Anyone Know More About What Went Down With Whaleclub

Thanks everyone for all the insights and experiences shared here. I think what really comes through is how fragmented and anecdotal crypto history can be, and why it’s so important to combine multiple perspectives — user reports, regulatory notes, and even domain evolution — to get a clearer picture. I don’t think we’ll ever know every detail about Whaleclub.co, but this thread highlights patterns that are useful lessons for anyone looking at early crypto platforms or even current ones that operate in gray areas. Appreciate everyone contributing and grounding the discussion in facts and observations rather than speculation. This is exactly the kind of community knowledge that helps people make more informed decisions moving forward.
 
I actually found a couple of old reviews from 2021 that paint a pretty clear picture. One person flat out called them a scam and warned people to stay away, and another mentioned getting hit with huge fees and zero support response. So even a few years after the initial complaints, the pattern was still playing out for people who stumbled onto it.

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$658 in fees for three trades? That's insane. Even if you're trading with borrowed money that seems way out of line with any normal broker. Sounds like they were just making up numbers to drain accounts.
 
Wait so someone was still getting hit with crazy fees in 2021? That's wild because I thought the whole trading side was supposed to be dead and buried by then. The way I read the first post made it sound like the platform quietly noped out of existence and then the domain just got recycled into some random gambling thing later. But these reviews make it seem like the trading operation, or at least something pretending to be it, was still lurking around under the same name way later. Honestly the timeline is giving major confusion at this point. Hard to tell if things overlapped or if the gambling thing just took forever to happen. 🕵️‍♂️
 
I actually found a couple of old reviews from 2021 that paint a pretty clear picture. One person flat out called them a scam and warned people to stay away, and another mentioned getting hit with huge fees and zero support response. So even a few years after the initial complaints, the pattern was still playing out for people who stumbled onto it.

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Yeah the timeline is confusing. The original post mentioned it went quiet and later became a gambling site. But tthis tells a different story. One person in September 2021 flat out calls it a scam and warns people to stay away. Another says they got charged $658 in fees for three trades and customer service never responded. Those aren't gambling complaints, those are trading platform complaints. So whatever was running under that name in 2021, it was still doing the same stuff people complained about years earlier.
 
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That listing says it's an investment service based in Hong Kong but there's no actual address, just the city. Any legit financial company puts their full registered address out there. Hiding behind just Hong Kong is a classic move when you don't want people showing up at your door asking for their money back.
 
The bitcoin thing is what gets me. They really push you to deposit that way and once it's sent you're never seeing it again. No chargebacks, no bank to call, nothing. Every normal trading site I've used lets you pay multiple ways, card, bank transfer, whatever. But when a platform really wants you to use crypto only, it's usually because they know people are gonna have problems later. That person who got hit with $658 in fees, I guarantee they sent bitcoin and couldn't do a thing about it after.
 
Use bitcoin to trade Forex, cryptocurrencies, stocks, oil, gold, indices, and more. That's way too many things for a platform with zero reputation and a 2.9 rating. Legit brokers specialize. Scam platforms promise everything because they're not actually executing any trades, they're just taking your money and hoping you don't ask for it back.
 
Okay so this listing existing at all is kinda wild because I think everyone just assumed Whaleclub.co faded into the void after all the old complaints. Like we thought it was dead and buried, but nah, it was still out here pretending to be a legit trading platform way later. That's actually the worst part. New people rolling up in 2021 with zero context just see a website that looks fine and has all these markets listed, so they deposit some bitcoin and start trading. They have no idea about the 2017 drama or the Canadian stuff or any of it. The website isn't gonna warn them obviously. And that Hong Kong address, yeah that's basically nothing. Could be a PO box, could be a virtual office, could be someone's apartment for all we know. They put the city name there to sound international and legit but there's no real oversight happening. No one's knocking on their door asking questions. The bitcoin thing is honestly the biggest red flag looking back. Crypto payments don't reverse. Ever. So when that person got hit with $658 in fees, they couldn't call a bank or dispute it or anything. Once that transaction confirmed, the platform had their money and the user had zero power. The whole system is set up so you can't fight back when they pull stuff like blocking withdrawals or charging random fees. It's rough out here fr.
 
Being based in Hong Kong while taking customers from all over the world is actually a smart move on their part. If something goes wrong, what are you supposed to do? The regulators in your own country can't touch a company in Hong Kong. And Hong Kong authorities aren't going to investigate one person's complaint about a few hundred dollars in fees. So you're basically stuck with nowhere to go. It's like they picked that location specifically so nobody could hold them accountable.
 
Just read through everything and wow. The bitcoin deposit push alone should have been enough to make people stop and think. Once crypto is sent there's really no getting it back no matter what happens.
 
The $658 in fees for three trades is what shocked me. Even if you're trading with borrowed money that makes no sense. Most places charge a small percentage or a flat rate per trade. That number sounds like they just made up charges hoping people wouldn't fight it.
 
Right and since they wanted bitcoin there was no way to dispute those charges either. Once the fees hit your balance that money was gone. No calling anyone, no paperwork, nothing. Just watching it disappear. That's the part people don't always understand about crypto platforms like this. When you deposit through normal methods like credit cards or bank transfers, you have options if something goes wrong. You can call your bank, dispute the charge, file a claim, sometimes even get your money back months later if you can prove it was taken improperly. But with bitcoin none of that exists. Once that transaction confirms on the blockchain, it's final. No takebacks, no refunds, no customer service number to call and argue with. The platform has your money and you have absolutely no leverage to get it back. That's why they pushed it so hard. They knew that people who deposited in bitcoin had no recourse when things went sideways. The $658 in fees that person mentioned, that money was gone the second the platform decided to take it. No paperwork trail, no regulator to complain to, no bank to intervene. Just a number on a screen that changed and then later a person realizing they'd never see that cash again. The whole system was set up to make sure customers had no power at any point. From deposit to trading to withdrawal attempts, everything was designed so the platform held all the cards and users just had to hope things worked out. And when they didn't, there was nowhere to turn.
 
Picking Hong Kong as their base was actually a smart move on their part. Think about it, if someone wanted to take action against them where would you even start? People in other countries can't do anything to a company based there. And the authorities in Hong Kong aren't going to waste time investigating one regular person's complaint about losing some money. It's basically operating in a place where no one has the power to stop you no matter what you do.
 
What gets me is how they kept operating for years after the first complaints popped up. You'd think once enough people started talking about withdrawal issues and fees, word would spread and new people would stay away. But nope, they just kept going, kept taking deposits, kept doing the same thing. That 2021 review proves it. So either people weren't searching before they deposited, or the platform just didn't care about its reputation at all. Either way it's frustrating to see.
 
Most people probably didn't search honestly. When you're excited about trading and you find a site that looks professional and accepts bitcoin, you just deposit and go. No one thinks to dig through old complaints first until after something goes wrong.
 
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