CyberSafePups.com
Practical online safety guidance
Romance Scams: What to Look For
Romance scams often start with a “perfect” profile and fast emotional connection. This page shows common signs of fake profiles and scripted conversations so you can pause and protect yourself before you get emotionally or financially committed.
Educational resource. Examples below are fictional and used for awareness only.
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Romance scams are on the rise
Don’t get scammed for Valentine’s Day. Learn the warning signs before you get invested.
Too good to be true?
If someone feels “perfect” too fast, pause and compare your chat to the examples below.
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Example “too-perfect” profiles
Photos alone don’t prove anything. Look for vague bios, rushed intimacy, and off-platform pressure.
“Looking for something real. I’m tired of games. I know what I want.”
“Not on here much. Message me and we can talk somewhere better.”
“I’m honest, loyal, and ready to settle down. I believe in destiny.”
- Vague bio + strong emotional language can be a sign the profile is designed to appeal to anyone.
- Off-app pressure early on is a common tactic to avoid reporting tools on dating platforms.
- Consistency checks matter: do their details stay the same, and do they answer simple questions clearly?
Scripted message examples
These examples show common patterns: fast bonding, vague answers, and avoidance of verification.
A real person may be shy or private—but over time they can usually verify who they are in reasonable ways. Repeated excuses and rushed intimacy are common scam indicators.
Common patterns (men & women)
Scammers tailor stories differently depending on the target. These are common themes.
Common tactics targeting men
- Very attractive profile with minimal detail (“works for anyone”).
- Fast compliments and emotional bonding early on.
- Pressure to move off-app quickly.
- Eventually introduces money topics (emergency, bills, “investment opportunity”).
Common tactics targeting women
- “Military,” “oil rig,” “widower,” or “traveling for work” storylines.
- Slow grooming: daily messages, “good morning my love,” steady attention.
- Repeated reasons they cannot meet or video call.
- Escalates to financial requests (gift cards, wire transfer, crypto, “fees”).
- Money request = stop. Do not send gift cards, crypto, wires, or “fees” for any reason.
- Urgency is a tool. “Right now” pressure is designed to bypass your judgment.
- Verification is normal. A reasonable person won’t get angry if you ask for basic verification over time.
What to do if you suspect a romance scam
Keep it simple: pause, protect, and verify—without arguing or escalating.
Feeling embarrassed is normal—scammers are skilled at manipulation. Protecting yourself is the priority. If you’re unsure, step back and get a second opinion.
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