Romance scammers do not improvise — they follow written scripts, refined across thousands of victims and often worked by teams sharing a single fake persona. The playbook has a predictable arc: rapid love bombing, a quick move off the dating platform, persistent excuses that prevent video calls or meetings, and finally a manufactured crisis that requires your money. Because the script is standardized, learning its phases lets you recognize a romance scam weeks before the first money request.
Phase 1: The Approach and the Persona
The persona is engineered to be trustworthy and unavailable. Common templates include a military officer deployed overseas, an engineer on an offshore oil rig, a surgeon on a foreign contract, a widowed businessperson traveling constantly, or — increasingly — a successful crypto trader. Each occupation is chosen for the same reason: it explains why they cannot meet, why video is difficult, and why their finances are temporarily inaccessible.
Opening messages are warm but generic, because they are pasted to hundreds of targets: "I came across your profile and something about your smile made me stop." Within a day or two comes the platform move: "I don't check this app often — can we talk on WhatsApp? I feel a real connection with you." Scammers move to WhatsApp or Telegram quickly because dating platforms scan messages for scam patterns and ban accounts; private chat apps do not.
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Phase 2: Love Bombing on an Accelerated Timeline
The intensity is deliberate and follows a compressed schedule:
- Days 1-3: Long daily conversations, good-morning and good-night messages, deep questions about your life, dreams, and — importantly — your finances, family situation, and whether you live alone.
- Week 1: Declarations begin. Typical script lines: "I have never felt this way about anyone so quickly." "I believe God brought us together." "I know this sounds crazy, but I think I am falling in love with you."
- Weeks 2-4: Future-building. They discuss visiting you, marriage, the house you will share. Some send small gifts or flowers to make the relationship feel materially real. Pet names replace your actual name — partly affection theater, partly because one scammer is juggling dozens of targets.
The purpose of love bombing is to create emotional dependency before any money is mentioned. By the time the crisis arrives, refusing to help feels like betraying a partner, not declining a stranger.
Phase 3: The Camera Never Works
Video is the scammer's greatest vulnerability, because the person in the stolen photos does not exist on their side of the call. The excuse script is extensive: the camera on their phone is broken; the internet on the rig or base is too slow for video; military rules prohibit video calls from deployment; they are shy or "want to save the moment for when we meet." When pressured, some send a short pre-recorded or AI-generated clip with no live interaction, or schedule a call and cancel at the last minute with an emergency. Meetings in person follow the same pattern — flights are booked, then a crisis cancels them, and often the cancelled trip itself becomes the money ask ("I need help with the ticket change fee").
Phase 4: The Crisis and the Ask
The first request is usually small and never framed as being for the scammer's benefit. Standard crisis scripts include: a customs or legal fee to release equipment or an inheritance; a medical emergency involving them or a child; a frozen bank account that leaves them stranded abroad; fees to process leave papers or early discharge from the military; or an investment "opportunity" they want to share with you — the bridge into pig butchering, where the romance becomes a fake crypto trading platform.
The phrasing is engineered to disarm refusal: "I hate to ask you this — I have never asked anyone for money in my life." "You are the only person I trust." "I will pay you back the moment my account is unfrozen, I promise on my life." Payment is requested through irreversible channels: wire transfer, gift cards, or cryptocurrency. After the first payment, crises multiply — each solved problem reveals a new fee — and if you hesitate, the script pivots to guilt ("I thought you loved me") or urgency ("I could go to jail tonight").
How to Break the Script
- Demand a spontaneous live video call early. Not scheduled, not pre-recorded. A genuine partner will manage this; a scammer's excuses will begin immediately.
- Reverse image search their photos. Stolen photos frequently trace back to public social profiles of unrelated people.
- Watch the timeline, not the words. Declarations of love within two weeks of meeting online, from someone you have never seen live, are a script — regardless of how genuine they feel.
- Apply the one absolute rule: never send money, crypto, or gift cards to someone you have not met in person. There are no exceptions that end well.
- Talk to someone you trust. Scammers explicitly script isolation ("let's keep us private for now"). Describing the relationship out loud to a friend often breaks the spell.
For the broader warning-sign checklist, see our guide to romance scam warning signs and the romance scam hub. If money has already been sent, report to the FTC and FBI IC3 promptly — and be wary of "recovery agents" who target victims a second time.
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