
With online and fraud UPI growing throughout India, one teenager became a viral for turning the Scammer scenario – and left it completely stunned. A video shared on x shows a teenage girl calmly dealing with a cheater who tried to pretend to be a friend of her father.
Scammer contacted the girl and claimed that her father asked him to transfer the money to her UPI account. He played his role confidently and told her that he was sending Rs. 12 000 and followed with a false SMS – affected by a personal number, not from a bank – which concerned that it shows that RS. 10,000 has already been sent.
A moment later he moved the gears and told her that he accidentally transferred Rs. 20 000 place remaining Rs. 2,000, and now he needed her to return Rs. Immediately 18 000.
What he did not expect was a reaction to the razor. She recognized the scam early and decided to turn the tables. Instead of refusing directly, she adjusted the fake SMS to make it look as if she had returned RS. 18 000 and handed it over to Scammer. Without missing a rhythm, she told him confidently: “I sent you Rs. 18 000.”
Scammer was left without a word. After the pause, he admitted defeat with unwilling: “Maan Gaya Main Aapko, Beta” (I admit I met my match, child) before suddenly ended the call. The moment – on the camera – was now viral when viewers across social media praised the presence of the mind and a quick joke of adolescents.
Reactions poured over X. One user commented, “That was a great presence of mind.”
Another wrote: “Very very smart girl with big IQ.”
The third user shared: “The same call I got and almost sent him money, but no. Although I recorded anywhere, I should have had it.” (Sic.)
The viral video hit many, especially when UPI -related cases continue to increase nationwide.
From false OTP to fraudulent requests for reimbursement of fraudsters, fraudsters are constantly evolving their tactics – but this teen has shown that with a little mind even the most convincing fraud will break up in seconds.
(Tagstotranslate) Teen Girl (T) UPI fraud