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Great, Big Tour: Part 1 Is Not a Tour — It’s a Fake Trading Bot Scam-Expose scammer
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Great, Big Tour: Part 1 Is Not a Tour — It’s a Fake Trading Bot Scam

Let’s cut the fluff. Great, Big Tour: Part 1 isn’t launching concerts. It’s launching a fake AI trading bot — wrapped in vague jargon, Telegram hype, and promises of ‘quantitative arbitrage’ that would make Renaissance Technologies blush.

They’re telling you their bot earns 1% daily. Let’s do the math — not the fantasy math they post in screenshots, but real compound interest math.

If you deposit $500 and it truly grew 1% every single day — no drawdowns, no fees, no failures — after just 90 days, you’d have:

$500 × (1.01)⁹⁰ = $1,227

After 365 days? $18,420.

That’s not investing. That’s financial alchemy — and alchemy doesn’t exist on Ethereum mainnet.

Real quant funds don’t post daily P&L updates in a group chat. They don’t ask for ETH deposits from strangers with $500 saved up from side gigs. They raise capital from pension funds, endowments, and sovereign wealth funds — because if your strategy is *actually* generating risk-adjusted alpha at that scale, you don’t need retail FOMO. You need compliance officers, auditors, and SEC filings.

Renaissance Technologies’ Medallion Fund — arguably the most successful quant strategy ever built — returned ~66% annualized *before fees*, over decades. And even that came with volatility, drawdowns, and a $10M minimum investment. Their edge? Decades of data science, physics PhDs, and proprietary market microstructure models — not a Discord link and a ‘live dashboard’ showing green numbers that update only when new deposits hit the wallet.

Here’s what Great, Big Tour: Part 1 actually has:

— A wallet address.
— A spreadsheet with pre-filled ‘profits’ (spoiler: those numbers never move unless you send more crypto).
— Zero verifiable on-chain trading activity. No arbitrage bots leave zero footprint — not on Etherscan, not on Dune Analytics, not in public order books.
— And a complete absence of any live, auditable smart contract that executes trades.

scam warning

That ‘AI arbitrage bot’? It’s a static JSON file served from a cheap VPS. The ‘quantitative strategy’? A coin flip masked as regression analysis. The ‘real-time dashboard’? A frontend pulling fake data from a backend that reads from a hardcoded array — not an exchange API.

This isn’t innovation. It’s theater. And like all good cons, it leans hard on recency bias — the dangerous idea that because markets went up last month, or because Bitcoin rallied last week, the same pattern will repeat *every single day*, forever, inside your $500 account.

Ray Dalio nailed it: “The biggest mistake investors make is to believe that what happened in the recent past is likely to persist.” These scams bank on that exact delusion — selling certainty in chaos, safety in volatility, and genius where there’s only greed.

Which brings us to Peter Lynch’s line — the one that should be tattooed on every crypto newbie’s forearm: “The person that turns over the most rocks wins the game. And that’s always been my philosophy.”

So turn over the rock. Check the wallet address on Etherscan. Look for outbound trades — not deposits. Search for deployed contracts linked to the bot. Try to find *one* independent audit, *one* live trade log, *one* verified withdrawal by someone who didn’t just get paid with incoming deposits (i.e., Ponzi payouts).

You won’t find any.

Because Great, Big Tour: Part 1 isn’t touring arenas. It’s touring wallets — yours, mine, your cousin’s, your retired neighbor’s — draining them one ‘guaranteed 1%’ at a time.

If this sounds familiar, it’s because it’s the same script, rebranded: ‘QuantBot Pro’, ‘AlphaNexus AI’, ‘Stellar Arbitrage Labs’. Same wallet. Same spreadsheet. Same silence when you ask for proof.

Don’t wait for the ‘Part 2’ announcement. Don’t DM the admin asking for ‘early access’. Just close the tab. Withdraw anything still in there. And next time you see ‘AI trading bot’ + ‘guaranteed returns’ + ‘Telegram group’ — walk away. Fast.

You’re not missing out. You’re being targeted. And the only thing growing daily here is their take — not your portfolio.

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