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Dumbest Move of the Week — Week of June 21, 2026

This Week’s Questionable Move

In the bustling digital agora of prediction markets, where fortunes are wagered on everything from election results to crypto prices, Polymarket stands as a titan of digital soothsaying. It’s a place where data-driven conviction meets cold, hard cash. This week, however, it appears its executives decided the most predictable outcome was that staged reality sells better than the real thing. They reportedly commissioned an influencer marketing campaign that traded in verifiable truth for something a little more… profitable.

The Full Story

According to a Wall Street Journal investigation, Polymarket paid online creators to post videos showcasing impressive, lucrative bets on the platform. The only wrinkle? The bets weren’t real. The WSJ reviewed 1,100 videos and instructional materials, discovering many were filmed on “near-perfect copies” of the Polymarket site, featuring fabricated trades and winnings designed to look like an easy path to riches.

This wasn’t just a few rogue creators. The campaign was allegedly amplified by a “social-media army” deployed by a marketing contractor, ensuring these deceptive demonstrations of success reached a wide audience. It was a masterclass in simulating victory, a digital Potemkin village where every user was a genius and every bet a winner, so long as the camera was rolling.

What They Were Probably Thinking

In a noisy crypto market, it’s hard to stand out. Polymarket was likely trying to solve a classic marketing problem: how do you demonstrate a product’s potential without boring your audience? The thinking probably went something like this: “Showing real, modest wins is slow. Showing a creator hypothetically making a fortune on a single, brilliant trade? That’s content. We’re not selling a lie; we’re selling the dream.”

Why It Backfired (or Will)

A prediction market’s only real asset is trust.

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