on August 22, 2025, 12:04 pm
I fell for their advert, when pissed one evening a few Saturday's ago. I entered the last draw, for a huge house in Cheshire.
I received an email, saying I had won a small prize in the Millionaire raffle of some sort. In their email, they urged me to hurry to redeem my prize, before it expires?
It turned out I had won a £15 subscription voucher, not cash money you can actually "redeem". You don't know this at the time of reading the "you've won" email.
The voucher gives you one hundred free entries into next months draw for a huge house in Cornwall, and entry to the £1m draw. So I entered the website to claim my exciting 'prize'.
After a somewhat confused read of the 'prize' itself, had I pressed 'continue', and accepted the terms of the offer, and put the voucher towards the next house draw, I am then tied to a £15 per month subscription, to enter draws for houses up and down the Country.
I don't need another £180.00 a year coming out of my bank account by direct debit right now. To say the Omaze website is 'confusing' is putting it very very mildly. It has you going round in circles, and re-directing you at times (which I am always 'put off' by).
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i wonder how many non computer savvy people in this country are now tied to a £15 per month subscription to this "charity" based company? who's website, to me, appears to be deliberately difficult to navigate and tovunderstand some of the terminology used.
Admittedly, I'm no expert about websites and computers, or the Internet as a whole, but I compared it to the "National lottery" website, which is clear and easy to make your way around, with no smoke no mirrors.
Anyway,just be careful.
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Message Thread Omaze. - Tonytaxi1970 August 22, 2025, 12:04 pm
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