Against all odds, we’re building something real.
We're a small team with a big vision, and a story we believe the world needs to play.
Our Kickstarter campaign launches soon, and your support will make all the difference.
Follow our campaign here: https://t.co/Y0d5ieN0x7
Hello Twitter,
Four months ago, we announced @Mazerance to the world.
Today, here’s a first look at what we’ve been building with teams across Australia, Singapore, Spain, and Nigeria.
We’re just getting started, and we’d love your support on this journey that will take years.
I decided to text one of his course mates about his location. I then found out he’s also owing one of His coursemates ₦150,000. It’s painful.
Not just because of the money, but because I genuinely believed I was patronizing someone I knew.
To confirm my suspicions, I asked a friend to text him.
Guess what?
He replied her That same day.
Same guy that’s been ignoring me for weeks.
That’s when I realized I wasn’t the only one he’s done this to.
Till now, I haven’t received a single kobo back.
He doesn’t reply my messages.
He ignores my calls.
Always one excuse or the other—“I’m in a meeting,” “I’m busy,” “I’ll get back to you.”
When he realized I wasn’t rushing to deliver the laptop without seeing the phone, his tone changed.
He said, “I’ll just refund you.”
I said, “That’s fine. Please refund me.
I told him clearly:
“Let me receive the phone first. Then you’ll get the laptop and any balance. I don’t owe people.”
But it felt like he was more focused on what he could collect from me than actually fulfilling his own end of the deal.
During those 7 days, instead of updates about the phone, he kept blowing up my phone—pressuring me to send the laptop.
Every day:
“Where’s the laptop?”
“Have you sent it?”
“Dispatch it now.”
Meanwhile, I hadn’t even seen the phone I paid for.
I sent him the ₦100K upfront.
That was the beginning of the problem.
He then told me he was importing the phone and I would have to wait 7 days.
I didn’t love that, but I agreed since he was my friend and i did trust him.
After a long conversation, we agreed I’d go for an iPhone 14 Pro.
He said since I was swapping, I’d add ₦200K to my current phone.
I told him I didn’t have that much at the moment, but I had ₦100K cash and a laptop I was hoping to sell.
He agreed.
A few weeks ago, I decided to swap my phone. It was giving me issues, and I needed something more reliable.
Instead of going through a random vendor, I chose to patronize someone I thought I could trust, an old friend from our university days who now sells gadgets.
I pray that everyone who has joined today's hallelujah Challenge dressing and acting like your miracles, May the Lord make your miracles a reality and may we receive loud congratulations in Jesus'name 🙏
#HallelujahChallenge