Do you know what 0.5% daily compounded actually means?
The Math Doesn’t Lie
Let’s say LoveInterest Crypto promises — and I’m quoting the kind of language scammers love — “steady, low-risk returns through AI-powered trading.” They hint at 0.5% per day. Sounds harmless, right? Like pocket change.
It’s not.
$1,000 invested at 0.5% compounded daily becomes:
$1,000 × (1.005)³⁶⁵ = $6,168
That’s a 517% annual return.
Warren Buffett — arguably the greatest investor alive — averages 20% per year, over 50+ years. The S&P 500? ~10%. Top-tier hedge funds? Maybe 25–30% in a very good year. LoveInterest Crypto isn’t matching those numbers. It’s claiming five times Buffett’s lifetime average — every single year — with zero volatility, zero drawdowns, and zero transparency.
Here’s Where It Gets Absurd
Now imagine they’re really pushing 1% daily — a number I’ve seen in screenshots from victims who got lured via fake dating profiles.
$1,000 × (1.01)³⁶⁵ = $37,783
That’s a 3,678% return. In one year.
At 2% daily? $1,000 becomes $1.3 million.
At 3% daily? $142 million. Yes — million.
If that were real — if LoveInterest Crypto had even a working algorithm that could reliably extract 3% from markets every day — its founders wouldn’t be DMing strangers on dating apps. They’d deposit $10 million, wait 2 years, and retire as the richest people on Earth. Instead, they’re begging for your $250 deposit — and blocking every withdrawal request after week two.
There Is No Trading. There Is No Bot. There Is No Platform.
Go look up LoveInterest Crypto on Crunchbase. On the SEC’s EDGAR database. On GitHub. On any exchange. You’ll find nothing. No whitepaper. No verifiable team. No API docs. No server logs. No trading history. Just a Discord link (https://discord.gg/sEKCFCegp7), a Mastodon handle, and a Twitter account with 37 followers and zero original content.

This isn’t a glitch. It’s design.
They don’t need to trade. They just need you to believe someone else got paid — so you’ll send money before the house of cards collapses. That’s textbook Ponzi: pay early “investors” with money from new ones, then vanish when the inflow slows.
“If You’ve Been in the Game 30 Minutes…”
Remember that quote?
“If you’ve been in the game 30 minutes and you don’t know who the patsy is, you’re the patsy.” — Warren Buffett
LoveInterest Crypto doesn’t hide its playbook. It leans into it: “love interest” + “crypto investment” is not a coincidence. It’s targeting loneliness, trust, and financial hope — all three at once. They build rapport first. Then they “share” their ‘portfolio’ — fake screenshots, always. Then they offer to “help you get started.” That’s when they ask for access to your wallet… or worse, your bank login.
No legitimate financial service asks for your banking credentials. No licensed broker sends trades via WhatsApp. No AI trading platform runs on Discord.
And yet — people keep sending money. Because the math sounds small. Because the person on the other end seems kind. Because the first $20 “profit” shows up fast — enough to hook you.
That $20 isn’t profit. It’s bait.
That $250 you sent next? Gone.
That $1,200 you wired after they said “this is your last chance before the quarterly reset”? Also gone.
I’ve talked to three people who lost between $800 and $4,200. Not one has recovered a cent. Not one has gotten a response to a withdrawal ticket. Not one has seen a single trade executed on-chain — because there are no on-chain trades.
LoveInterest Crypto is not broken. It’s working exactly as intended: to separate you from your money, gently, patiently, and with a smile.
Don’t be the patsy.
Expose scammer



















