Interactive tool

Crypto Scam Pattern Quiz

Five realistic scenarios. Decide if each one is a scam or legitimate. Get a score and a per-scenario explanation so you can spot the same pattern next time.

Scenario 1 of 5

A Twitter account named "@MalairteSupport" replies to your tweet about a wallet issue and asks you to "verify your 12-word recovery phrase" by sending it via DM so they can fix the problem.

Scenario 2 of 5

You read a guide on malairtebitcoin.com about installing the Malairte wallet. The guide gives you a SHA-256 checksum to verify the download against, and tells you to write your recovery phrase on paper, never share it, and store the paper somewhere safe.

Scenario 3 of 5

A YouTube ad promises that sending 1 MLRT to a specific address will get you 2 MLRT back, "to celebrate the network launch." The video looks polished and shows live blockchain transactions.

Scenario 4 of 5

A local meetup group posts on a public city subreddit: "Free Malairte wallet setup workshop at the public library on Saturday. Bring your own laptop. RSVP via the library website." No promise of profit, no asks for money or seed phrases.

Scenario 5 of 5

A Telegram bot offers an "official Malairte airdrop" - send a small amount of MLRT to verify your wallet is active, and you'll receive 100 MLRT back automatically.