Updated November 2025
If you saw FlingAFF.com name-dropped in the middle of a dodgy Trustpilot rant, you’re not alone. It’s happening more and more.
Here’s the setup:
A random “user” slates one app (in this case, OkCupid), then casually drops a mention of FlingAFF.com as “the most trusted site”.
It’s not a real review. It’s a scam funnel.

Here’s how it works:
Scammy networks pay people (or use bots) to write fake complaints about mainstream apps. Then they slide in a link or name like FlingAFF.com and call it “legit.” The aim is simple:
Get you to search for it. Get you curious. Then get you clicking.
Once you’re inside?
The women look stunning — but they’re not real users
The chat is flirty — but you’re paying by the message
There’s no intention to meet — it’s all engineered fantasy
And it adds up fast — often £30–50 before you realise it’s a loop
FlingAFF.com isn’t about meeting anyone.
It’s about squeezing as much money from frustrated men as possible.
Want to meet real women — not fake profiles?
After reviewing dozens of these platforms, these are the only ones I still recommend.
No BS. Just what actually works in 2025.
