Can the word amazingly be used as a present participle at the beginning of a sentence:

Amazingly more players aren't worried about how they affect children like that.

It's being used as an adverb and needs a comma after it ... but it's used correctly (not a participle, though).

Thank you, isn't present participle a word with -ing? I have to begin the sentence with a present participle won't that be the same whatever word I use. Thanks

A present participle does have an -ing ending on it -- but no -ly ending, too!

Scaring his sister, the boy ...
(you finish the sentence)

Howling into the wind, the dog ...

Or make up your own!

Thank you. So I could just use amazing more players aren't worried about how they affect children like that, right. Thanks again

No. In that sentence, it's not clear what "amazing" is modifying. Participles are verbal adjectives; they must be modifying a noun or pronoun.

Amazing their friends with their new skills, the players ...
In that sentence, the participle and its phrase are modifying "players" -- now finish the sentence, with "players" as the subject.

Thank you so much for your time. Have a good day

could you correct that?

Nowadays, we are in touch with bully, in television, news, friends, schools, and workplace. Bullying is a stubborn, conscious manners planned to hurt another person, either physically or emotionally. Within the past years bullying can turn violent and often ends to death. What could the causes to bullying be?