Most romance scams begin quietly. A stranger reaches out with genuine-seeming curiosity. They message regularly, becoming a steady presence. Along the way, they gather intel: your hopes, your past wounds, your weak spots. Then they weaponize it, constructing a relationship that feels custom-built for your heart.
Let’s be clear: your kindness didn’t make you vulnerable; their cruelty made them a predator. They identified your empathy and used it as a pressure point. You entered with honesty; they operated with an agenda. Don’t internalize their wrongdoing. The scammer bears the blame, not the person who dared to care.
Choosing to trust again is brave. It’s also what scammers count on. Before you catch feelings for someone online, do your due diligence: reverse search their photos, study common red flags, and check which images fraudsters are currently using. This week’s most catfished photos are listed below.
Weekly Alert: The 10 Most Used Catfish Photos Right Now










Enjoying our Latest Catches? Relive last week’s Most Unbelievable Catfish Moments here.







