Let’s cut through the noise. You got messaged. Maybe on a dating app. Maybe on Instagram. Someone charming, maybe with a fake profile pic and a story about trading crypto while sipping espresso in Bali. They showed you a screenshot — $12,473 profit in 11 days. ‘Just copy my strategy,’ they said. Then they sent you a link to PigsCrypto.
Here’s the first red flag nobody asks:
If this thing actually prints money — why do they need YOU?
Not your attention. Not your trust. Not your ‘testimony.’ Your cash. Real, working systems don’t beg for deposits from strangers. They raise capital from VCs, banks, or accredited investors — not people who just matched with a ‘financial advisor’ named ‘Alex from Toronto’ (who lives in Minsk).
The math doesn’t lie — and it screams fraud
PigsCrypto promises ‘consistent daily yields’ — vague, but their demo accounts show ~1.2% to 1.8% per day. Let’s test that.
1.5% per day, compounded, is 605% per year. Not 6% — six hundred and five percent.
Start with $1,000. After 30 days? $1,563.
After 90 days? $4,049.
After 365 days? Over $237,000.
Now ask yourself: if that were real, why isn’t JPMorgan shutting down their trading desks and wiring $10 billion into PigsCrypto? Why isn’t BlackRock dumping index funds and building a data center just to run this ‘algorithm’?
Because it doesn’t exist. There is no algorithm. There’s no trading. There’s only one ledger — and it lives in the scammer’s head (or more likely, their Telegram admin panel).

This isn’t investing. It’s feeding the pig.
‘Pig butchering’ isn’t a cute nickname. It’s a cold, calculated process: groom, build trust, isolate, escalate emotion, then slaughter financially. You’re not a client. You’re livestock. And PigsCrypto is the pen.
They don’t care about your portfolio. They care about how much you’ll deposit before you realize the ‘withdrawal button’ is a GIF — not a function. The ‘support team’? A shift worker in Cambodia reading canned replies. The ‘verified withdrawal proof’? A Photoshop layer over a spreadsheet.
Charlie Munger once said:
‘It’s not supposed to be easy. Anyone who finds it easy is stupid.’
That line hits like a brick when you’re staring at your bank statement — wondering how $3,200 vanished in 72 hours. Easy returns? Easy access? Easy ‘verification’? That’s not opportunity — that’s bait. Real wealth takes time, friction, due diligence, and often, failure. If it feels smooth, frictionless, and emotionally charged — walk away. Fast.
And don’t fall for the ‘just one more deposit to unlock your funds’ trap. That’s not unlocking anything. It’s tightening the rope.
You didn’t lose money because you were greedy. You lost because you trusted — and they weaponized that. That’s not weakness. That’s being human. But now you know: PigsCrypto doesn’t trade crypto. It trades on hope, loneliness, and the desperate belief that *this time*, it’ll be different.
So here’s what to do right now:
— Screenshot everything.
— Report the Telegram group, website, and any linked domains to the FTC and IC3.
— Tell one friend. Not to shame yourself — to protect them.
This isn’t about shame. It’s about stopping the next person from handing over their rent money to someone who’s already booked a one-way ticket out of the country.
Expose scammer



















