Focus the topic: game account trading scams
This angle works well for a school anti-fraud poster because it connects with situations students may actually see online, such as gaming, adding strangers, QR payments, and private chats. A focused topic is easier to understand than a general warning about scams.
- Common bait: cheap game accounts, free skins, discounted top-ups, paid boosting offers
- Common tricks: asking for private transfers, sending fake customer service links, requesting QR payments, telling students to download unknown apps
- Common results: losing pocket money, stolen accounts, leaked personal information, misuse of a parent’s phone
What to write in the middle of the poster
A useful way to organize the text is “situation plus reminder.” Short sections are easier for children to copy and easier for readers to scan.
Simple sections students can use
- How the scam works: The scammer attracts attention with a very low price, asks the student to leave the official platform, and then keeps demanding more money for a deposit, verification fee, or account release fee.
- Safety rhyme: Don’t trust deals that sound too cheap. Never trade in private. Before any transfer, stop and ask a parent or teacher.
- Warning signs: They rush you to pay now, refuse official channels, ask for a verification code, or want you to borrow a parent’s phone.
- Right response: Do not click unknown links, scan random QR codes, share passwords or codes, or make payments without adult approval.
Short anti-fraud lines for a school poster
Poster text should be clear and memorable, so short lines work best.
- Be careful with game trades; cheap deals may hide traps.
- Your account and password are private.
- A verification code is like a key—never give it away.
- If a “customer service” message appears, ask an adult first.
- Do not scan unknown QR codes or install unknown apps.
- One more check means one more layer of safety.
If there is extra space, add one reminder: online strangers are hard to verify, so the more attractive a deal looks, the more carefully you should question it.
A layout idea that looks clear and lively
This topic fits a warning-sign and chat-box style. Put the main title at the top, place the key message in the center, and use side sections for examples and tips.
- Top area: title and subtitle with small icons like shields, locks, or alert signs
- Left side: a scam flow chart such as “add friend → private chat → transfer money → extra fees →被骗”
- Right side: warning signs and safety rhymes
- Bottom area: what to do if scammed, including stop paying, save chat records, and tell a parent or teacher
Use blue, green, and orange for a clean school-friendly look. Highlight a few important words in red, but do not overuse strong colors across the whole page.
How to finish the poster well
End with a short call-to-action sentence such as: Protect your account by starting with caution. Guard your pocket money and your personal information. If you want to continue polishing titles, borders, and sections, you can also keep designing in the Zhihui Shouchaobao WeChat mini program.