What a fake scan
looks like
We scanned a counterfeit Rolex Submariner and the system caught it immediately. Here is what the report looks like when a watch fails authentication.
Identity flagged
Instead of a clean identification, the system flags the watch as a known replica type — in this case, a "superclone" variant.
Defects highlighted
Rather than confirming features, the report pinpoints exactly what is wrong — font weight, hand finishing, bezel alignment, and more.
No valuation given
Counterfeit watches receive no price estimate. Instead, you get a clear advisory against purchase or resale.
AI concierge
You can still ask follow-up questions — the concierge explains exactly which red flags were found and what to look out for next time.
Evidence report
Even for fakes, you get a downloadable PDF documenting the findings — useful if you need to file a dispute with a seller.
Sources cited
Every verdict is backed by references — official manufacturer specs, known replica databases, and authentication benchmarks.
Why this matters
Counterfeits are getting harder to spot. A quick scan before you buy can save you thousands and protect you from fraud.
See what an authentic scan looks like? View genuine example