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Swedish Woman Makes a Fake Profile on Amino, Then, When She Gets Caught, She Pretends to Be the Profile Owner’s Older Sister

Fake indentity

@tokiioreo is jumping on the “put a finger down if…” trend and has a wild story to share with TikTok users. On June 10, 2026, @tokiioreo, whose real name seems to be Livelly based on the info she provided on her TikTok profile, shared a story from when she was eleven.

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Livelly explained that when she was 11, she created a profile on Amino (a social media platform) and joined a community of 13- to 16-year-olds hoping to make friends. However, the profile she made wasn’t real. She had a fake profile, with a fake profile picture, and pretended to be a 15-year-old from Atlanta, Georgia. As she shared more about this experience, Livelly said she got caught in a lie for a moment but then turned the story around by lying even more.

TikTok user @tokiioreo set up a fake profile on a social media app

As previously mentioned, on June 10, 2026, TikTok user @tokiioreo uploaded a video in which, while jumping on the “put a finger down if…” trend, she shared how creating a fake profile on the social media platform Amino led her to tell a bunch of lies and then some more.

Livelly mentioned that, as a curious 11-year-old girl looking to make some friends, she set up a fake profile named Emily on Amino and joined a community of 13- to 16-year-olds. She said she developed a good rapport with almost all of them but grew especially close to one of the moderators, who used to share her deepest secrets with Livelly. Livelly said that this friendship even led to her becoming one of the group’s moderators later on.

Livelly also mentioned that she started talking to a boy from Boston, Massachusetts, and they began getting to know each other, eventually leading them to enter a relationship. However, Livelly said the situation escalated when one of her co-moderators questioned whether the profile picture was really hers. Livelly said she tried to defend herself, even though her co-moderator was telling the truth, but to no avail, as she was convinced that it wasn’t her in the profile picture.

Then, Livelly explained in her video that, to convince others that the profile picture on her Amino account (where she posed as Emily) was really hers, she made a post on the profile pretending to be Emily’s elder sister. In the post, Livelly, as Emily’s sister, stated that Emily had taken her own life after facing heavy bullying at school.

Talking about what happened after she made this announcement through Emily’s fake profile, Livelly said that condolences started pouring in from people in the group she was part of. She also mentioned that the group posted a tribute to “Emily” a few days after the false announcement, and many people commented, sharing their condolences and remembering her. Not only that, but this post was allegedly pinned to the profile for a long time, and Livelly believes it could have been close to a year.

In addition to all of this, Livelly said that the co-moderator she had befriended in the group kept sending her messages, but she ignored them all. She also ignored messages from her boyfriend at the time, despite her reluctance.

People in the comments section have a lot of opinions about @tokiioreo’s story

@tokiioreo’s story about the time she faked her death on a social media platform after getting caught for catfishing has intrigued a lot of people. User @bugeye.zz wrote, “Boyfriend from Massachusetts seeing this.” User @lanava53 said, “them rn seeing this after so many years.”

User @_williamaft0n commented, “There is definitely someone out there who is genuinely still grieving.” User @silfarmeria said, “could’ve literally just told them that you preferred not to show your real face.”

Facebook identified 1.1 billion fake accounts in the fourth quarter of 2025

According to a Statista article published on May 21, 2026, Facebook took action against (potentially removed) 1.1 billion fake accounts in the fourth quarter of 2025. 

The source noted that the fourth-quarter 2025 numbers represented a significant increase from the previous quarter, which saw 698 million accounts affected. However, the numbers also showed a notable decrease from the first quarter of 2019, when around 2.2 billion fake profiles were removed from Facebook.

(featured image: TikTok/@tokiioreo)

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Sanchari Ghosh is a political writer for The Mary Sue who enjoys keeping up with what's going on in the world and sometimes reminding everyone what they should be talking about. She's been around for a few years, but still gets excited whenever she disentangles a complicated story. When she's not writing, she's likely sleeping, eating, daydreaming, or just hanging out with friends. Politics is her passion, but so is an amazing nap.