Profile

Internal links: Kitboga, Scam Investigations, Internet Crime, Fraud, YouTube Creators, AI Scams, Gift Card Scams. Source links: YouTube .

Kitboga is a YouTube creator focused on scam investigations, internet crime, and fraud. According to the supplied channel metadata, the Kitboga YouTube channel has 3.9 million subscribers and 578 videos. The channel overview describes the project plainly: scammers take advantage of people every day, and Kitboga calls them to waste their time, walk through their scripts and lies, report information when possible, and make light of a dark situation.

What Kitboga Covers

The core format is scam-baiting with an educational purpose. Kitboga's videos often revolve around phone and tech support scams, refund scams, gift card schemes, and newer AI-assisted scam calls. The creator record does not identify Kitboga as law enforcement or a formal investigator, so the safest way to describe the work is as creator-led anti-scam content that documents scam tactics and shows how pressure, confusion, and social engineering can appear during a call.

Why This Work Fits True Crime Gods

Kitboga belongs in the True Crime Gods creator graph because the channel sits at the intersection of online fraud, victim prevention, and internet-native investigation. Rather than retelling solved crimes, the videos often show attempted scams in progress. That makes the channel especially useful for audiences interested in how fraud scripts work, how scammers adapt, and how entertainment formats can still carry practical awareness value.

Referenced video

The Angriest Scammer I've Ever Called (Do Not Redeem)

24.5M views

Representative Breakout Videos

Several of Kitboga's most-watched full-length YouTube videos center on gift cards, refund scripts, and escalating scammer frustration. The Angriest Scammer I've Ever Called (Do Not Redeem), published in 2020, is listed in the supplied data at 24.5 million views. Other major examples include Scammers Wanted $3,000 - They Watched Me Spend It All at 20.9 million views, This Scammer Broke His Phone After Losing $2,000 at 13.7 million views, and Scammers Go Mad While Losing $3,000 In Gift Cards at 13.1 million views.

The Long-Form Appeal

The supplied video list shows that Kitboga's channel is not built only around short clips. Many uploads run for well over an hour, preserving the slow mechanics of a scam attempt rather than reducing it to a punchline. That long-form style matters because scam scripts often depend on time, pressure, repetition, and confusion. Watching the call unfold can make those tactics more visible than a brief summary would.

Referenced video

Scammers Wanted $3,000 - They Watched Me Spend It All

20.9M views

Recent Full-Length Work

Recent full-length uploads in the supplied dataset show the channel continuing to follow live scam patterns and AI-enabled fraud. Examples include Hunting Scammers, Hunting AI Scammers, and Forcing Scammers to Watch Unskippable Ads. The shorter but still full-length entry Don't Hang Up On AI Scammers. Do THIS Instead. is listed at 2.9 million views, suggesting strong audience interest in how AI scam calls can be handled.

Editorial Note

This profile is based on the supplied creator record, YouTube channel metadata, and listed full-length video references. The biography section in the source material was seeded from YouTube metadata and should receive human editorial review before publication. Claims about Kitboga's identity, off-platform history, reporting outcomes, or real-world enforcement impact should not be added without additional sourcing.

Referenced video

This Scammer Broke His Phone After Losing $2,000

13.7M views

Where To Start

For new viewers, the best entry points are the representative full-length videos that show the format at scale: The Angriest Scammer I've Ever Called (Do Not Redeem), Scammers Wanted $3,000 - They Watched Me Spend It All, and Don't Hang Up On AI Scammers. Do THIS Instead.. Together, they show the channel's mix of character-driven calls, anti-fraud awareness, and long-form internet crime storytelling.