Making 200 million from trading coins only to be scammed down to zero, a story even more exaggerated than that of Da Xiang Ge.

CN
6 hours ago

Imagine this: you’ve traded cryptocurrencies to 2 million, achieving your first small goal in life, and you’re ready to diversify your risks and look for some reliable investment opportunities.

At this moment, your girlfriend's friend comes to you.

You met in a cryptocurrency group and have known each other for two years. At first, you were just friends, discussing market trends, projects, sharing jokes, and poking fun at the absurdities of the market—gradually, your relationship changed. She would greet you morning and night, send selfies, share her thoughts, talk about how lonely she felt in Beijing, and say that only you made her feel that the world still had some warmth. Unknowingly, you started to develop feelings for her.

She is in the oil business, owns several gas stations, engages in bulk shipping trade, participates in the distribution of Moutai liquor, and has 100 million in overseas trusts. Her social media posts showcase either plane tickets or yachts, frequently checking in from different countries; that lifestyle is incredibly appealing to you. She is confident, independent, and even a bit assertive—you begin to feel that she is not just a girlfriend, but someone more capable than you.

You can’t help but marvel at how fate has favored you, allowing you to meet a partner with whom you share common interests, willing to navigate the bull and bear markets together.

One day, she tells you about a collaboration with Sinopec, a short-term funding opportunity with high returns—10% profit in a month. She mentions that she just needs a little more funding to secure the deal and doesn’t want to tell anyone else, just wants you to participate.

You hesitate a bit, but she speaks with such certainty, and since you’ve been dating for a while, you know her character and that she isn’t the type to ask for money outright. She hasn’t formally asked, just said that it would be great if you were willing to participate, but there’s no pressure.

You have 2 million on hand, so you decide to take out 100,000 to give it a try.

Over the next two months, she indeed transfers the interest to you as promised, 10,000 each month, without any delays. This makes you completely let down your guard. You feel that you have not only gained love but also found a reliable business partner. You even start to fantasize about the two of you working on projects together, investing, and making money, like the "power couple" you admire.

Then, the unexpected happens.

She suddenly tells you that the company’s account has been frozen, with several million in goods payments stuck, and now the business can’t continue. Employees are pressing, suppliers are causing a scene, and trouble is imminent. She says she has gathered most of the funds but needs 300,000 more and asks if you can help. She repeatedly emphasizes: it’s not a loan, it’s an emergency, and she will pay you back as soon as the money is unfrozen in a couple of days.

She is visibly upset, even shedding tears, saying she shouldn’t have put this pressure on you, and that she wouldn’t have asked if it weren’t absolutely necessary.

You are stunned. Flashing through your mind are the things she has done for you, the gentle tones of your late-night conversations, and her words when you received the interest, "Don’t worry, I’m a reliable person."

You loosen your grip and transfer the money…

Another young person in the cryptocurrency world has been scammed out of 200 million.

This is the true story of Brother Datiao.

However, Brother Datiao’s savings are not 2 million, but 200 million. The investment he made for his girlfriend was not 100,000, but 10 million and 30 million.

And she is not just a "girlfriend" or a "benefactor." Her name is Zhang Bai, and she is a "hunter," part of a mature, well-organized, and clearly divided "romance + investment scam" gang that has been operating for two years. They set up a scheme more intricate than one could imagine—from the glamorous and wealthy persona to the fake romantic relationship, from forged sources of goods, police notices, to fake lawyers, fake police, fake companies, and fake seizures, culminating in layers of escalating "crisis resolution."

On social media, Brother Datiao recorded a video lasting over 20 minutes, recounting his experience of being scammed. He could have retired before turning thirty, living a life of driving supercars and traveling the world. Now, he is left with only a phone and these suffocating memories.

After Brother Datiao transferred 30 million to help unfreeze the account, Zhang Bai "thanked" him by sending a Lamborghini Urus, a top configuration worth over 4 million.

He thought it was a return of love, only to later find out that the car was also bought with his own money, registered under her friend's company. This is another clever aspect of the scam:

Giving you some returns and sweeteners—making you believe everything is real.

In April 2023, Brother Datiao wanted to buy a Ferrari 812 GTS, and Zhang Bai said she had connections to get it at a good price. She suggested buying the car and registering it under a "familiar company" to make the transaction easier and avoid tax scrutiny. Without hesitation, Brother Datiao transferred another 7 million for the car.

A few days later, she came to him again, saying that because this company was newly registered and didn’t have enough cash flow, the tax authorities suspected "tax evasion," and now the car payment account was frozen, requiring another transfer to go through the proper process. Brother Datiao chose to trust her again and transferred another 7 million. Over the next two months, Zhang Bai used reasons like "tax investigation," "company liability," and "large fines" to take over 30 million from him. By this time, nearly half of Brother Datiao’s 100 million had been drained. Yet he continued to trust.

