Hacoo: toda la verdad

🥰 If you'd like to contribute to this channel, you can comment, share the videos, or support me on my Patreon:   / trendingtony   How do you buy on Hacoo? More and more people are wondering how Hacoo's fake replica links supposedly lead to discounted fake sneakers work. And there's a reason: below, I'm going to explain how it works and how reliable the world's first app is where customers are satisfied even when they don't receive what they ordered. Welcome to the dark world of Hacoo, the largest global counterfeit network on the planet. Hacoo is an app that sells all kinds of high-quality counterfeits, but with a catch: if you want to buy the products, you'll have to go to great lengths to find a link that takes you to them, because their page only displays junk. One of the many tricks, for example, is that Hacoo hides the good products with letter combinations. We've all heard about the famous Aliexpress video game consoles that some clueless person occasionally buys for 50 euros only to discover, two weeks later, that what they've actually bought is a Playstation with a Mario Bros. NES game, right? Well, Hacoo is the same thing, but in reverse: you order a Playstation and what you get is a Playstation. Or something very similar. Temu, AliExpress, Shein, Miravia, PandaBuy... there are so many Chinese e-commerce companies that, of course, there's no room for them all. Like trendy singers, every time one of these new stores pops up, all eyes and clicks focus on the new Lady Gaga of the moment. AliExpress was the lord and master of the e-commerce world until, during the pandemic, Shein and its pretty clothes started to become all the rage. And Temu was there, rising and rising for almost two years thanks to its ultra-cheap junk products, when a new competitor appeared on the scene. You may have heard of Sara Mart, the name of one of the many Chinese stores that were almost forgotten due to the rise in popularity of Temu and company. Well, at the beginning of 2024, Sara Mart decided to change its image and, above all, its philosophy: it's now called Hacoo, and although before the rebranding they were already selling products of dubious origin, they're no longer hiding it: Hacoo is the app you have to download if you want to buy counterfeits at a discount. Well, sorry, they do hide it. For starters, they don't have a website, so take a look at the app and tell me if you've ever seen an app with less corporate identity: do you know of any other store where it's literally IMPOSSIBLE to see the store's name mentioned anywhere beyond the app icon? No matter how many times you scroll down looking for information about the company, all you'll see are handbags, jewelry, and, above all, sneakers. An avalanche of products with generic names and looks that, in reality, are just a facade. Once we've found the link to the product we were looking for, we'll click on it and, in most cases, we'll end up on the page of a product that, judging by its photography, is still a dud: a low-quality fake. In most cases, the product links these influencers share are going to be useless. That's why the comments section of Hacoo Haul videos posted on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok has been filled with people desperately asking for a link to a pair of Converse, Air Force Ones, or whatever. And where there's a demand, there's an opportunity. It didn't take long for perfectly organized Telegram communities to appear, with moderators and users providing their dose of links to those most in need, and even Google Drive documents constantly updated with prices, links, and availability. My opinion is that if Nike wants to charge €120 for a pair of Air Force Ones, they're within their rights: it's not a basic necessity. Are you going to pirate Nike? Okay, go for it, I don't care. I just want us to call things by their name. Look, with this video I'm not trying to defend or demonize counterfeits. I was simply struck by how this company is managing to laugh at Google and Apple (and Nike) in the face. Like Temu or AliExpress, Hacoo doesn't sell anything; it's simply the intermediary between the customer and the Chinese manufacturers. In fact, the only visible information about the product's origin is that logo up there where we see the name of the Chinese store. And when I say "only information," I mean it, again, literally: don't expect to find a tax address or any other information about who's selling you the product. Not even Miravia dared to go that far. And, of course, the same thing happens in Hacoo as in Miravia: good luck if you try to make a return.