Scammers are flooding Findom Twitterâand theyâre not targeting submissives. Theyâre pretending to be them.
In a space where financial domination is built on trust, kink, and control, a growing number of fake âpaypigsâ are turning the tables on dommes, students, and financially vulnerable users. These accounts promise large tributes, but instead run a lazy, manipulative scam designed to steal quick cash.
đ How the Fake Paypig Scam Works
It often begins with a friendly DM. A so-called submissive claims to be a paypig ready to spoil you. Theyâll say things like:
âI just sent you $2,500 through PayPal. Check your balance, goddess.â
Naturally, thereâs nothing there. But before you can question it, they send a screenshot âprovingâ the payment. At first glance, it looks real. Upon closer inspection? Itâs fake. Poorly photoshopped, often re-used across multiple accounts.
Then comes the pivot:
âYou just need to send a $25 processing fee to unlock it.â
âMy agent requires a $30 confirmation before funds are released.â
âOnce you send the fee, youâll have access to the full amount.â
This is the scam. These accounts arenât here to tribute. Theyâre here to flip the dynamic and get you to pay them under the illusion that a payout is waiting.
đ¸ Screenshots of the Scam
Below are real examples of scam messages, bios, and fake payment receipts. These come directly from accounts that DM’d me during my short investigation.



đ The âGodâs Workâ Variant: Using Kindness as Bait
Not every scammer plays the submissive card. Some pose as older, âkind-heartedâ women claiming to be on a mission to help people. These bios are stuffed with emojis, vague religious sentiments, and promises to support students, single moms, or anyone struggling with finances.
Hereâs a real example from a DM I received:
“Iâm here to help a lot of people đŤĽof college students or đŞĄsingle peopleđŁthat need helpđđto paying bills and tuition đ´$ đfinancial and school fee!đˇ DMme!”
While the language might feel off, the pitch is convincingâespecially when youâre vulnerable. But the play is exactly the same. A fake screenshot. A request for a small âprocessingâ payment. And then theyâre gone.
What makes this worse is the emotional leverage. These scammers exploit hope, faith, and financial stressâall while hiding behind stolen profile pics and spiritual quotes.
đ¸ Real Screenshots: What These Scams Look Like
I’ve collected a series of screenshots from real scam DMs, bios, and fake payment proofs. Youâll see the same tricks used across different profiles, often using identical phrasing or design templates.





These images can help you recognize red flags fasterâand avoid falling for similar traps.
đŠ How to Spot a Scam Quickly
Here are the most common red flags I saw:
- Over-the-top promises of large tributes
- New or inactive accounts with few followers
- Emo-filled bios claiming to help students or âserve Godâ
- Fake payment screenshots with mismatched details
- Pressure to act fast or send a fee to release funds
- Mentions of âagents,â âverification,â or âunlockingâ payments
Remember: Real paypigs and supporters donât need you to send money first. Thatâs not financial domination. Thatâs just a con.
đ§Ż Who These Scammers Are Targeting
These scams donât only affect experienced dommes. Theyâre also aimed at:
- New dommes trying to grow their presence
- Women tweeting about bills, tuition, or financial stress
- Content creators in adult spaces
- Students and single moms posting publicly about needing help
Because the amounts involved are smallâusually $20 to $50âmany victims donât report it. That silence helps these scammers keep going.
â Stay Safe: What to Do Instead
If you get a suspicious DM, hereâs how to protect yourself:
- Donât respond emotionally. Scammers prey on urgency and excitement.
- Never send money to someone offering you money. Thatâs the golden rule.
- Screenshot the conversation for documentation.
- Block and report the account on Twitter.
- Share your experience to warn others.
Even better, talk openly in your circles. Many others have seen these scams but stayed quiet out of embarrassment. Raising awareness is how we shut them down.
đ Final Thoughts: Awareness = Power
This scam is lazy, predictable, and everywhere. It targets dommes, women, and students with false promises and emotional manipulation. Whether itâs wrapped in kink or kindness, the result is the sameâsomeoneâs trying to get a few bucks out of your wallet.
Donât fall for it.
Real tribute doesnât come with strings.
Real help doesnât ask for a âprocessing fee.â
And real dommes? Donât pay to get paid.
đŹ If youâve been approached by one of these scammers, drop a comment or share this post. The more visibility we give this scam, the less it works.đŠ Common Red Flags
Want to avoid getting scammed? Watch for these signs:
1. Over-the-top promises â âIâll send you $5,000 nowâ
2. New or inactive accounts â Few tweets, low engagement
3. Emotionally manipulative bios â Claiming theyâre here to help or serve God
4. Fake screenshots â Fonts, usernames, or layout doesnât match the real app
5. âProcessing feesâ â Any request to send money first
6. Talk of agents, verification, or test transfers â đŠđŠđŠ
đ Who Are They Targeting?
This scam doesnât just hit findommesâit targets:
- New content creators in adult spaces
- College students tweeting about needing help
- Single moms or women posting about bills, rent, or school fees
- Anyone who seems financially vulnerable or trusting
Itâs fast, low-risk for the scammer, and preys on people just trying to get a leg up.
đ§Ż Final Thoughts: Donât Pay to Get Paid
This scam is lazy. Itâs transparent. And yet, it keeps working because people donât always talk about it.
So letâs talk about it.
If someone slides into your DMs offering free money, tribute, or supportâbut asks you to send money first? Itâs a scam. Every time.
â
You donât need to send proof.
â
You donât need to pay any agent.
â
You donât need to verify anything.
If they really want to give you money, they will. No strings attached.
đŹ Spread the Word
Have you seen this scam? Got a fake pig in your DMs?
Share this post or tag someone who needs to see it.
The more we talk about it, the less power these scammers have.
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