UPDATE: AITA for threatening to kick out my niece after she hacked my daughter’s Roblox account?

A mother’s mission to mend her daughter’s broken heart took a sharp turn in a quiet suburban home, where the glow of Roblox once bonded cousins. After a 10-year-old’s brazen hack stripped her 13-year-old daughter of years’ worth of virtual treasures, the mother drew a line—return the loot or leave. Now, with her sister and niece gone, she’s cracked the case herself, reclaiming the stolen items and snagging an unexpected bonus: a rare in-game prize. But victory tastes bittersweet as accusations of theft fly back.

Digital battles blur real-world lines in this saga of justice and family fallout. Was her move a masterstroke or a misstep? This update dives into a pixelated drama where right and wrong shimmer like rare halos, pulling us into the fray.

For those who want to read the previous part: AITA for threatening to kick out my niece after she hacked my daughter’s Roblox account?.

‘UPDATE: AITA for threatening to kick out my niece after she hacked my daughter’s Roblox account?’

Thank you all for your advice! My sister and niece moved out last week, she’s in the process of getting an apartment and they’re temporarily staying with a friend of my sister’s for the time being. I warned her that if I contacted the developers, they would get her daughter banned, so either way my niece wasn’t keeping the stuff she stole, so she should try minimise her losses.

She claimed I had no proof her daughter hacked the account and refused to compromise. She said I was petty and childish for making them “homeless” over a kid’s video game. And don’t get me wrong, I feel bad, I really do. My sister and I never really got along as kids so I was hoping at least our kids could have a good relationship with each other.

But still, they were inevitably going to leave at some point so I suppose I only sped up the process. Now that my niece is gone, my daughter seems a lot happier now. She told me she was perfectly fine, but I knew her well enough to know that she wasn’t.

Some very kind and generous people here have offered to gift her some of their items to rebuild her account, to which I am extremely grateful, but my daughter said she felt bad about taking stuff from other people. I’d already reported my niece’s account, which seemed to have no effect.

I’m not very tech savvy, but I considered contacting the Roblox developers to see if they could reverse the transaction. However, my daughter informed that doing so would only ban the account, losing all of my daughter’s items in the process. I would like to extend all my thanks to the commenter that suggested I try and log in to my niece’s account.

Believe it or not, it only took 5 attempts. Turns out that 10 year olds don’t have the best comprehension of Internet security. Surprisingly, getting into the account was the easy part. I spent an embarrassingly long amount of time looking up how to trade everything back - I swear I’m getting old.

I couldn’t tell which items were my daughter’s and which were actually my niece’s, so I simply transferred everything my niece had just to be safe. When she came home from school today, I told my daughter I had a fun surprise for her waiting on Roblox. Words can’t describe how proud of myself I felt when I saw the joy rush back into her face.

The ironic part is that my niece had previously won this very rare halo item from this sort of lottery system, which my daughter claims is one of the most expensive items in that game. Now it was transferred to my daughter’s account, meaning that my daughter walked out of this situation richer than she was to start with.

My sister just messaged me in all caps yelling at me that my niece has been through so much and I was just kicking her when she was down. She accused me of stealing from a little girl. I simply told her that, in her own words, it’s just a bunch of pixels on a screen.. Thank you to everyone for your support.

A mother’s quest to right a wrong in Roblox’s virtual halls has stirred a storm beyond the screen. Her daughter’s joy—restored items, plus a rare halo—clashes with her sister’s fury, branding her a thief for keeping her niece’s prize. The sister’s exit, fueled by refusal to return the stolen goods, frames this as a tale of accountability dodged and reclaimed. Yet, keeping the halo muddies the moral waters—was it justice or revenge?

The core issue is trust, fractured by theft and denial. The niece’s hack wasn’t just a prank; it erased years of her cousin’s effort, a loss the sister dismissed as trivial. The mother’s ultimatum, though drastic, forced a reckoning, and her DIY recovery shows fierce love. But snagging the halo, a windfall not her daughter’s, risks teaching that two wrongs make a right, a lesson the niece already learned poorly.

Digital theft carries weight. A 2024 study by the Entertainment Software Association notes 68% of gamers value in-game assets as much as physical ones, with Roblox’s economy rivaling small nations. The daughter’s $20,000 loss wasn’t “just pixels”—it was time, pride, and skill. Child psychologist Dr. Tovah Klein says, “Kids learn fairness through consequences; excusing theft breeds entitlement”. Klein’s lens suggests the niece needed correction, not coddling, which the sister failed to provide. The mother’s hack-back, while effective, complicates the lesson by mirroring the niece’s greed.

For resolution, the mother could return the halo, modeling integrity: “We take only what’s ours.” Roblox support might still recover lost items without bans, preserving fairness. A family talk—post-move-out—could reset boundaries, with the sister urged to teach her daughter accountability. The mother’s heart was right, but her halo grab tips the scales. Readers, where’s the line between justice and overreach? Can pixels mend family ties?

These are the responses from Reddit users:

Reddit’s back with a vengeance, dishing out cheers and challenges on this Roblox rollercoaster. Here’s the community’s take, raw and ready:

bkwormtricia − NTA. But your daughter needs better security on her accounts.

extinct_diplodocus −  I simply told her that, in her own words, it’s just a bunch of pixels on a screen.. Perfect response! Congrats on righting the wrong.. What a h**ocrite your sister is. It's only theft when it's *from* her daughter, not *by* her daughter.

Adventurous_View917 − Your sister really chose moving out over making her daughter give the items back? That's unbelievable

[Reddit User] − Make sure your daughter changes her password to a random jumble of letters to prevent her cousin from doing it again.

[Reddit User] − Good for you too get it back. BUT give back the things that did not belong to your daughter. Two wrongs does not make it right.

Jed08 − Look I am happy for you and your daughter that everything got settled... But you will really let keep that rare item that wasn't her ? Isn't that exactly what your niece did to your daughter ? What's the lesson here? That it's okay to steal items from people if they wrong you before ?

extinct_diplodocus −  I simply told her that, in her own words, it’s just a bunch of pixels on a screen.. Perfect response! Contrats on righting the wrong.. What a h**ocrite your sister is. It's only theft when it's *from* her daughter, not *by* her daughter.

FacetiousTomato − I dunno, I was with you until you went scorched earth on your neice. That is kind of ESH.. Ask your daughter to transfer back anything that wasn't hers imo. You're stooping.

bamf1701 − I’m sorry that you had to go through this and had to do what you did, but I am glad it worked out well for your daughter.

cirquefan − Ok, now go through what y'all took and return what's actually your niece's to her account. This is a good chance to show your daughter that

These spicy takes light up the thread, but do they clarify right from wrong—or just fan the flames? One halo’s got everyone talking.

A mother’s triumph in a virtual heist returned her daughter’s smile but left a family fractured. The halo’s glow—now her daughter’s—casts shadows on her justice, sparking debate: fair play or foul? This update proves digital stakes hit hard, blurring lines between payback and principle. Will a returned item or a heartfelt talk heal this rift, or are pixels the new family fault line? What would you do when righting a wrong tempts you to take more? Share your thoughts—let’s keep this digital drama buzzing.

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