The rules of the hunt

How it works

The Hunt turns scattered online sleuthing into a coordinated effort — with real rewards for the people who bring scammers to justice and money back to victims.

1

Pick a target

Browse the board of open bounties. Every suspect has a full dossier: their scheme, wallets, last known location, and the funds still owed to victims.

2

Hunt the truth

Trace the money on-chain. Cluster the wallets. Connect the shell companies. Find who is behind the codename — and where the stolen funds went.

3

Submit your intel

Claim the bounty and file what you found. Analysts verify every lead — identity, location, or a path to freeze and recover the funds.

4

Collect the reward

When your intel helps return money to victims or put a suspect in custody, the bounty is yours. The more verifiable the lead, the faster the payout.

Verified, not vigilante

Every lead is checked before anyone is named or any reward is paid. The Hunt rewards research and evidence — never harassment, doxxing of the innocent, or taking the law into your own hands.

Paid for results

No subscriptions, no gatekeeping. If your intel closes a case or recovers funds, you get the bounty. Simple as that.

Questions

The fine print

Who decides if a claim gets paid?+

A panel of independent on-chain analysts reviews every submission. A claim pays out when the intel materially helps identify a suspect, freeze assets, or return funds to victims. The more verifiable your evidence, the faster the decision.

Can multiple hunters split one bounty?+

Yes. Big cases are rarely cracked alone. When several leads combine to close a case, the bounty is split proportionally to each contribution. Collaboration is encouraged.

What counts as good intel?+

Anything that moves a case forward: a wallet cluster linking a codename to a real identity, an exchange off-ramp with KYC, a jurisdiction where assets can be frozen, or testimony from a victim or insider.

Is it legal to hunt scammers?+

Hunting means open-source research and on-chain analysis — not hacking, harassment, or vigilantism. Verified intel is handed to the parties who can act on it lawfully. Stay on the right side of the line.

Where does the bounty money come from?+

Bounties are funded by affected investors, recovery pools, and community contributions — pooled so that the people who lost money can reward the people who help get it back.

Fictional profiles

Every suspect, codename, “Jane/John Doe” identity, case file, wallet address, and figure shown on this site is fictional mock data and does not refer to any real person, company, or event.