VaultGigs – A Professional-Looking Scam & its scam partner ArtVerse
I recently worked on a platform called VaultGigs, directed to it by Artverse, which claimed to hold my payment in escrow. After I delivered my artwork to Artverse via Vaultgigs, I was hit with a jaw-dropping demand: pay $160 in TRX (roughly 529 TRX)… just to release my own money. (Obviously a lot happened that led to this review, cause I went and started digging, but i will not bore you with the details, lets focus on important points, the rest we will see later). Anyway...
Let that sink in.
This is not the norm! On legitimate platforms, you never ever have to pay to receive payment you already earned.
So, naturally, I did my due diligence, and what I found was… delightfully suspicious:
* ArtVerse (conveniently linked to VaultGigs) has no live website and zero public information. Not a team (Except the scammers playing their role, and perfectly I might add), not an address, not even a LinkedIn ghost (Haa! even Linked in? Shame on you Artverse, how unprofessional, anyway I digress, focus!).
* Both platforms look sleek, wait wha?! No no no, scratch that! Vaultgigs looks sleek, Artverse on the other hand is ran from Oliviaethan367 at gmail.com conglomerate, it looks and feels polished, and oh-so-professional… but trust me—they’re about as real as a unicorn selling NFTs.
* After I sent a polite-yet-firm email to “ArtVerse” asking for answers… poof! My VaultGigs account vanished without warning. (Booo!!! SCAM!!)
Coincidence? Only if you believe in fairy tales.
Do not use VaultGigs or ArtVerse. They take your art, lock you out, and then ask you to pay them to get paid. That’s not business my dear, that’s scam!!! scam!! scam!!! Plain. Simple. Shameless.
Oh, and by the way, did you notice they contacted you from a Gmail address, that nicely obscured, nicely tucked in gmail address? Yes, that one with some random numbers tacked on like it’s 2003? I am talking about you Olivia Ethan 367. Who runs a “professional” creative platform using gmail.com that way in this day and age? Google literally gives businesses custom domains, email hosting, the works! If they can’t afford a domain, how can they afford to pay you, wait or is it "pay me"?
And why send a contract via Google Forms? What is this, a freelance gig or a middle-school bake sale? Cheapskate of a scammer!!! Scam!! Scam!! Scam!! Be professional through and through dweeb!!!
For the record: this happened very recently, so I caught it early and saved myself the stress (and did not lose any funds). Do the same.
Check their domain on WHOIS—spoiler: it was registered not so long ago (about month or a few), it is very new, I-smell-new-domain-fragrance new. And please, ignore those glowing “I got paid!” reviews—they’re likely part of the same scam soup, ladled out by bots or accomplices.
My advice?
Walk away.
Protect your art.
Protect your wallet.
Yours truly
A Caring Fellow Artist




