Parents' Guide to Unicorn Academy

Unicorn Academy TV Poster: Sophia, a teenage Latina girl, with her unicorn Wildstar

Common Sense Media Review

Ashley Moulton By Ashley Moulton , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 8+

Magical, immersive world of adventures has some peril.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 8+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 9+

Based on 20 parent reviews

Parents say that while the show is enjoyable and features positive themes like empathy and diversity, it also contains elements of mean-spirited dialogue, undue focus on romance, and poor conflict resolution that may not be suitable for younger children. Some reviewers express concerns about the influence it has on kids' behavior and attitudes, raising doubts about its appropriateness for the intended age group.

  • mean-spirited dialogue
  • focus on romance
  • conflict resolution issues
  • suitable for older kids
  • positive themes
Summarized with AI

age 8+

Based on 11 kid reviews

What's the Story?

In UNICORN ACADEMY, rebellious horse-loving teen Sophia receives a mysterious invitation to "Nuncior Academy," what she thinks is an equestrian academy. When she arrives at the boarding school, she learns she actually has been invited into the secret world of magical unicorns. Sophia will be training to protect the magic of Unicorn Island, where all the world's magic comes from. Sophia and the other students navigate making new friends, bonding with their unicorns, and mastering their unicorns' magic. Soon, they realize that not everything is sparkles and rainbows. Sophia learns that her father did not die in an accident. He too was a unicorn rider and died protecting the world from the evil villain Ravenzella. Can Sophia and her friends become expert unicorn riders and thwart Ravenzella and her "grim magic" from destroying the unicorns' magic forever?

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say ( 20 ):
Kids say ( 11 ):

Bigger kids into unicorns and fantasy will probably be obsessed with Unicorn Academy. The magical world is exquisitely imagined. The unicorns have fun powers, the settings are beautiful, and the non-unicorn creatures are equally fantastical. The world feels real enough that kids will have no trouble imagining themselves getting a special invitation to attend Unicorn Academy themselves. Grown-ups will appreciate that the characters are also good role models and that the series has positive larger themes. (They may not appreciate as much the oodles of sought-after products this series is destined to produce.)

One knock against this otherwise superb series is that it is fairly derivative. Fans of the Harry Potter series will notice close similarities between many of the characters, magical elements, and storylines. However, there is a reason why Potter took the world by storm. The idea of finding a secret magical world is an irresistible fantasy escape to kids, and they won't mind if they've heard this one before.

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the themes of light vs. dark in Unicorn Academy. Ravenzella thinks dark, "grim" magic is the way to gain power, but everyone on Unicorn Island uses happiness and light. How do you notice "light" and "dark" magic throughout the show?

  • Sophia and her friends break a lot of Unicorn Academy's rules. What do you think about rule breaking -- how does someone decide what rules are okay to break and when?

TV Details

Did we miss something on diversity?

Research shows a connection between kids' healthy self-esteem and positive portrayals in media. That's why we've added a new "Diverse Representations" section to our reviews that will be rolling out on an ongoing basis. You can help us help kids by

Unicorn Academy TV Poster: Sophia, a teenage Latina girl, with her unicorn Wildstar

What to Watch Next

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