Picture this: a crafty 15-year-old, armed with a shiny new Cricut Maker, gets roped into making eerie Squid Game-inspired cards for a friend’s “surprise.” Sounds like a harmless high school adventure, right? Wrong.
This AITA Reddit post takes a sharp turn when those cards end up in teachers’ mailboxes, triggering a prank-gone-wrong scandal. When the vice principal comes knocking, the so-called “friend” tries to pin the whole stunt on her but she flips the script with Discord receipts.
Now, he’s fuming, stuck with detention, and some classmates think she should’ve taken the fall. Did she do the right thing, or break the teen “loyalty code”?

Let’s cut through the chaos! Here’s the original post:











When a Favor Turns into a Setup
Our Redditor thought she was doing a harmless favor, cutting 20 Squid Game-style calling cards for a classmate who promised a fun surprise. What she didn’t know?
His real plan was to sneak them into teachers’ mailboxes as a prank. When school admin traced the cards back, the vice principal called her in, ready to hand down punishment.
Instead of crumbling, she pulled out her digital receipts: Discord messages proving she was just the “craft supplier” and had no idea about the prank delivery.
That flipped the narrative instantly. the vice principal cleared her, and the prank mastermind was given detention.
But instead of apologizing, her friend lashed out, accusing her of “selling him out.” To make matters worse, a few peers joined the chorus, saying she should’ve “taken one for the team.”
Why Loyalty Doesn’t Mean Lying
From his side, maybe he thought she’d protect him, classic “ride or die” mentality. But here’s the hard truth: he never told her the plan, used her work without consent, and then lied to save himself. That’s not loyalty, it’s manipulation.
Peer pressure is a powerful force at this age. In fact, a 2022 Journal of Youth and Adolescence study found 70% of teens feel pressured to go along with risky group antics to avoid social backlash.
Psychologist Dr. Lisa Damour warns:
“Teens need to learn to stand up for themselves without losing their social circle, it’s a tough but vital skill”.
By telling the truth, she avoided an undeserved punishment and sent a clear message: friendship isn’t a free pass to use someone as a scapegoat.
Those urging her to lie might think they’re protecting group harmony, but they’re really enabling bad behavior.
Expert Opinion
This is a textbook example of boundaries and accountability in teen friendships.
Yes, high school social dynamics can make honesty feel like betrayal, but bending the truth here would’ve reinforced the idea that he can dodge consequences while others pay the price.
If anything, her quick thinking not only saved her reputation but might teach her former friend a lesson about owning up to his actions.
If she wants to salvage the friendship, an honest conversation could help but she’d need to be clear that trust is a two-way street.
More realistically, this may be the kind of betrayal that shows who’s worth keeping close.
Check out how the community responded:
Most commenters sided with the poster, saying they were “NTA” and urging them to cut ties with these so-called friends.





Most redditors agreed the poster was “NTA,” with one pointing out they simply “reverse carded” a friend who tried to throw them under the bus.







Are these takes gold or just Reddit’s peanut gallery?
A harmless crafting favor turned into a disciplinary disaster, forcing a 15-year-old to choose between social loyalty and self-preservation.
Was she right to protect herself with proof, or should she have taken the hit to save her friend’s reputation? When loyalty and truth collide, which one wins in your book?










