
BTS fans desperate to catch comeback tour lose more than $100,000 to scammers
BTS fans desperate to catch comeback tour lose more than $100,000 to scammers1 hour ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleKelly Ng ,SingaporeandSawitree Jang Wongketjai ,BangkokBig Hit MusicBTS is on a mammoth world...
No Meeting by June 30 — Where will Trump and Putin meet after that?
Here is the latest breaking news from around the world: BTS fans desperate to catch comeback tour lose more than $100,000 to scammers1 hour ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleKelly Ng ,SingaporeandSawitree Jang Wongketjai ,BangkokBig Hit MusicBTS is on a mammoth world tour after a hiatus that lasted more than three years When Vevee logged in to Ticketmaster on 9 June, she hoped her years-long wait to see supergroup BTS was finally drawing to an end. Like millions of fans everywhere, the 26-year-old thought she was ready for battle. She had even taken the day off from work.
The septet's mammoth global tour was making a stop in her backyard – the Indonesian capital, Jakarta – and as a longtime fan, she couldn't fathom missing it. Perched in front of her computer, eyes glued to her fateful queue number, Vevee waited for hours. When it was her turn, she was told the tickets had been snapped up.
The Details
But there were more sales. So she tried again, and again, but her luck did not change. "It felt impossible because the demand was just too crazy", she tells the .
Determined to secure her spot, Vevee found an account reselling tickets on X and splashed out $1,200 for four VIP seats. That's worth about two months of her salary at a logistics firm. But they soon stopped responding.
"Right after I sent the money, they ghosted me. I am so sad and heartbroken," says the 26-year-old. Desperate fans in South East Asia, where BTS is performing 15 of 88 shows, have lost more than $100,000 as scammers cash in on explosive demand.
What Experts Say
It has been a rollercoaster of a month for the band's fans, who call themselves Army. Elated to see BTS on the road again after the pandemic and a three-year hiatus, but frustrated by super-competitive ticketing wars, they have become easy targets. In Thailand, lawmakers are hearing a complaint by 126 fans who were duped by an offer to help them "wait in line" for tickets.
Scammers have also infiltrated fan groups online, promising exclusive access or lower prices. Once money changes hands, they vanish. Some even offer "power of attorney forms" – typically used to hand over legal decision-making to someone else – to convince targets the tickets are authentic.
These are familiar enough tactics that authorities have issued multiple warnings. But fans are still falling prey to them. SuppliedVevee at BTS' 2019 concert in BangkokThe tour, which kicked off in April and stretched well into 2027, will span 34 cities.
The story has become one of the most prominent items on the global agenda.





