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Prop screen · Banking

The fake bank account balance app that's honest about it

Type any number. Watch it land on a dashboard that looks like a real banking app — accounts, cards, transactions, incoming payment alerts. Then hit screen record and go make the video. Larped is a creative prop: it never touches a real bank, and nothing in it is real money. That's not a limitation. That's the product.

9:415G  100%
Checking · Everyday
$4,250,000.00
▲ +$1,340,000 this month
Incoming wireToday, 9:12 AM
+$250,000
Savings · Vault4.2% APY
$1.8M
Card ending 4832Active
$0 due
A Larped bank dashboard. Every number on this screen was typed in by the person holding the phone — which is exactly the point.

What a fake bank balance app actually is

A fake bank account balance app puts a realistic-looking — but entirely fictional — banking screen on your phone. Not a screenshot you edited in ten minutes, and not a real banking app you probably shouldn't be pointing a camera at. A living screen: it scrolls, transactions animate in, alerts arrive, and the balance says whatever you told it to say.

People reach for one for the same handful of reasons:

  • Content. POV skits, "day in my life as a millionaire," reaction videos, storylines where a character checks their account. The money screen is the punchline, the plot device, or the B-roll.
  • Roleplay. Playing a version of yourself that already made it. Rehearsing the future, basically — see manifesting the number.
  • Pranks between friends. The group chat sees the balance, loses it, then gets let in on the bit. (In on it is the rule — more below.)
  • Design & film props. A money screen for a short film, a mockup, a classroom demo — without using anyone's real account.

How it works in Larped

Larped treats the bank screen like a set you're directing:

  • Six bank-style dashboards. Different layouts — classic, dark premium, big-card, tabbed — so your screen doesn't look like everyone else's video. Pick one during setup or switch anytime.
  • Every number is scriptable. Balance, savings, account names, individual transactions, the card on file. Set the checking account to $4,250,000 and the story writes itself.
  • Live numbers. Flip one switch and balances drift like a real app pulling data — small ticks, nothing cartoonish. It reads as real on camera because it moves like real.
  • Incoming payment alerts. Fire a "you received $25,000" notification on cue, mid-take.
  • No visible edit controls. The edit UI hides behind a tap pattern, so a screen recording never gives the trick away.

Three steps, then you're filming

Download Larped, pick a bank dashboard, type your number. Get the app — the whole setup takes about a minute.

The line: prop, not deception

Prop money is legal on a film set and illegal at a cash register. Same object, different intent — and the same line applies here. Larped is for screens that perform: content, comedy, roleplay, pranks where everyone ends up in on it. It is not for fake payment "proof," not for convincing a seller you paid, not for loan applications, not for any situation where someone hands over something real because of a fictional number. That's fraud, our terms ban it, and honestly — the fictional number is funnier when everyone knows.

This is also why Larped never connects to a bank: there's nothing to hack, nothing to leak, and no way to confuse the prop for the real thing behind the scenes. The full breakdown is in entertainment vs real banking apps.

Fake bank balance questions, answered straight

Using a prop balance for entertainment — videos, skits, roleplay, pranks between friends who end up in on it — is exactly what Larped is for. Using any fake balance to get money or goods out of someone (fake payment proof, loan paperwork, marketplace deals) is fraud, full stop, and our terms prohibit it.

No. No bank link, no card connection, no financial logins — the feature doesn't exist in the app. The only numbers on screen are the ones you typed, and they stay on your device.

Yes — the balance, account names, transaction history and payment alerts are all yours to script. $5,000 reads "comfortable," $500,000,000 reads "season finale." Your call.

That's the product. Real dashboard layouts, believable transaction rows, numbers that can tick like live data, and zero visible edit controls. The screen holds up in a recording because it behaves like an app, not an image.

Free to download and explore. Editing balances and firing alerts is Larped Pro — $14.99 once (lifetime) or $9.99 a year. One coffee, infinite millions.

Keep reading

Set the balance. Press record.

The fake bank account balance app built for filming — openly a prop, seriously good at it.