When he questioned Dr. Profit in the group, he was instantly banned. It turned out the “winning screenshots” were edited or copied from demo accounts. The “testimonials” were fake profiles run by the admin himself. Worse, Alex discovered a network of similar channels — “Boom Master,” “Crash Hunter,” “Volatility Gods” — all run by the same small group. Their real profit came not from trading, but from and affiliate kickbacks from shady brokers.
For the first three months, the channel seemed magical. Dr. Profit posted screenshots of winning trades with 200–500% returns. Testimonials poured in from “members” showing their accounts growing from $100 to $5,000. The catch? To access the exact entry signals , you had to pay a monthly subscription of $150 or join a “premium VIP group” for $500. boom and crash telegram channel
Here’s an interesting, real-world cautionary story about a — a niche but notorious corner of online trading communities. Back in 2022, a Telegram channel called “Boom & Crash Kings” gained rapid popularity among novice forex and synthetic index traders. The premise was seductive: the channel’s admin, a charismatic figure using the alias “Dr. Profit,” claimed to have developed a proprietary algorithm that predicted the exact seconds before the Boom (rapid upward spike) and Crash (sudden drop) events on synthetic indices like those from Deriv (derived from volatility indices). When he questioned Dr