Choose a clear focus: game top-up scams
If you want an anti-fraud handwritten newspaper that feels relevant to children, game top-up scams are a practical topic. Many students have seen messages about free skins, cheap game credits, or gift rewards. This makes the poster easier to understand and more useful for safety education.
A simple layout that works well
- Main title in the center: Are Free Skins Real? Watch Out for Game Recharge Scams
- Left section: Common scam tricks
- Right section: What to do if a stranger contacts you
- Bottom section: Safety tips or a short anti-fraud rhyme
- Corner box: Three things I can do to stay safe
This structure is neat and easy to read. It also helps students separate scam examples from safety actions.
Ready-to-use writing materials
Common scam messages
- Free skin giveaway, scan now to claim it.
- Cheap top-up service, much lower than the official price.
- We can upgrade your account, just send the verification code.
- Click this link to get a limited-time reward.
- Your game account has a problem, contact customer service here.
Short safety reminders
- Do not trust reward messages from strangers.
- Do not scan unknown QR codes.
- Do not tell anyone your password or verification code.
- Do not make payments without a parent’s permission.
- Ask parents or teachers first if something feels wrong.
Anti-fraud rhyme
Free rewards may be fake, unknown links are a mistake. Keep your code and password safe, ask an adult before you pay.
Add a small real-life scene
You can include a short example: A student sees a message promising a rare free skin. The sender asks to borrow a parent’s phone, scan a code, and enter a verification code. The student remembers that verification codes must stay private, stops immediately, and tells a parent. This kind of short scene makes the poster easier to understand.
Drawing ideas and color choices
Use blue and green as main colors, with orange for warning words. Small drawings like a shield, lock, mobile phone, warning sign, or game controller can match the topic well. Bold key phrases such as “unknown link,” “verification code,” and “do not transfer money” to make the message stand out.
How to end the poster well
A good ending should tell readers what action to take: stay calm when seeing game rewards, stop before paying, and ask parents or teachers for help. If you want to keep improving the title, layout, and materials, you can also continue creating in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program.