First Day Venus Berlin -2025
The energy at Berlin’s Venus Expo, where Dugmor moved like a ghost among neon-lit booths and tangled cables, not as a vendor, but as a mentor. He delivered a masterclass on mobile automation 6 accounts per phone, 4G proxies rotating every 30 seconds, real Android devices stripped of batteries to avoid overheating teaching creators how to build invisible, sustainable traffic without bots or fake followers. His “Jesus Automator” wasn’t just software; it was a philosophy: authenticity over hype, resilience over shortcuts. Amidst the chaos, he networked with agency owners, exchanged Telegram details, and quietly offered free controllers to those who asked, his worn denim shirt and tired eyes betraying a man who’d seen the industry’s rise, fall, and reinvention.
# Key takeaways
- His automation is ethical rebellion; He doesn’t sell bots or fake engagement he builds real, human-like mobile farms using real phones, 4G proxies, and randomized behavior, proving that scalable digital influence can be done without deception.
- He speaks truth to noise: In a world of influencers and hype, Dugmor gives away free tools, admits the limits of his methods, and refuses to monetize trauma. His authority comes not from branding, but from lived experience and that makes him dangerous to the status quo.
# Atmosphere
At the expo, the atmosphere crackled with artificial energy flashing lights, bass-heavy music. Dugmor moved through it like a man who had seen the machinery behind the spectacle: the followers, the influencer personas and the corporate veneer. There was warmth in his interactions, brief, genuine, unpolished but it was always tinged with exhaustion, with the knowledge that the world he was helping to build was still built on broken foundations. The air felt heavy with unspoken grief, quiet defiance, and the fragile hope of redemption.