Fansoria.com: 535 Fake Reviews, One AI-Generated Template
👉 What you need to know…
- 535 fake reviews detected by ScamDoc’s moderation system on Fansoria.com — and counting. A staggering 529 out of 535 come from Germany, exposing a systematic, industrial-scale fake review operation.
- The pattern is painfully obvious: every fake review follows an identical template — a generic intro, a randomly picked service (“500 Spotify Premium Saves”, “100 Quora Premium Views”), and a boilerplate “result” that reads like ChatGPT on autopilot.
- Fansoria has been running this charade every single day since November 2025, posting 3-6 fabricated reviews daily across ScamDoc, Scamwatcher, and other review platforms.
- Trustpilot removed their page entirely — it was flagged for violating platform rules and spammy review behavior.
- Real customers paint a very different picture: money taken, zero delivery, and support bots that regurgitate copy-paste non-responses.
The Anatomy of a Fake Review Factory
Fansoria.com sells social media growth — Instagram followers, TikTok likes, YouTube subscribers, you name it. They claim “1M+ who got famous” and flash a 4.86/5 rating from “42,213 reviews” alongside a VerifyPilot trust score of 97/100.
Impressive numbers. Too bad they’re largely fabricated.
Since late November 2025, our moderation systems have flagged a relentless stream of fake reviews targeting Fansoria’s ScamDoc page. The pattern hasn’t changed in seven months:
Same structure, every single time:
“Quietly impressed by the 100 Quora Premium Views, the result hit the page in record time and everything changed for the better.”
“Finally pulled the trigger and the 5,000 Telegram Premium positive reactions hit the chat within hours, instantly proving the concept to investors.”
“The hype is real – 500 Instagram Premium Impressions flooded the story within hours, and engagement skyrocketed.”
The formula is trivially obvious:
1. A generic opener — “Major props to…”, “Quietly impressed by…”, “The hype is real…”
2. A randomly generated service — pick any combination of a number + platform + action: “50,000 Audiomack Premium Re-ups”, “500 Spotify premium saves”, “200 Deezer Premium Likes”
3. An equally generic “result” — “credibility went through the roof”, “the growth became exponential”, “everything changed for the better”
These are not real reviews. They are the output of a scripted content generator — almost certainly ChatGPT — cranked out at industrial scale, 3 to 6 times a day, every day, for over 200 consecutive days.
And the kicker? 529 of the 535 fake reviews originate from Germany. The GEOIP data is unequivocal. Someone in Germany is running this operation, feeding AI-generated praise into scam reporting platforms to drown out actual victim complaints.
“Did You Try It Because of All the Reviews? That’s the Point.”
The irony hasn’t gone unnoticed. One user on Scamwatcher, who has been documenting this spam campaign since day one, captured a deleted fake review where the “reviewer” claimed: “The reviews convinced me, and the 200 Deezer Premium Likes hit my page before the deadline…”
As the whistleblower aptly noted in their Scamwatcher documentation: “Fake reviews convinced them! That’s the whole point of this spam.”
This user — going by “chii-tan” on Scamwatcher and “BeckyMay2” on ScamDoc — has been methodically screenshotting and exposing every single wave of fake reviews since November 2025. Their documentation is exhaustive. At one point, Fansoria was so brazen they were posting 6 reviews within minutes of each other, using the exact same template. After being called out repeatedly, they adjusted: same volume, just spaced out more cleverly. But the template never changed.
The admins have deleted hundreds of these fabrications, but the spigot never turns off. Fansoria just keeps pumping them out.
What Real Customers Actually Say
Strip away the 535 fake reviews, and what’s left on ScamDoc tells the real story — 9 authentic reviews with an average rating of 1 out of 5.
“Scammer company! Ordered a package and never received anything. The helpdesk promises to help but they don’t. They talk like robots. Avoid this bad scam company!”
— Insignia, November 2024“Scammers! Some random robots instead of premium service.”
— Ca, June 2024“Fansoria mixes it all up, so you have to order again, and they do not deliver any follower. SCAM.”
— Klaus, April 2025“Avoid! Avoid! Avoid! I purchased 500 YouTube users, received them, and lost them overnight. After many reminders, they couldn’t give me an answer. They refuse to issue a refund.”
— Alex, October 2025
Over on Scamwatcher, a victim reported in April 2026: “They did not provide the service I paid for — YouTube watchtime. After payment I could not contact them at all. Not responding to emails, live chat suddenly offline from that moment.” — Report #916148
The pattern is consistent: pay the money, get nothing (or bots that disappear overnight), then get stonewalled by a support team that responds like a broken chatbot. Because that’s exactly what it is.
Trustpilot Kicked Them Out
For a while, Fansoria flaunted their Trustpilot score prominently on their website. That page is now gone. Trustpilot removed their listing after determining it violated platform guidelines — the reviews were flagged as spammy and inauthentic.
Fansoria has since pivoted to VerifyPilot — a lesser-known platform where they claim a 97/100 trust score and 42,213 reviews. The credibility of those numbers, given everything we’ve documented, speaks for itself.
The Bigger Picture: Why Fake Reviews Matter
Fake reviews aren’t just annoying — they’re the foundation of the entire operation. Fansoria’s business model depends entirely on appearing legitimate. Their website is a polished storefront offering “social media growth” across 40+ platforms, complete with fake support agents (“James Lee”, “Emma Green”, “Richard Thompson”) and a “90-day money-back guarantee” that nobody seems able to claim.
Without the avalanche of manufactured praise drowning out real complaints, nobody would take the risk. The fake reviews are the product.
What to Do If You’ve Been Scammed
Do not pay them another cent. The “money-back guarantee” is theater.
- Request a chargeback from your bank — if you paid by credit card or PayPal, dispute the transaction immediately. Cite “service not delivered” and provide your payment receipt.
- Report the scam on Scamwatcher and leave an honest review on ScamDoc — real victim accounts are the most powerful counterweight to fabricated praise.
- Spread the word — share this article. The more people who know about the fake review operation, the less effective it becomes.
If you’ve had an experience with Fansoria — good or bad — leave your review on ScamDoc. Your honest account matters more than 535 AI-generated fabrications.
