I was trying to sign up for MyFitnessPal and, at the end, I was presented with several questions about weight control products that I had NOT subscribed to. It was an endless list where I had to keep clicking NO. Surely I missed one and accidentally clicked YES, because PerfectBody—which I thought was part of MyFitnessPal—charged me more than €130 for products with strange names that I didn’t even use.
I work in IT, and I still got scammed because I fully trusted MyFitnessPal, since it’s an app that everyone in the fitness world speaks highly of. This happened at night, and luckily the payment was made through PayPal. When I started receiving multiple notifications, I immediately blocked everything related to PerfectBody, and even changed the bank account linked to PayPal.
When I asked them for a refund, a PerfectBody AI replied that they would only return 20–25% of what I paid. In short, I ended up paying €100 for services I don’t even know and don’t want to know about.
PerfectBody gives a very bad reputation to other fitness apps. I don’t know how they did it, but thanks to them I will be much more careful with online payments from now on. If PerfectScam’s goal is to make you lose weight, they achieve it—but because of the shock they give you.
Stay as far away as possible from this app, PerfectBody, also known as PerfectScam.
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