Let’s cut the fantasy. Pursuit of Jade isn’t a love story. It’s not even a show. It’s a front — a beautifully branded, emotionally manipulative shell for a classic pig-butchering crypto scam. And if you’ve sent money to it, your $1,000 wasn’t invested in anything. It was handed straight to someone who joined two weeks before you — as ‘profit.’
Here’s where your money *actually* goes:
You deposit $1,000 into Pursuit of Jade’s wallet. No trade logs. No on-chain proof of asset purchases. No portfolio dashboard with real-time holdings. Just a dashboard that says ‘+1% daily return’ — and a $10 credit showing up the next morning.
That $10 didn’t come from yield farming, staking, or arbitrage. It came from the $1,000 deposited by another person — maybe five minutes before yours hit their server. Their money pays your ‘return.’ Your money pays the next person’s. It’s a closed loop — with no engine, no assets, no revenue — just redistribution.
The Math Doesn’t Lie — and It’s Brutal
Say you believe the pitch: ‘Just 1% daily compounding.’ Sounds harmless? Let’s test it.
$1,000 at 1% per day, compounded daily for 30 days = $1,000 × (1.01)³⁰ ≈ $1,347.85.
60 days? $1,000 × (1.01)⁶⁰ ≈ $1,816.70.
90 days? $1,000 × (1.01)⁹⁰ ≈ $2,459.60.
That’s a 146% return in three months — without risk, without volatility, without explanation. Real-world index funds average ~7% annualized. Hedge funds brag about 12–15% *before fees*. Pursuit of Jade promises nearly five times that — every month. There is no market, no instrument, no legal entity on Earth that delivers that — unless it’s stealing from someone else’s principal.
And that’s exactly what’s happening.

Your deposit doesn’t buy Bitcoin. It doesn’t fund a DeFi pool. It lands in a private wallet — likely controlled by three people in a shared apartment overseas — and gets instantly routed: part to earlier investors as ‘returns,’ part to marketing (TikTok ads, fake testimonials), part to cash-out via P2P or Tether mixers… and part straight into the founders’ pockets as ‘platform fee’ — often 5–15% off the top of every deposit.
That’s the real product: your trust. The romance storyline? Fan art? The ‘Marquis of Wu’an’ title? All set dressing — designed to make you lower your guard while they siphon your bank account.
When new deposits slow — and they always do — the ‘returns’ stop. The withdrawal button grays out. Support stops replying. The website goes dark. And the only people who made money? The ones who built the bucket with the hole in it — and stood there, funnel in hand, collecting water until the last drop fell through.
‘Show me the incentive and I’ll show you the outcome.’ — Charlie Munger
Their incentive? Not building wealth. Not launching a token. Not growing a community. Their incentive is simple: extract maximum principal from maximum victims — fast — before the math catches up with them. And the outcome? You lose $1,000. Your cousin loses $3,500. Your coworker remortgages her house — and loses it.
This isn’t speculation. This is forensic accounting applied to human behavior. Every pig-butchering scam follows this script. Pursuit of Jade isn’t unique — it’s just the latest costume on an old, ugly thief.
If you’re still in, get out *now*. Don’t wait for ‘one more cycle.’ Don’t ‘just withdraw the profit.’ Your ‘profit’ isn’t real — it’s someone else’s money, temporarily assigned to your balance. The second you try to pull it out, the system flags you as a ‘withdrawal risk’ — and freezes everything.
If you’ve already lost money: file a report with your local financial crimes unit. Document every transaction. Screenshot every promise. And tell *everyone* you know — especially the ones who think ‘it’s different this time.’ Because it’s never different. It’s always the same bucket. Always the same hole. Always the same theft.
You didn’t invest. You were harvested.
Expose scammer


















