If you've landed on pppprotestsss.click thinking it's the real Polymarket, you're not alone. The site copies the popular prediction market's branding, layout, and even the tagline. But the domain name is a dead giveaway — it's a misspelled version of the legitimate site, and that's a classic trick used by scammers to catch people who type quickly or click without checking the URL.
What makes this especially dangerous is that Google's Safe Browsing system has already flagged it for social engineering. That means the site is designed to manipulate you into making a mistake, like entering login credentials or sending cryptocurrency to a wallet you don't control. The site also uses 97 external scripts and hides 37 elements on the page, which is far more than a legitimate prediction market would need. Those extra scripts could be collecting your data or redirecting you to phishing pages.
For a crypto-focused site like this, you need to see real ownership information and a verifiable history. This domain has none of that. There are no pppprotestsss.click reviews from real users, and the Wayback Machine has no record of it, which suggests it was created very recently. If you're considering using this site, don't. The safest move is to stick with the official Polymarket domain and double-check every URL before you click.