niteprice.com
Niteprice.com looks like a Fortnite locker value site, but it raises serious caution signs
Niteprice.com appears to be connected to the “Fortnite locker value” trend, where players are told they can scan their Fortnite account or locker and learn how much their skins, emotes, V-Bucks, and rare items are worth.
When I opened the site, it did not show a normal public homepage.
It redirected to an access verification page that asked the visitor to click shapes before continuing.
That does not prove the site is unsafe by itself.
Many sites use anti-bot checks.
But for a site that may deal with game accounts, login data, or account valuation, the lack of open public information is a concern.
A normal trusted service usually explains who runs it, what data it collects, how it works, and how it protects users.
With niteprice.com, public search results show more warning signs than useful company details.
The big issue is Fortnite account phishing
The main risk around sites like this is simple.
A player wants to know what their Fortnite locker is worth.
The site asks them to connect, log in, enter an account ID, or provide some kind of access.
Then the player may lose control of the account.
PCrisk recently analyzed a similar “Fortnite Inventory Price Checker” scam and said the fake service claimed to check item values, but its real goal was to collect login details and hijack accounts.
That report was not directly about niteprice.com.
It named another related domain.
Still, the pattern matters because niteprice.com appears in public discussion around the same type of “locker value scanner” idea.
A YouTube result specifically mentions niteprice.com and warns viewers not to visit it, describing it as part of a locker value scanner scam.
A public X result also warns people not to trust a site called “niteprice” that claims to scan a Fortnite locker.
Those social posts are not the same as a formal security report.
But they do show that niteprice.com has been discussed in the Fortnite community as suspicious.
Why this kind of site works on players
The idea behind a locker value checker is attractive.
Fortnite players may have old skins, rare cosmetics, battle pass items, or limited rewards.
Some people think those items make an account valuable.
That creates curiosity.
It also creates fear of missing out.
A player may think, “Maybe my account is worth hundreds of dollars.”
That is exactly the kind of moment scammers use.
They do not need every visitor to believe them.
They only need some users to enter an email, password, one-time code, or account recovery detail.
Once that happens, the scam can move fast.
PCrisk says stolen Fortnite login details can be used to hijack accounts, steal or sell items, take V-Bucks, or use the account to scam other players.
That is why any site promising instant Fortnite account valuation should be treated carefully.
The site does not look easy to verify
A strong website builds trust before asking for anything.
It shows a clear company name.
It has a real privacy policy.
It explains data use.
It gives support contact details.
It avoids asking for passwords.
It uses official login flows where needed.
Niteprice.com, from the public access I could check, did not provide that kind of clear information.
The page I reached was only an access verification screen.
ScamAdviser’s result for niteprice.com also lists mixed and confusing signals.
It says the SSL certificate is valid, but it also says the site has a very low rank, is very young, and is hosted on a server with many suspicious websites.
A valid SSL certificate only means the connection is encrypted.
It does not mean the business is safe.
Scam sites can use HTTPS too.
A safer way to check Fortnite spending
If the real question is “how much have I spent on Fortnite,” the safer route is not a random locker scanner.
Epic Games has official guidance for viewing purchase history.
Epic says users can go to their Epic Games account, open the Transactions tab, and view purchases, subscriptions, code redemptions, and V-Bucks card redemption history.
That does not give a resale value.
But it gives a real spending record.
It also keeps the user inside the official Epic account system.
That is much safer than entering account details into an unknown website.
A locker value is not the same as real money
Another problem is the word “value.”
A Fortnite locker may feel valuable because it has rare skins.
But that does not mean the account has a safe cash value.
Selling or buying game accounts can violate platform rules, attract scammers, and lead to account recovery problems.
Also, item value is not fixed.
A skin may seem rare today and return later.
A cosmetic may be popular in one community and ignored in another.
A calculator can only guess.
Even legitimate-looking calculator sites cannot know what a buyer will really pay.
So when a site says it can give an instant accurate market price, that claim should be questioned.
PCrisk also notes that these fake tools often promise instant and accurate results to lure users into giving account details.
My practical view on niteprice.com
I would not treat niteprice.com as a trusted Fortnite account tool.
The public evidence is too weak on the positive side.
The warning signs are stronger.
The site was not openly readable during my check.
Search results connect it with Fortnite locker scanner warnings.
Security reporting on similar sites shows a clear phishing pattern.
ScamAdviser shows several negative signals, including young age and suspicious hosting context.
That does not let me say with full legal certainty that the site is malicious.
But it is enough to say this.
Do not enter your Epic Games login.
Do not enter a one-time code.
Do not connect your account.
Do not download anything from it.
Do not share the link with friends as a “locker checker.”
What to do if someone already used it
If someone entered their Fortnite or Epic Games details on niteprice.com, they should act quickly.
Change the Epic Games password.
Change the password on the linked email account too.
Turn on two-factor authentication.
Check the Epic account for strange linked accounts.
Review recent purchases and V-Bucks activity.
Log out of other sessions where possible.
If the same password was used anywhere else, change it there too.
PCrisk gives similar general advice for scam victims, including changing passwords and enabling two-factor authentication after personal information is shared.
Bottom line
Niteprice.com is best viewed as a high-risk Fortnite-related website.
Its public footprint is thin.
Its visible page is only an access check.
Community search results connect it to locker scanner scam warnings.
The broader scam pattern around Fortnite inventory price checkers is well known enough to be taken seriously.
For Fortnite account safety, use Epic’s official account pages and avoid third-party “locker value” scanners that ask for access or login details.
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