The subsequent "games" became more frequent, almost every month.

In October, it was about a problem with the initial mask goods, a "major case of fraud involving epidemic materials," and she tearfully sought help, prompting Brother Datiao to transfer over 10 million again.

In November, it was about company employees being taken away by the police, with records mentioning Brother Datiao as a "key figure in money laundering," needing someone to take the blame. She suggested spending 10 million to settle it, including a "compensation" of 3 million to Liu Yuqiao for going to jail. After hesitating, Brother Datiao transferred the money.

In December, there were "sudden audits" across the country. Accounts were frozen in the east, and tax authorities were questioning in the west; every few days brought a new "crisis," each requiring hundreds of thousands or millions to "settle," with transfers unable to keep up with the rapidly changing script.

…………

By July 2024, Brother Datiao was completely drained.

He sold all his supercars, and his accounts were nearly empty. He finally began to awaken, organizing all past chat records, transfer receipts, and travel arrangements, and he reported to the police.

The most ironic part is that he went to the police station with Zhang Bai. In other words, at the moment he reported the crime, he still didn’t know that the "girlfriend" sitting next to him was actually one of the masterminds behind this astonishing scam.

He is not the only one who has been scammed.

The cryptocurrency world has never lacked myths, but it has also never lacked nightmares. You see some people becoming rich overnight, but you don’t see many others who have lost everything in trading or have been drained of their wealth by a "love + investment" dual trap…

In recent years, the cryptocurrency world has become a "hot commodity."

The cryptocurrency world is too young, too lucrative, too chaotic, and too lonely, gathering a group of people who quickly become wealthy, experience strong emotional fluctuations, and have blurred social boundaries. These individuals are precisely the ideal targets in the eyes of scammers.

Brother Datiao is not the only one who has been scammed. It’s not just cryptocurrency players.

Recently, a well-known UP master, Daxiang Ge, who has been in the "Top 100" for three consecutive years, publicly shared in his video a personal experience of a three-year-long, over 10 million yuan chain scam. Initially, he was drawn into a "restaurant investment"—the other party was a big shot running a high-end restaurant, with connections, financial resources, and a grand setup, even letting him taste food, stay over, meet friends, and discuss the future. A meal, a car, a luxury apartment—each seemingly real "proof" stacked together, ultimately leading him to unwittingly transfer 2.4 million.

No contracts, no agreements, just the words "Don’t worry, I’ll help you make money."

Then came the constant upselling—opening branches, forming a group, entering major projects, eventually leading him to gather 10 million and bring in six friends to join. Daxiang Ge not only put in all his savings but also personally guaranteed, bringing in brothers who trusted him to "take a shot together."

In the end, predictably—the other party ran away.

The project collapsed, and Daxiang Ge was left with over 12.49 million in personal and joint debts, even selling his Maybach and using all of his parents' and grandmother's savings, still owing relatives 900,000. He said, "I’m not afraid of having nothing; I’m afraid of letting down those who believe in me."

You may not be in the cryptocurrency world, nor have you engaged in contracts, but as long as you possess these three characteristics: you’ve made money quickly, you desire a bigger breakthrough, and you once believed in someone who would "help you fly." Then you are one of the target groups.

They will appear when you are making the most money, discussing strategies with you, praising your insight; they will stay up late chatting about market trends, saying they are lonely too, believe in fate, and have stories to share. They seem to understand you very well. They even understand you better than you understand yourself.

They know how to weave stories, with backgrounds more exciting than scripts. They know how to manipulate, giving you a little sweetness each time, then creating the next crisis. They don’t need you to transfer all your funds at once. They just need you to "trust once more" at every juncture. They are setting up a psychological war.

They are not in a hurry; they can chat about market trends with you for half a year, be friends for a year, or even accompany you slowly from a bull market to a bear market, making their move subtly.

Brother Datiao and Daxiang Ge are undoubtedly among the unfortunate ones.

But if, after reading this story, you still think to yourself, "I won’t be scammed," then please go back to the beginning of the article and read it again, putting yourself in their shoes.

The truly frightening thing is not the act of being scammed itself, but the confidence that such a thing will never happen to you. Because, unbeknownst to you, they may already be lurking around you, lying in your WeChat contacts, hanging in your Telegram contacts, or even friends you have already met.

They are waiting for you to say the next word that exposes your trust or greed, and then with a drink, a collaboration, or a phrase like "Bro, I really admire you," the scammer will make their move.

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