Octopussy: The aftermath

Four days later and no sign of a refund


With 2500 tickets sold at £11 each, Octopussy let students believe that they would have the best Halloween night ever.

The location and venue were a mystery.

But what punters didn’t know is that it could only hold 1500 people. Most students ended up spending their night outside. And those who managed to get inside had a crap night.

Having realised their mistake, Octopussy organisers hurried earlier this week to apologise and promise a refund to all the disappointed students.

But victims of the Octopussy fraud weren’t satisfied. A Facebook page has been created under the name ‘Octopussy Refund Effort’.

Bastard organisers at Octopussy took this as a cue and stopped responding to all the correspondence about the event and made clear that they didn’t have any intention to refund the tickets.

Devastated students are now holding an online petition demanding their money back and plan to contact Glasgow City Council Trading Standards about the scam.

In the meantime, the only consolaion students will be getting is Octopussy’s poor excuse for an apology.