Roblox Adopt Me Trust Trade Safety Calculator
Analyze potential trade scams in Adopt Me. Detect Trust Trades, Fail Trades, and Fake YouTubers.
How to use Roblox Adopt Me Trust Trade Safety Calculator
Step-by-step guide to using the Roblox Adopt Me Trust Trade Safety Calculator:
- Enter your values. Input the required values in the calculator form
- Calculate. The calculator will automatically compute and display your results
- Review results. Review the calculated results and any additional information provided
Frequently asked questions
What is a Trust Trade?
A Trust Trade is a scam where one player asks another to give them an item for free, promising to give it back (or give something better) afterwards to 'prove trust'. 99.9% of the time, they will simply leave the game with your item.
Is 'Fail Trading' real?
No. Scammers claim that if you put in a pet and food, and accept, the trade will 'fail' and duplicate the item. This is a lie. The trade will succeed, and they will take your pet. Do not test it.
Can I get banned for Cross-Trading?
Yes. Cross-Trading (trading Adopt Me pets for Robux, Fortnite V-Bucks, or real money) is a direct violation of Roblox Terms of Service. If you are caught, your account will be banned and your inventory wiped.
How do I spot a fake YouTuber?
Fake YouTubers have names like 'DreamCraft_Official123' or 'NotLeahAshe_Real'. They will ask you to trust trade for a video thumbnail. Real YouTubers never ask fans for free items for videos.
What is the 'Add After' scam?
When a trade is too big (more than 18 items), scammers say 'Give me the good pets first, and I'll add the rest in the second trade'. They never do the second trade. Always use a middleman service from a trusted site if absolutely necessary, but generally, avoid '9+' trades.
Can Adopt Me Support get my pets back?
Adopt Me Support generally does NOT return pets lost to scams like Trust Trades, because you willingly clicked 'Accept'. They only restore pets if verified hacking/account theft occurred. You are responsible for your own trades.
Is the 'Pick a Door' game safe?
Usually no. Scammers build a house with 'Door 1' and 'Door 2'. You pay a pet to enter. One door has a prize, one has nothing. Often, both doors have nothing, or they kick you after you pay.