Tweet Bombs

Tweet Bombs

Make fake Adam Schefter "Tweet Bombs" to drop breaking news

3.0
1 review

2 followers

Tweet Bombs was made with a little help from Adam Schefter and a no-code tool called Bubble.io. It's is a tool where you can make your own Adam Schefter "Tweet Bomb" and drop BREAKING news on the rest of your fantasy football league (or just smack talk 😄)
Tweet Bombs gallery image
Tweet Bombs gallery image
Tweet Bombs gallery image
Tweet Bombs gallery image
Launch Team

What do you think? …

KP
Hunter
Launching soon!
@arjawn is a driven maker in the no-code space. Loved his 1st product (Pemvee) built on @glideapp which seemed like such a creative application. Tweet Bombs is his latest idea, a tongue-in-cheek take on "news bombs" we hear from analysts all the time. Excited to help him launch this and bring it in front of the PH community. Feel free to share your feedback, questions or comments!
Arjun Mahadevan
Hey PH, maker of the app here! I built Tweet Bombs because I am a huge fantasy football fan and I wanted better banter: A new way to build hype. An innovative way to talk smack. A different way to drop news bombs on the rest of my league… news bombs… … this led to a 💡moment: The NBA has Woj Bombs… What if I could create Woj Bombs for football, specifically fantasy football? I first used "inspect element" to make fake Schefter Tweets this but this was cumbersome and took too long; I wanted a faster way to do it and a "self-serve" way to do it so friends in my league could also make their own Tweets. Therefore, I built Tweet Bombs which lets anyone create a fake Adam Schefter Tweet which you can then share with your leaguemates. People have used the tool to talk smack, make a "fake press statement" or just Tweet something funny. If you're interested in learning in more detail why and how this was made, here is a Tweet Thread (which links to a Medium Blog Post)
samuel woods
Not surprisingly, some reports say that there are as many as 20 million fake Twitter accounts. With a reported 500 million registered users, that comes out to roughly 4% of all Twitter accounts being fake (bots). While I use social media management tools to easily clean up my stream, at times I like to see how easy it is to spot a fake Twitter account. When you are growing your Twitter account, it is important to pay attention to those you are following. While there are some obvious tell-tale signs, some users are making it tougher to decipher if they are real or fake. I know there are sites that supposedly can do this for you, but what is the fun in that? Here are some of the things I look for when determining whether or not a Twitter account is fake. Fake tweet Generator is one of the online tool which creates exactly look a like real tweet.