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Prop screen · Payments

Searching "fake Cash App balance"? Here's the version that doesn't end badly

You don't want a hacked balance — that doesn't exist. What you actually want is the shot: a payment screen with a stupid number on it, a send that lands mid-take, an alert going off at the exact right beat. Larped gives you that as a creative prop — a Cash App–style send screen you script yourself, openly fictional from the first frame to the last.

9:415G  100%
To: Marcus
$25,000
123456789.0
Request
Pay
Received from Jayden+$4,500
Sent to Detailing (the good one)-$800
Received from "Investor"+$12,000
Larped's payment-style prop screen. Every name and number was typed by the person filming — that's the whole trick, and everyone finds out.

What "fake Cash App balance" actually means

Nobody searching this phrase wants to defraud a bank. Mostly they want one of three things: a skit where the character sends someone an absurd amount, a prank where the group chat watches a "payment" land, or B-roll of a payment screen with a number that makes the video work. In other words — a prop. A screen that performs.

The bad news: there is no app that changes a real Cash App balance. That number lives on a server you don't control, and anything promising otherwise is either malware or a lie. The good news: you never needed it. Film sets don't rob banks to shoot heist scenes.

What Larped gives you instead

Larped includes a dark, payment-app-style Send/Request/Pay screen — it looks like the payment apps you already know, without pretending to be any of them:

  • A custom keypad. Type the amount live on camera. The tactile part — thumbs punching in $25,000 — is half the shot.
  • Scripted contacts. You write the names. "Mom." "Marcus." "Investor." The cast is yours.
  • Sends and requests that stick. Every fictional send or request writes itself into the transaction history, so the screen has a past, not just a moment.
  • Alerts on cue. Fire a "you received $X" notification mid-take, at exactly the beat the edit needs.

To be completely clear: Larped is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to Cash App or Block, Inc. Cash App is a trademark of Block, Inc. Larped's screen is a generic payment-style prop — a costume, not a counterfeit.

Script it, send it, film it

Download Larped, open the payment prop screen, write your cast and amounts. Get the app — you'll be rolling in about a minute.

Read this part: fake "payment proof" is fraud

Some people land on this page wanting to flash a fake payment confirmation at a seller — show the "sent" screen, grab the sneakers, ghost. Let's kill that idea right here: that is not a prank, it's theft by deception. It's a crime whether or not an app was involved, people get charged for it constantly, and Larped's terms ban it outright. We didn't build a scam tool with a wink. We built a film prop.

The difference is who's in on it. In a Larped video, the audience ends up in on the joke — the fictional number IS the content. In a scam, the victim never gets let in, and they're out real money. If your plan only works because someone never finds out, that's not larping, that's fraud — and this app is genuinely useless for it, because it never touches real payment rails at all.

Payment prop questions, answered straight

No — and neither can anything else, because that number lives on Block's servers, not your phone. Larped is a separate app with its own payment-style prop screen where every name, amount and alert is fiction you typed. Larped is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to Cash App or Block, Inc.

Yes. Flashing a fake "payment sent" screen to walk off with someone's goods is fraud — a crime, full stop. Larped's terms prohibit it, and the app is built for filming, where the audience ends up in on the joke.

Yes. You write the contacts, punch amounts into the keypad, and every fictional send or request lands in the transaction history. Alerts — "you received $12,000" — fire whenever you tap the trigger.

No. No payment rails, no linked cards, no accounts, no logins to any financial service. Everything on screen is fictional and stays on your device.

Free to download and explore. Editing screens and firing alerts is Larped Pro — $14.99 once (lifetime) or $9.99 a year.

Keep reading

Write the send. Press record.

A payment screen prop that's openly fictional — which is exactly why the video works.