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Operating terms

DMCA notice

KidsGames streams hand-tested browser games straight to your tab — no installer, no waiting, no friction. Open a category and play on any device.

The site respects the intellectual property of others and expects every player to do the same. This page describes how to file a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) notice — or any other copyright claim — for material you believe is hosted or surfaced on KidsGames without permission, and how to respond if you think we removed the wrong item.

Filing a copyright report

If you have a good-faith belief that material on the site infringes a copyright you own or are authorised to enforce, send a written notice that includes everything below. Incomplete reports get queued or rejected, so be specific.

  1. The protected work — title, format, and a link to an authorised copy if one exists. Include a registration number when relevant.
  2. Location on the site — the exact URL(s) on KidsGames where the material is surfaced, or a precise description of where it lived if it has since been moved.
  3. How to reach you — your full legal name, physical mailing address, phone number, and inbox.
  4. Authority — a statement confirming you are the rights holder or are authorised to act on the rights holder's behalf.
  5. Good-faith assertion — a statement that you have a good-faith belief the disputed use is not authorised by the rights holder, their agent, or the law.
  6. Accuracy declaration — a statement, under penalty of perjury, that your notice is accurate and (if you are not the owner) that you are authorised to act for the owner.

Where to send a notice

Copyright / DMCA contact
Inbox: contact@kids-games.uk

The site may forward your notice to the player who supplied the disputed content. You may be liable for damages (including our reasonable legal costs) if you knowingly misrepresent that material is infringing. When uncertain, consult a qualified lawyer in your jurisdiction before filing.

Counter-notices

If your material was taken down or access was disabled and you believe that was a mistake, you can send a counter-notice. A useful counter-notice typically contains: a clear identification of the material and where it lived before removal; your contact information; a sworn good-faith statement that the takedown was an error; and an acknowledgement that you submit to the jurisdiction of the U.S. federal court in the district where you reside (or, if you reside outside the U.S., the U.S. district we designate) and that you will accept service of process from the player who filed the original report.

Send counter-notices to the same inbox above. Under standard DMCA timing, we may restore the material after 10 to 14 U.S. business days unless a court action has been filed, subject to the laws that apply to your matter.

Repeat-offender posture

The site may, where appropriate, restrict accounts or block players who repeatedly infringe, and we keep records of notices we process. Nothing on this page limits any separate enforcement we may take under our Operating Terms.

Trademarks and other complaints

DMCA is primarily a copyright mechanism. For trademark, defamation, privacy, or other legal complaints, the same inbox is a reasonable starting point — be precise in your subject line. The site is not a court; when facts are unclear we may take neutral steps (such as a temporary takedown) while the parties resolve the dispute, where the law permits.