The Message: "You currently have 12,739 Reward Points available... to redeem please visit the link below."
The Scam Link: eeco.rewardsn[.]cn
The Giveaway: The link ends in .cn (China). EE is a UK company.
(Note: We cannot show the screenshot here, but look out for that specific link).
Status: WIDESPREAD SCAM
Comes from generic email addresses like "support.tiuof@hetassink.nl" claiming to be a known courier who just need a little more information, a signature or a small fee before they can complete the 'delivery'.
Verdict: Delete immediately. Real couriers put a card from the door or email from the official email address ending in their company name after the @.
Status: WIDESPREAD SCAM
The Trap: You receive an email claiming you have won a "Mystery Box," a "Spin the Wheel" reward, or an "Unclaimed Pallet" from Temu or Shein.
The Sender: These come from random, garbage email addresses (e.g., @versustravel.net, @newsletter-info.com). Do not bother checking the address. If it didn't come from temu.com, it is fake.
The Goal: They want you to click a survey link and pay a small "shipping fee" (usually £1.99 or £2.00). This gives them your credit card details, which they will then use to steal money.
Verdict: Delete immediately. Real shops do not give away £500 boxes for free via random emails.