Qisa Reviews | Check if qisa.com is scam or legit?


MZ

Rated 1 out of 5 stars

Amazon store selling damaged goods as…

Amazon store selling damaged goods as new
(look up Qisa on amazon… cannot include link).

They sell power packs with unrechargable batteries.

When you give a bad review they badger and work to bribe a removal or improvement of the rating.

The bribe is seldom nearing 40% of what was tossed in ewaste with their faulty ‘product’.

Then, they email as many as 3 times a day trying to get you to accept their offer (of course… they want me to change the review FIRST – lols a liar who cannot trust… no surprise).

This email badgering started in December 2020 and continues to this day.

They send repeated qualifications of how it is improved (in ewaste my power pack was improved?). Yet, they never do one of the 2 honest things:
1) Full refund
2) Send a tested working one.

A new email arrived offering me $50. Better than the first offer of $5 and previous offer of $30. But not yet the going price $53 + tax I asked for (instead of the $59.98+tax I actually paid).


Below are the analyze and conclusion of us about above reviews

Review 1:

This review from “MZ” alleges a negative experience with a seller named “Qisa” on Amazon. The reviewer claims to have received a damaged product (power pack with an unrechargeable battery) sold as new. A significant red flag is the accusation of Qisa attempting to bribe the reviewer into removing or improving their negative rating. The persistence of email contact (up to 3 times a day since December 2020) trying to get the review changed, coupled with inadequate compensation offers (not a full refund or a working replacement), strongly suggests unethical business practices. The reviewer’s frustration is palpable, and the details provided lend credibility to their claims. The fact that the offers are increasing over time also indicates a calculated effort to manipulate the review system, rather than genuinely resolving the issue. The lack of a full refund or replacement points towards a potential scam.

Qisa.com is likely a scam.

Note: The above statement is just my personal opinion, you should check carefully at the sources and make the right decision for yourself.

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