Pursuit of Jade is a scam!
Let’s be clear from the start: Pursuit of Jade is not a legitimate investment platform — it’s a sophisticated crypto-based pig butchering scam disguised as an entertainment or narrative-driven experience. Don’t be fooled by its polished branding, episodic structure, or social media buzz. This is a predatory scheme designed to lure victims into depositing cryptocurrency under false pretenses — and then vanish with their funds.
What do they promise? Behind the curtain of ‘Episode 24 discussions’ and host announcements lies a classic pig butchering playbook: victims are drawn in through seemingly harmless engagement — perhaps via dating apps, social media DMs, or even fan communities — and gradually steered toward a fake trading interface tied to the ‘Pursuit of Jade’ brand. They’re shown fabricated dashboards with steadily rising balances, promised ‘guaranteed returns’ of 15–30% per week, and pressured to ‘unlock higher tiers’ with larger deposits. Some reports indicate claims of AI-powered trading, ‘Jade Token staking,’ or ‘episode milestone rewards’ — all fictional mechanisms with zero real infrastructure.
Why is this mathematically impossible — and therefore a scam? A 25% weekly return compounds to over 1,000% annually. No legitimate crypto project, let alone one with no verifiable team, audited smart contracts, or exchange listings, can sustain that. There is no underlying product, no revenue stream, no licensed entity — just empty front-end interfaces mimicking profit statements. Real yield comes from real utility or market demand; ‘Pursuit of Jade’ offers neither. Its ‘token’ doesn’t trade anywhere. Its ‘platform’ has no whitepaper, no GitHub, no KYC-compliant operations — only urgency, flattery, and fabricated social proof.
How does the scam operate? Once victims deposit funds — usually USDT or ETH — withdrawals are systematically delayed or blocked with excuses: ‘KYC verification pending,’ ‘network congestion,’ ‘compliance review.’ When users push back, support vanishes. The ‘hosts’ and ‘community managers’ disappear after major deposit milestones. The final stage? A sudden platform shutdown or ‘maintenance mode’ — followed by silence. This isn’t volatility. It’s theft.
The victims? Often people new to crypto, emotionally engaged through storytelling or relationship-building tactics, and trusting because the scam mimics familiarity — episode numbers, fan interaction, even lighthearted emojis. That’s the danger: it weaponizes connection to bypass financial skepticism.
If you’ve sent money to Pursuit of Jade — stop sending more. Contact your wallet provider and local financial crime unit immediately. And if you haven’t: do not engage, do not deposit, do not trust. This isn’t an investment. It’s a trap — and it will collapse, as every pig butchering scheme does. Walk away. Now.
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