Quigital FameFutures Bracelet

By Gabriel D

Predict your spotlight, then step into it

Customer Reviews

Georgia Zemlak's avatar

Georgia Zemlak

I wanted to like the Quigital FameFutures Bracelet, but after a week I still couldn’t figure out what it was trying to do. It blends prediction markets and kid-centric self-promotion into a baffling game of futures, badges, and buzzwords. The app asks me to bet on a child’s “brand momentum,” then nudges me to post and share, but the goals and rewards never make sense. Is this for parents, kids, or marketers? I ended up confused and uncomfortable, unsure why this exists at all

Jesusa Dare Huels's avatar

Jesusa Dare Huels

I tried the Quigital FameFutures Bracelet for my 12-year-old, and it turned her social life into a casino. The app let classmates bet on her “fame” and short it; a whispered rumor tanked her score, and kids coordinated to profit. Overnight she went from excited to ostracized, checking panic-inducing push alerts while the bracelet chirped “sell!” during class. Support called it “market dynamics.” We yanked it after the school counselor flagged the anxiety and sleep loss. Turning childhood into a tradable asset is indefensible