Fortunatehut shop
AKA “Lucky Box”, AKA “Alcherry” Using basically the same set of images (and “lies”) as (nearly) every other mystery box scam, but includes Walmart and Target a well as the usual Amazon in the ad.
AKA “Lucky Box”, AKA “Alcherry” Using basically the same set of images (and “lies”) as (nearly) every other mystery box scam, but includes Walmart and Target a well as the usual Amazon in the ad.
Uses stolen images in the store and ad (like the one below). The image appears in articles like this: https://time.com/5471614/amazon-employees-bear-spray/The eagle eyed reader might notice (in the article) that the image comes from Getty images (credited to Adrian Dennis—AFP/Getty Images), and then there’s no issue…
In most cases the comments on mystery box ads, that claim to show a product they received, are at least somewhat believable. But then there are comments like these! We are not completely sure on whether these comments are by trolls or fake comments by…
One our favorite comments, because it so “out there” (it might just be a troll, we are not 100% sure, and we love it either way). If one is to believe this comment, they got 50 RTX 3090 graphics cards, which currently would be worth…
This a weird one: people supposedly got an old/retro game console in their mystery boxes. What are the odds? (None!) The scammers probably just found an image containing “interesting electronics” and decided to use it, not caring about what the product in the image was.
The image used is stolen from an Amazon review.
This ad uses stolen videos and images. The site contains no information (beside the store listings), so no contact/business info, no “about us” page, no “Terms of Service”, no FAQ, etc.
The site this ad goes to is called TRANSITIONFOR-LIFE, and doesn’t list any valid business or contact info (just have support@example.com as a support e-mail), but seems to be another site “run” by Funpinpin