Social media feeds have been flooded with “I just turned $500 into $100K” videos — and according to a Wall Street Journal investigation, at least some promoting Polymarket were allegedly staged on replica websites, complete with fake trades, fabricated winnings, and zero disclosure. The Journal reported reviewing 1,105 videos from 10 creators posted between December 2025 and mid-May 2026. Roughly 70% reportedly showed bets that never actually happened. Across 118 of those videos, creators promoted nearly $900,000 in winnings that didn’t exist — on positions that would have lost more than $166,000 on live markets.
The Architecture of Fake Wins
Clone domains, paid creators, and the fintech equivalent of posing with a rented Lamborghini.
The alleged mechanics are remarkably brazen. According to the Journal, Polymarket and its contractors reportedly built near-identical clone sites — including a domain called poiymarket.com — where creators could simulate trades without risking real money. At least 10 creators allegedly received $2,000 to $3,000 per month and were reportedly instructed not to disclose the paid arrangement — a dynamic that mirrors how OpenAI secretly funded a coalition without public disclosure. Some only added “@polymarket partner” to their profiles after the Journal started asking questions.
One creator, George Makihara, reportedly posted a January video implying he won $100,000 after Donald Trump supposedly said “McDonald’s” on TV — except, according to the Journal, Trump didn’t say that in January, and the video used older footage.
The numbers the Journal reported tell the full story:
- 1,105 videos reviewed across 10 creators (December 2025–mid-May 2026)
- Approximately 70% showed a bet that was not real
- 118 videos promoted nearly $900,000 in fabricated winnings
- Those same positions would have lost more than $166,000 in live markets
- Disclosures were allegedly added only after press inquiries began
A Platform Already Under Scrutiny
The influencer campaign reportedly layered onto a platform already facing deeper integrity questions.
This isn’t Polymarket’s first credibility problem. A Columbia University study estimated roughly 25% of the platform’s historical trading volume was likely wash trading — artificially inflated activity designed to manufacture the appearance of demand. A prior Journal analysis found 67% of profits went to just 0.1% of accounts. The influencer videos allegedly painted a picture of widespread, accessible winnings on a platform where profits were already concentrated like wealth in a Monopoly endgame.
Both Polymarket and rival Kalshi have grown rapidly while drawing regulatory scrutiny over whether prediction markets resemble gambling — part of a broader pattern of Tech Scandals in which platforms exploit users at scale. Polymarket’s defenders might frame creator partnerships as standard marketing. Undisclosed fake-bet clips filmed on clone websites, however, stretch that argument well past its breaking point.
For anyone who encountered those videos, the uncomfortable question is not whether the platform works — it is whether what appeared on screen was ever real at all.




























