This customer seems to have found a way to get a bunch of free food at Walmart, but her “method” may just be a scam.
Food prices have climbed so high in recent years that even a routine grocery run feels like you’re getting less and less while paying more and more (shrinkflation, anybody?). With the cost of basics like eggs, bread, and produce stretching people’s budgets, it’s no surprise that shoppers are looking for any way to save.
While this hack seems promising, it may not be a viable solution (especially long-term).
What Is The Walmart Method?
In a viral video with more than 1.6 million views, content creator Darlene (@realdarlenex)—who so far has only posted about this “Walmart Method”—shared a hack for getting more bang for your buck at Walmart.
In the original video, Darlene shows a counter and fridge full of food, including meats, juices, frozen foods, chips, and produce. It easily looks like hundreds of dollars’ worth of food.
“POV: the Walmart Method hit harder than the food stamps,” Darlene said in the text overlay of the video.
“Didn’t know it’d be so helpful,” she added in the caption.
After receiving several messages from people wanting in on the “Walmart Method,” Darlene posted a follow-up video instructing them to go to Walgrab.com and click “claim.”
She says that if you complete five deals (it’s unclear what these deals require), you’ll get a voucher.
Is This A Scam?
BroBible went on this website. And we were redirected to reviewsus.myfunnelish.com/walmart.
There, the page instructed you to enter your email and basic info and “complete all recommended deals” to receive a $500 Walmart gift card.
There aren’t specific reviews about this exact site. The general myfunnelish.com domain raises red flags.
Several pages hosted under the myfunnelish.com domain—like earncash.myfunnelish.com and rewardlevel.myfunnelish.com—have been widely reported as scams. These sites typically lure people in with promises of easy money or prizes, only to funnel them into shady sign-ups, hidden charges, or outright data harvesting.
Scam-detection services, like Scam Adviser, consistently give myfunnelish.com subdomains low trust scores. They cite suspicious factors like hidden ownership, recent registrations, and minimal visitor traffic. In some cases, they’ve even been flagged as malicious.
Reviewsus.myfunnelish.com hasn’t been directly exposed. However, the pattern suggests it’s safest to treat it as a potential scam. As with similar sites, the best approach is to avoid entering any personal or payment information and stick to verified, official platforms for jobs, rewards, or reviews.
Commenters React
“Couldn’t pay me to eat Walmart meat tho,” a person said.
“Wait, this mean stealing???” another asked, confused.
Before Darlene posted her follow-up, viewers assumed the “scam” was ordering Walmart delivery and then claiming it’s wrong or missing.
“Gotta have the money to put up front, basically order on the app and say it’s all wrong and request a refund but yall doing this all the time the policy WILL change and soon. So get it while the getting is good yall,” one said.
“As a spark driver this is why I document and photograph every shop/delivery I do, because we get blamed for the ‘mistakes’ like this…” another wrote.
“At some point we gotta know when to NOT post shit tell a friend but posting is wild it wont work by tomorrow thanks alot,” a third said, suggesting Walmart was going to change its policies due to this video.
@realdarlenex Didn’t know it’d be so helpful😭👋#walmart #restock #groceryhaul #fyp
BroBible reached out to Darlene for comment via TikTok direct message and comment and to Walmart via email.
