✗ ZoidBerg ✗
Ajinumoto Sai   Cleveland, United Kingdom (Great Britain)
 
 
Buying $10 - $200 worth of items and payment will be through western Union. Trusted and Legit Buyer and trader since 2016 :steammocking:
Don't hesitate to contact me if you want to sell items :steamhappy:

Godota2 . com is also the best betting site and they are giving free credits everyday. Make sure you use my referral code " Free121 " for free 500 points. All you have to do is to set your profile as public (ALL) activate your steam guard for claiming purposes, put GoDota2 . Com in the end of your steam name (just like mine) and redeem the referral code on the menu and your good to go.

If you want to trade just click the link below :steamhappy:

https://steamproxy.net/tradeoffer/new/?partner=382129972&token=JK-S3fu_
Currently Offline
Items Up For Trade
213
Items Owned
218
Trades Made
851
Market Transactions
TRADE RULES!


*Please offer profit at least 15% of the price of the item that you wanted to trade.

*After trade Friendship is OVER!

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NOTE! If you wanted to trade with sets you may need to add me as your friend so that we can discuss what could be the conditions that I have. If it is gift-able, we all have to wait 30 days for trade and I WON'T GO FIRST! THANK YOU!
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>TIPS! TYPES OF COMMON SCAMS< 

There are a number of common scams users may attempt to deceive you out of your items:



*Item switching or quick switching - A user tells you they will trade you a specific item, and the item they put in the trade box looks like the item, but isn't as valuable as the original offer.



*CS:GO quality switch - A user offers you a specific quality CS:GO item (Factory New), but the item in the trade box is of a lower quality (Field-Tested). Often the item switch is made in a counter-offer.



*Hidden item - A user offers a trade that includes a lot of your low value items (cards, crates, etc.), but also includes a high value item hidden somewhere in the middle.



*Begging/spamming - A user spams trade offers requesting high value items for nothing or little in return in hopes that you mis-click and accept the offer.



*Forward confirmation email - A user convinces you to forward your confirmation email to their email address. They then confirm the trade using the link in the message. Do not forward trade confirmation emails or links anddo not provide additional information to another user asking for information used for your account.



*Money For Items - A user offers to send you money in the form of PayPal, PaySafeCard, Steam Wallet codes, Steam Digital Gift Cards, etc. The scammer usually sends you a fake payment code after the trade is completed. In the case of Steam Digital Gift Cards, the scammer may even appear to pay you first, but be planning to charge the Digital Gift Card back later or buy the gift card with a fraudulent credit card.



*CD keys for items - A user offers to send you a Wallet Credit code or a game's CD Key in exchange for your items. The scammer usually sends you a fake CD Key after the trade is completed.



*Users offering item duplication - A user offers to duplicate your items, but first you have to trade away your items. After receiving your items, the user blocks your messages and keeps your items.



*Users acting as trade bots - A user impersonating a trade bot(s) tells you that you have to trade them some items. After you've accepted the trade and sent the user the items, they block you on Steam and keep your items.



*Middleman trades - If you are performing a trade that sits within Steam's trading guidelines, there is no need for a middleman. Any time you choose to trust any other user with one of your items, you are allowing them the opportunity to scam you.



*Verification accounts - A user wants you to trade an item for "verification". The user will give a made-up excuse to convince you to do this, such as needing to make sure the item is not a duplicate or to ensure the item is not bugged. These users will then keep your item(s) and block you, getting away with the items.



*Fund transfer via the Steam Market - A user offers to send you Steam Wallet funds by buying one of your low value items at a high price in the market. Most of these offers are done using fraudulent funds.



*Voice comm software/join our tournament team (malware) - A user convinces you to install malware hidden in a voice communication, anti-cheat, or other type of software by claiming that they need you to install it so that you can play in a tournament.



*Offering fraudulent items for resale - Malicious users will sometimes acquire unusual items from the Steam Market using fraudulent credit cards and then attempt to trade them to you for more well known items. Watch out for claims that they will overpayor that you can quicksell the items for an immediate profit. These users will sometimes say they need tradeable keys or other tradeable items as an excuse for the unusual trade.


Credits to Trade Scam FAQ.
 
Recent Activity
2,530 hrs on record
last played on 19 Jan, 2023
0.6 hrs on record
last played on 5 Feb, 2019
1.6 hrs on record
last played on 23 Feb, 2018
✗ ZoidBerg ✗ 5 Mar, 2018 @ 6:43pm 
Thanks!
Snow 5 Mar, 2018 @ 6:42pm 
+rep trustly trader :)
tinydude 16 Feb, 2018 @ 7:33pm 
+rep
mvp 10 Feb, 2018 @ 12:49pm 
+rep friendly trader
Boo 1 Feb, 2018 @ 7:59pm 
+rep