The sports betting world is booming, but so are the scams. From “guaranteed locks” to shady Discord tipsters, opaque operators exploit bettors who want risk-free profit. If you’ve ever seen someone promising a 75% win rate or “inside info,” chances are you were looking at a scam.
Knowing how to spot the red flags can protect your bankroll and keep you focused on what actually works: discipline, data, and long-term thinking.
In a market built on probability, anyone promising certainty is selling something other than truth.
If performance isn’t tracked, it didn’t happen.
The most common betting scams
1. Guaranteed lock of the day
Scammers promise a “sure thing” pick. In reality, no bet is guaranteed. Odds always imply uncertainty, and anyone claiming otherwise is lying.
2. Fake records and screenshots
Many scam accounts on social media post doctored tickets or cherry-picked wins while ignoring their losses. Without verified tracking, their results are meaningless.
3. Paid touts with no transparency
Some tipsters sell picks through subscriptions or group chats but never show verifiable records. They profit from your fees, not from betting.
4. Shady Discords and Telegram groups
These groups hype picks, often using “pump and dump” tactics — everyone piles into a losing bet while the admins cash subscription payments.
5. Insider info claims
Scammers love to claim they have access to “fixed games” or “locker room info.” If they did, they wouldn’t be selling it for $49.99.
Red flags to watch for
- Anyone advertising 70%+ win rates.
- Selling picks exclusively via DMs.
- “Double your money tonight” style hype.
- No unit tracking or third-party verification.
- Emotional sales pitches — “Don’t miss out!” “Easy money!”

Why people fall for scams
- FOMO: Seeing others “win” on social media screenshots.
- Greed: Chasing quick, easy money.
- Inexperience: Not knowing what realistic win rates look like (hint: even the best sharps win ~55%).
How sharps avoid scams
- Trust the math: Focus on expected value (EV), not flashy records.
- Track units, not dollars: Dollars are misleading; units measure true profitability.
- Stay skeptical: If a claim sounds too good to be true, it is.
- Use data, not hype: Look for transparent performance and long-term results.
Where Moddy fits
At Moddy, we built our platform to be the opposite of a scam:
- Transparent tracking: Every model’s performance is public and measurable.
- No hype picks: Results are proven, not promised.
- Data + AI: You’re betting smarter with real stats, not someone’s gut feeling.
Moddy helps bettors think like sharps — with accountability, transparency, and tools that cut through the noise.
Key takeaways
- Sports betting scams are everywhere, from “locks of the day” to fake record touts.
- Red flags include unrealistic win rates, fake screenshots, and unverifiable picks.
- Sharps avoid scams by focusing on data, EV, and transparency.
- Moddy is built to keep bettors sharp and scam-free.
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