QUOTE(J1g54w @ May 14 2020, 01:30 PM)
I beg to differ. It's better to suspect that all these 'challengers' are possible scammers working together or a single person using different accounts to fish out as much real information about someone as much as possible as a process of an elaborate scam modus operandi. So they only target those who 'might' be rich, but they will need 'confirmation' of their wealth before they take the next step in their scam process.
They might even try to locate physical location of the targeted victim, then plant real life agent(s) around the victim, and the end goal is to run away with the victim's money. Con artists can plan this in advance for years.
Nothing to lose by not giving in to these lame 'challenges'. Besides, even if the challengers themselves are not scammers, who's to say that there won't be scammers silently picking up the info for their deed?
And 'challenging' a person on the internet to show their true wealth is really childish. Like you feel so insecure cannot accept someone is legit richer than you and have to prove it to you, a nobody on the internet. I don't mean 'you' you, but the challenger.
Sometimes, when a person provoked you non-stop on a personal level, a challenge is warranted.
Just like how e46 likes to mock me due to his own insecurity about his wealth vs mine. A person would only put down another person due to jealousy.
And to do it consistently makes me wonder whether if e46 is that insecure that he wants to mock and provoke a middle class person like me.
I was so sick of his provocations (I would usually ignore him but he kept pushing on due to his small epeen) so I issued him a challenge based on his statement but he has yet to accept it.
Which of course makes me wonder if he’s that rich as he said he was since someone posted here that rich people don’t back down from challenges..