I tried to buy the TikTok viral unitard but was scammed with a baggy jumpsuit that wouldn't hold 'nowt' in
A TRENDSETTER was left horrified after buying a jumpsuit that had been going viral across social media.
She vented her frustration after discovering that some of her 138,000 TikTok followers had also been tricked into buying it.
Just Nina (@justnina_official) routinely shares product reviews and bargain buys while describing herself as being similar to QVC - but with swearing.
She took to TikTok to complain about scammers using a video of her reviewing products from Mooslover to fool people into buying their poor-quality clothes.
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“What the f**k is this?” she said while wearing a baggy jumpsuit ordered from a TikTok shop.
“I’ll tell you what it is chums, when curlady steal my Mooslover videos and pass them off as their own then put their links at the bottom.
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“They send out their own s**t and this is what you get.”
She held up the sleeves of the jumpsuit to show that they were excessively long before stepping back to show the bottom was also ridiculously long.
She pulled at the fabric on the jumpsuit before holding up a version from Mooslover to compare the elasticity.
“This nylon, zero compression, baggy piece of crap worth about £2 [$2.53],” she said.
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“It would be funny if it wasn’t so upsetting. So many people have been ripped off because they’ve seen my face and trust me.
“They think they’re buying off me and getting a Mooslover and then this f**king rocks up.
“Wait until you see the bottom, look at it they are like f**king trousers.
“It won’t hold nowt in that,” she chuckled while pulling at the waist.
The TikToker held up a Mooslover jumpsuit to show how figure-hugging it is to sculpt the wearer’s body in comparison to the one she was wearing.
She added that it also had the brand’s logo whereas the styles sold by imposters on TikTok don’t have any branding.
The ribbed seamless jumpsuit on the official Mooslover website costs around $46.
“They also do a bodysuit that they’re scamming people with,” she said while holding it.
“To be fair it isn’t as bad. It does have some stretch to it and compression.
“One of my followers kindly sent me this so I could actually see what it was like because I didn’t want to f**king buy one off the scamming tw*ts.
“It might look alright under a jacket or something but it’s not going to hold much in.”
Holding up a Mooslover bodysuit to compare, she said: “The compression on it, literally you could do exercises it’s mental.
“It just doesn’t compare. Mooslover is so much better.”
She struggled to hold back her laughter as she looked at herself in the jumpsuit again.
“This just takes the biscuit doesn’t it?” she said.
“The moral of the story is if you see a creator that you know and like, when you see them promoting a product just check that it says their name down here before you click any links.
“If you see my face and someone else’s name down here God knows what you’re going to get and I can’t vouch for that.
“I always tell you the truth and if it’s s**t I’ll tell you and this is s**t my friends.”
She captioned the post, writing: “Yes, I’ve reported and they’re still using my content on their ads.
"They’ve blocked me thinking I won’t know [eye roll].”
The video went viral with over 812,000 views, 18,000 likes, and hundreds of comments from people sharing their experiences with online fraudsters.
“That happened to me twice. I really want a Mooslover jumpsuit but I’m scared to order one in case it happens again,” one person wrote.
“This happened to me. I can’t get a refund because they’ve now closed the shop cost £28 [$36],” another said.
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“I ordered two they are just like this crap and refusing to refund. I am fuming,” a third chimed in.
“I waited three weeks for mine to be delivered and this was exactly what I got… I’m so mad… it’s frigging cold to wear out and no shaping,” another added.