Let me be clear upfront: TGCF RP Search is not a writing forum. It is a crypto romance scam disguised as fanfiction matchmaking — and it’s already stolen thousands.
This Is Not About Fanfiction
You see phrases like ‘Hua Cheng’, ‘Xie Lian’, ‘Heaven Official’s Blessing’ — and your brain goes to anime forums, AO3, Discord servers. Cute. Harmless. But the keyword that flagged this? Romance investment scam. That’s the red flag screaming in binary.
Here’s how it works: someone posing as ‘Dolce (26F)’ reaches out — warm, enthusiastic, ‘new to the series but obsessed’. She wants to co-write. Then… a gentle pivot. ‘My cousin runs a quiet crypto fund. He lets me refer people. Just $500 to start — his AI bot locks in 1.8% daily returns.’ That’s not fanfic. That’s the hook.
The Math Doesn’t Lie — It Screams
1.8% daily. Let’s calculate what that actually means — no jargon, just real numbers.
Start with $500.
After 30 days: $500 × (1.018)30 = $857
After 90 days: $500 × (1.018)90 = $2,492
After 365 days: $500 × (1.018)365 = $327,000
That’s 65,300% annual return. For context: Renaissance Technologies’ Medallion Fund — arguably the most successful quant fund ever — averaged ~66% per year before fees, over decades, with $25B in capital, hundreds of PhDs, and custom microwave-networked trading infrastructure.
If TGCF RP Search’s ‘AI bot’ could reliably deliver even 10% of that performance — 6.6% daily — they wouldn’t be DMing strangers on fan forums. They’d be turning away sovereign wealth funds.
No Bot. No Strategy. Just a Wallet Address.
There is no arbitrage engine. No machine learning model scraping Binance/Bybit order books. No latency-optimized server cluster in Ashburn, VA.
There is a Telegram group. A fake dashboard showing green arrows and ‘profit updates’. And a single crypto wallet — likely shared across dozens of victims. Your USDT or ETH goes in. The ‘bot’ shows fake gains for 3–5 days to build trust. Then withdrawal requests hit ‘maintenance mode’, ‘KYC verification pending’, or — most commonly — silence.

Ray Dalio nailed it: ‘The biggest mistake investors make is to believe that what happened in the recent past is likely to persist.’ Those first three green days? That’s not alpha. That’s bait.
‘It’s Not Supposed to Be Easy’
Charlie Munger didn’t say that to sound wise. He said it because it’s physics-level true. Real edge in markets requires insane resources, relentless iteration, and losses — lots of them. You don’t get it by replying to a ‘Dolce’ who ‘just finished the books’ and ‘loves descriptive prose’.
This isn’t about being cynical. It’s about respecting math more than flattery. If someone’s offering you life-changing returns wrapped in fandom language — they’re not your writing partner. They’re your exit scammer.
And yes — they’ll use your emotional investment against you. ‘I trusted you with my story arc. Why won’t you trust me with $300?’ That’s not chemistry. That’s coercion.
Real quant firms don’t recruit via shipping requests. They hire from MIT, Caltech, and ETH Zurich — not Telegram DMs quoting Heaven Official’s Blessing.
So ask yourself: if this ‘bot’ is so good, why does it need *you* — and your $500 — instead of BlackRock’s $1 trillion?
Answer: it doesn’t. It needs your deposit. Nothing more.
Don’t send money. Don’t share wallet addresses. Don’t fall for the ‘romance before ROI’ script. Block. Report. Walk away — and tell two friends who love BL novels and think ‘crypto side hustle’ sounds harmless.
Expose scammer

















