like willful ignorance.

The lack of action is a slap in the face to those of us who actually want this platform to be safe and enjoyable. If VRChat leadership can’t be bothered to enforce its own policies, then what’s the point of even having them? At this stage, it’s hard not to feel like they’re protecting the problem, not solving it.

This isn’t just negligence—it’s complicity. And the community deserves better.

I’ve reported over 80 avatars in the last few days—complete with clear image evidence of how each one blatantly violates VRChat’s Terms of Service. Crashers, NSFW content in public lobbies, predatory behavior—you name it, I’ve flagged it.

And what have I gotten in return?
Absolutely nothing.

Not a single confirmation that action has been taken. Not even an automated response saying they’re “looking into it.” Just total silence while these avatars continue to flood public instances, crash worlds, and violate community safety without consequence.

I don’t want to hear excuses about “high volume” or “limited resources.” If VRChat has the bandwidth to push out new monetization features, they damn well have the resources to protect their player base from predatory behavior and blatant ToS violations.

This isn’t just poor moderation; it’s a total failure of community protection. If VRChat leadership thinks ignoring this problem will make it go away, they’re dead wrong. This silence is only making it louder.

Maybe it’s time to ask: Is VRChat protecting its users, or protecting the people abusing its platform?

Have you considered not having ChatGPT write all of your posts? You look like an overly verbose spammer that can’t express themselves properly.

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Interesting assumption. If you’re more focused on how it’s written rather than the fact that over 80 avatars that blatantly violate VRChat’s own Terms of Service are still up, it says a lot about your priorities. I’d be more concerned with the lack of enforcement and the safety risks posed to users than trying to deflect with ad hominem jabs. Let’s keep the focus where it belongs—on VRChat’s failure to act.

If you can’t even write your own text, I am going to assume that everything else you’re talking about is also made up.

Do the bare minimum, or look like a clown. Notice how literally nobody is replying to your posts? Sure wonder why.

I appreciate the concern, but keep it to one post please. Flooding the forum with posts does not help anybody. It dilutes the discussion between different posts, and generally makes you appear unreasonable or annoying to others.

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Totally agree brother, VRChats “moderation team” is bottom of the barrel degenerate.
VRChats maybe got another 2 or 3 years in it before it shuts down completely.
Don’t listen to the literal PDF files that defend illegal crap like this, your doing good stuff my man. :+1:

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I’ve reported users for sexual content and each time the report was dealt with overnight, and I received a notification of action taken the next morning.
Either the reports you were making were deemed invalid, or you’re just straight up lying.
Given that all of your texts are AI-generated I am inclined to believe the latter.

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@Latte_Macchiato, it’s a bold assumption to make that structured, well-articulated arguments must come from AI just because it doesn’t match your expectation of chaotic rambling. If clear documentation, evidence-based reporting, and direct criticism make me look like a “clown,” then maybe the circus is exactly where the truth gets exposed.

And let’s talk about nobody responding—curious how you seem to be invested enough to keep coming back. Maybe it’s because you know deep down there’s merit to what’s being said, but it’s easier to discredit the messenger than address the message. I’m here talking about accountability and community safety. You’re here worried about syntax. Real telling.

@madcaker, it’s interesting that you find multiple posts addressing critical issues in VRChat to be “flooding,” yet you have no problem with the flood of NSFW avatars breaking TOS or the rampant crashers that ruin public instances daily. Funny how vocal you are about silencing discussions but silent when it comes to holding VRChat accountable.

If advocating for better moderation and community safety is “annoying,” then I’m more than happy to be a thorn in the side of complacency. Maybe the problem isn’t the number of posts; maybe it’s that these issues make you uncomfortable because they shine a light on things you’d rather ignore.

@Yz_d, appreciate the support! It’s refreshing to see someone who actually recognizes the problem instead of brushing it under the rug. VRChat’s so-called “moderation” has been nothing but smoke and mirrors—just enough to keep people complacent, but never enough to actually fix the issues. I’m going to keep pushing, whether they like it or not. This platform deserves better, and so do its users. Thanks for having my back.

@missingno123 Interesting how your “experience” is the golden standard for VRChat’s moderation, huh? Must be nice living in that fantasy. I’ve reported over 300 avatars with clear evidence of TOS violations—images, descriptions, the whole package—and only a handful have been actioned on, and that took weeks, not overnight. But hey, if you want to live in denial and pretend VRChat’s moderation team is flawless, be my guest.

As for your AI comment—funny how you’d rather grasp at straws than address the actual problem. If you want to dismiss evidence because it’s written well, that says more about your standards than mine. I’m here to clean up VRChat, not cater to your skepticism.

“I like pancakes” “So you hate waffles?!”
I’ve previously commented on your posts, and I said I agreed with you. Which you would have known if that comment wasn’t on an entirely different post from this one despite being about the exact same topic.