Why this topic works well for a poster
A poster about game account scams is easy for students to understand because it connects with real online habits. You can focus on common traps such as “free skins,” cheap top-ups, fake customer support, requests for login details, and QR-code reward offers. A specific topic like this is more useful than general advice because children can quickly recognize risky situations.
A simple and effective layout
You can divide the poster into four clear sections with the title in the center and support blocks around it.
- Top left: Common scam tricks
- Top right: Warning signs to notice
- Bottom left: What to do if something feels wrong
- Bottom right: Safety slogan or short reminder lines
For decoration, use shields, locks, phones, chat bubbles, or warning icons. Blue, orange, and red make the page bright and eye-catching while still matching a safety theme.
Ready-to-use poster text
Short headings for common scams
- Free game skins may be a trick to steal your account
- Cheap top-ups can lead to money and account loss
- Fake support staff may ask for your verification code
- QR reward links may hide dangerous pages
- Prize claims can be used to collect personal information
Easy anti-scam reminder lines
- Do not trust game rewards from strangers.
- Never share your account, password, or verification code.
- Do not open unknown links or pop-up pages.
- Do not rush just because an offer says “limited time.”
- Ask a parent or teacher before taking action.
Sample safety chant
Free skins sound nice, but stop and think twice. Keep your password safe each day. Never share codes, never click fast, and ask an adult before you act.
Make the poster practical, not just decorative
This topic works best when it tells students exactly what to do. Add a small three-step action box:
- Stop immediately. Do not click, pay, or reply again.
- Tell a parent or teacher and show the messages.
- Change passwords, save evidence, and ask for help if needed.
This turns the poster into a useful school safety guide instead of a page with only slogans.
Title ideas and illustration tips
You can use titles like “How to Protect Your Game Account,” “The Trap Behind Free Skins,” or “Stay Alert, Keep Your Account Safe.” Draw a student holding a phone, a gift box with a question mark, or a fake chat window crossed out. Add clear notes such as “Do not share codes” and “Do not trust unknown links.”
If you want to continue arranging the layout more easily, you can also use the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program to refine sections and prepare a cleaner poster draft.