After pulsegra.com went dark, Pulse Glide quietly shifted to pulsed6.com and pulsece.com. But with the collapse now in full effect, a final “verification” scam signals the end of this multi-domain e-scooter fraud.
When we first reported on Pulse Glide in April, it was already clear that the operation had all the makings of a well-crafted scam. A manufactured front, physical presence bolstered by e-scooter props and window dressing, and a pitch designed to appear legitimate on the surface while offering nothing but circular deposits and artificial dashboards beneath.
That article, published on 1 April 2025 (Meet Pulse Glide: A Scam Masquerading as a Legitimate E-Scooter Company), laid out the mechanisms that made the scam attractive, credible to some, and ultimately dangerous.
And now, just over six weeks later, Pulse Glide has entered its final phase — a collapse marked by a domain shutdown, a shift in narrative, and one last push to extract funds under the guise of “verification.”
But like many scams before it, Pulse Glide is not collapsing cleanly. It is dragging its last breath through fallback domains and vague WhatsApp messages, sustained not by operations, but by inertia and the wishful thinking of those still hoping for a return on their lost funds.
Domain Games and the Slow Disintegration of the Scam
The scam’s most widely used domain — pulsegra.com — recently went dark. It had, for all intents and purposes, been the flagship URL for the Pulse Glide pitch, and the one pushed most aggressively across social media and WhatsApp throughout the scam’s run.
But this was never the only domain in circulation. Both pulsed6.com and pulsece.com were quietly registered months earlier, on 17 October 2024. They existed in the background, functioning as mirror sites or regional alternates, never heavily promoted until now. Following increased scrutiny, including the publication of investigative reporting and a general cooling of user sentiment, the syndicate behind the scam shifted attention to these backup domains — which remain active as of writing.
The shift, however, did not restore momentum. While some late joiners continued to engage through the new URLs, many long-standing participants — particularly those who entered via pulsegra.com — have since disengaged, either as a result of loss or due to the mounting signs that Pulse Glide is no longer functioning.
And while the pivot in domain use may have been an attempt to buy time or avoid reputational fallout from the main domain’s collapse, it has failed to stem the inevitable — the public unravelling of yet another scam designed to be short-lived from the start.
Promotions, Again — But This Time More Desperate, More Absurd
As with most scams entering their final phase, Pulse Glide ramped up its online promotions — not because of growth, but as a last-ditch effort to maintain the illusion of traction. Offline events such as giveaways, lunches, and manufactured “community drives” had always been part of the scam’s arsenal. They lent a veneer of legitimacy, encouraged word-of-mouth signups, and served to obscure the digital nature of the fraud by projecting physical presence.
But in the final days of pulsegra.com, and increasingly through pulsed6.com and pulsece.com, the promotions grew noticeably frantic. One particularly convoluted campaign ran between 7 and 10 May 2025, framed as a “New Partner Equipment Discount” offer. It promised tiered device discounts, reduced withdrawal fees, and enhanced partner bonuses — all conveniently requiring new deposits.
The language was crowded with percentages and token denominations, with every benefit linked to another financial requirement. The message was clear: the scam was trying to milk as much as it could from whoever was still willing to believe, or had already invested too much to pull out.
And when promotions become layered with fine print and urgency, it is often because time is running out — not for the users, but for the scam itself.
Also read:
The Verification Ruse — One Final Heist Before the Lights Go Out
On Wednesday, 14 May 2025, the scam crossed into familiar, fatal territory. A message appeared in official WhatsApp channels. It referenced “big problems” vaguely, and requested that users verify their accounts by depositing 48.9 USDT within 24 hours.
It is an old trick. The “verification deposit” is not a solution to a problem — it is the problem. The message is worded just carefully enough to suggest the issue is temporary, but just serious enough to compel urgent compliance. The goal is psychological: convince users who feel stuck to pay just a little more, in the hope that it unlocks everything else.
But nothing will be unlocked. Those who send funds will receive no confirmation, no resolution, and no restored access. The administrators — many operating under pseudonyms such as “Bailey 1” — will remain silent or evasive. And the few that continue to post will do so using templated language, recycled from earlier scam collapses, always vaguely hopeful, always asking for “patience”.
What we are witnessing is not a glitch in the system, but the final stages of an engineered collapse.
The Inevitable End, Dressed Up in Denial
Scams do not always end in silence. Some collapse loudly, with excuses, promotions, promises of upgrades, and verification ruses. Others, like Pulse Glide, try to maintain momentum with secondary domains, even after the main infrastructure has failed.
And that is where Pulse Glide currently stands — collapsed in effect, but not yet in appearance. The pulsed6.com and pulsece.com domains remain online, and in some WhatsApp groups, low-level promoters continue to peddle the narrative that the platform is “recovering” or that “issues are being resolved”.
But make no mistake: the structure is gone. The platform’s financial model is broken. The domains are residual placeholders for a scam that has already cashed out. What remains is not a business – if you dare call it that, but a ghost platform, one being pushed by those who either haven’t realised the collapse or are complicit in denying it.
The Final Verdict
Pulse Glide is finished.
It is not recovering, and it is not temporarily frozen. It is not undergoing verification or system upgrades. It has collapsed — and the last deposits it now seeks are not for maintenance, but for profit.
Do not deposit. Not 48.9 USDT. Not 4.89 USDT. Not a cent.
If you have lost money, you are not alone. If you are still being told to “wait”, you are being strung along. And if you are being asked to deposit anything further, understand that you are the target of a final ruse, designed solely to squeeze one last round of money from a dying scam.
Pulse Glide was always a deception — just better dressed and secretive than most. Now, even the dressing and secrecy has worn thin.
Let this be the final chapter.





I trusted Pulse Glide in everything I had..Now I am left with debts to pay, my children with no food, will report them to Hawks. I wish they can be arrested and give back our money.
Rocco’s accidentally shared on group 005 a google maps link. Hope this will help with the investigations
Is there a site or a department where we can open a investigation? I am sure many people will chip in with information that they think might be useful to find those guys. Because the strange thing is they still on Telegram with the same accounts. Don’t they fear some police department or agency find them????
We will not heal from what Pulse Glide has done to us. Most of us have trusted Pulse Glide, as a result we are left with nothing. I wish there’s an ongoing investigation so that these heartless criminals can be arrested. They don’t care about anyone else but themselves. We have lost thousands of rands from our loans, savings etc.
It was my first time trying PGL, and guess what the day of my withdrawal everything went wrong. I lost R104k in this shit scam, can’t even eat 😭😭😭😭😭😭
Also scammed by PgL l dont know where l will get 50K that l borrowed
It’s sad to see the amount of people that have been scammed by PGL. I hope that it’s victims have learnt their lesson about free money or easy money. No matter how bad your financial situation is, DO NOT put your money into a pyramid scheme like this. Money isn’t free, money isn’t easy to earn. No legitimate business requires millions of random people to invest money so that they can benefit. Please stay aware and stay safe. May God bless you all.